Brief introduction of Charles Lamb's life
Charles Lamb's father is the secret secretary of Samuel salter's lawyer. Lawyer salter lives in the British National Seal Area where Lamb was born and raised. Lamb's grandmother is Ms. Feld. She is the housekeeper of Blackwell (near Weill Street), and Blackwell is the prototype of the author "Blackmore" in Elijah's Essays and Lady Leicester's School. Lamb was educated in a Christian hospital, where he established an unbreakable friendship with Coleridge. He worked in customs for a few months in his early years. 1792, when he was 17 years old, he began to work in the East India Company until 1825. 1796, his sister had a mental attack and killed her mother. Because my sister's mental illness often occurs periodically, Lamb undertook the obligation to take care of her sister. Similarly, my sister repaid Lamb with her thoughtfulness and concern. Lamb himself had a brief insanity (1795- 1796), and the terrible insanity was the shadow of his life. S·T· Coleridge published a collection of poems in 1796, four of which were written by Lamb. 1798, The Poem Without rhyme co-authored by Charles Lloyd and Charles Lamb was published, and The Familiar Old Face is one of the most famous poems in this collection of poems. In the same year, The Story of rosamond Gray and The Old Blind Margaret were published one after another, telling the tragic story of an innocent little girl. 1802, Lamb published "John Wood Ville" (formerly known as "Saving Self-confidence"), which is an Elizabethan tragedy. 1806, he wrote another stage play called Mr. H, but it failed in Trulli Theatre. 1807, in order to let more young people know about Shakespeare, Lamb and his sister wrote The Tales of Shakespeare. 1809 wrote about Mrs. Lester's school, which consists of a story, mainly about her childhood memories of Hertford primary school life, and also introduced some personal information of the author. 1808 The publication of The Adventures of Ulysses is a successful attempt to introduce The Odyssey with My Sister in the future. 1808 also published the book Examples and Notes of Shakespeare's Contemporary English Drama Poets. During the period of1810-1820, his works were few, but during the period of181,he wrote two essays, Shakespeare's Tragedy and Hogarth's Genius and Traits. He wrote articles for Leigh Hunt's The Reflector and the Prosecutor, and wrote an article about Wordsworth's hiking in 18 14 for Review Quarterly. 18 18 column published his collection of essays and poems. During the period of 1820- 1823, Lamb wrote regularly for London Magazine, during which he wrote many essays one after another. Later, it was published separately in 1823, and it was named "Ilya Prose Collection". 1833, the second collection of Ilya's essays was published. Sir Thomas Talhold first collected and published his letters in 1834. During the period of 1899- 1900, Ji Nong Angels further expanded and perfected this collection of letters. The most famous of his poems is the familiar old face, the lyric poem Hearst published in 1803 and the elegy Short-lived Baby published in 1827. There are also many excellent metrical poems and lyric poems in Selected Poems of 1830. During the period of 1797- 1823, lamb and his sister lived in London (successively in Pendleton, Southampton Building, Abbey, Coventry Garden, etc. ), 1823 moved to Iselin, 1827 moved to enfield, and then moved to.