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  ALBUM VERSES

  Page 46. In the Album of a Clergyman's Lady.

  This lady was probably Mrs. Williams, of Fornham, in Suffolk, in whose house Lamb's adopted daughter, Emma Isola, lived as a governess in 1829-1830. The epitaph on page 65 and the acrostic on page 107 were written for the same lady.

  Page 46. In the Autograph Book of Mrs. Sergeant W——.

  Mrs. Sergeant Wilde, née Wileman, was the first wife of Thomas Wilde,

  afterwards Lord Truro (1782-1855), for whose election at Newark in 1831

  Lamb is said to have written facetious verses (see my large edition).

  The Wildes were Lamb's neighbours at Enfield.

  Page 47. In the Album of Lucy Barton.

  These lines were sent by Lamb to Lucy Barton's father, Bernard Barton, the Quaker poet, in the letter of September 30, 1824. Lucy Barton, who afterwards became the wife of Edward FitzGerald, the translator of Omar Khayyam, lived until November 27, 1898. She retained her faculties almost to the end, and in 1892 kindly wrote out for me her memory of a visit paid with her father to the Lambs at Colebrook Row about 1825—a little reminiscence first printed in Bernard Barton and His Friends, 1893.

  Page 48. In the Album of Miss——.

  This poem was first printed in Blackwood's Magazine, May, 1829, entitled "For a Young Lady's Album." The identity of the young lady is not now discoverable: probably a school friend of Emma Isola's.

  Page 48. In the Album of a very young Lady.

  Josepha was a daughter of Mrs. Williams, of Fornham.

  Page 49. In the Album of a French Teacher.

  First printed in Blackwood's Magazine, June, 1829, entitled "For the

  Album of: Miss——, French Teacher at Mrs. Gisborn's School, Enfield."

  Page 49. In the Album of Miss Daubeny.

  Miss Daubeny was a schoolfellow of Emma Isola's, at Dulwich.

  Page 50. In the Album of Mrs. Jane Towers.

  Charles Clarke—in line 7—was Charles Cowden Clarke (1787-1877), a friend of the Lambs not only for his own sake, but for that of his wife, Mary Victoria Novello, whom he married in 1828 and who died as recently as 1898. Their Recollections of Writers, 1878, have many interesting reminiscences of Charles and Mary Lamb. Writing to Cowden Clarke on February 25, 1828, Lamb says:—"I had a pleasant letter from your sister, greatly over acknowledging my poor sonnet…. Alas for sonnetting,'tis as the nerves are; all the summer I was dawdling among green lanes, and verses came as thick as fancies. I am sunk winterly below prose and zero."

  Mrs. Towers lived at Standerwick, in Somersetshire, and was fairly well known in her day as a writer of books for children, The Children's Fireside, etc.

  Page 50. In my own Album.

  This poem was first printed in The Bijou, 1828, edited by William

  Fraser, under the title "Verses for an Album." The Works of Charles and Mary Lamb — Volume 4

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