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Elia; and The Last Essays of Elia

Gelesen von LibriVox Volunteers

Elia and The Last Essays of Elia are two collections of essays written by Charles Lamb. The essays first began appearing in The London Magazine in 1820 and continued to 1825. They were very popular and were printed in many subsequent editions throughout the nineteenth century. The personal and conversational tone of the essays has charmed many readers.

Lamb himself is the Elia of the collection, and his sister Mary is "Cousin Bridget." Lamb took the name of Elia from an old Italian clerk at the South-Sea House in Lamb's time of employment there; that is, in 1791-1792. Many of these essays contain references to Lamb's contemporaries or events of his day, which may not strike as strong a chord in the heart of the contemporary listener.
- Summary by TriciaG (16 hr 14 min)

Chapters

The South-Sea House

22:45

Read by Adrian Stephens

Oxford in the Vacation

14:11

Read by KevinS

Christ's Hospital Five and Thirty Years Ago

37:44

Read by Adrian Stephens

The Two Races of Men

15:56

Read by Adrian Stephens

New Year's Eve

17:40

Read by Adrian Stephens

Mrs. Battle's Opinions on Whist

17:24

Read by Adrian Stephens

A Chapter on Ears

14:35

Read by Adrian Stephens

All Fools' Day

8:52

Read by Adrian Stephens

A Quaker's Meeting

13:54

Read by Sandra Cullum

The Old and the New Schoolmaster

24:55

Read by Sandra Cullum

Valentine's Day

9:31

Read by Sandra Cullum

Imperfect Sympathies

21:34

Read by Sandra Cullum

Witches, and other Night-Fears

18:45

Read by Sandra Cullum

My Relations

17:48

Read by Sandra Cullum

Mackery End, in Hertfordshire

12:59

Read by Sandra Cullum

Modern Gallantry

8:49

Read by Arden

The Old Benchers of the Inner Temple

30:15

Read by Adrian Stephens

Grace Before Meat

14:39

Read by Arden

My First Play

12:31

Read by Adrian Stephens

Dream-Children; A Reverie

8:54

Read by Arden

Distant Correspondents

13:01

Read by Arden

The Praise of Chimney-Sweepers

19:13

Read by Adrian Stephens

A Complaint of the Decay of Beggars in the Metropolis

20:48

Read by Adrian Stephens

A Dissertation upon Roast Pig

20:48

Read by Adrian Stephens

A Bachelor's Complaint of the Behaviour of Married People

20:38

Read by Adrian Stephens

On Some Old Actors

33:40

Read by Adrian Stephens

On the Artificial Comedy of the Last Century

22:17

Read by Adrian Stephens

On the Acting of Munden

6:26

Read by Alan Mapstone

Preface, by a Friend of the late Elia

7:27

Read by colson

Blakesmoor in H—shire

14:18

Read by Adrian Stephens

Poor Relations

18:39

Read by Adrian Stephens

Stage Illusion

7:33

Read by Arden

To the Shade of Elliston

8:10

Read by Alan Mapstone

Ellistoniana

14:43

Read by drwebber

Detached Thoughts on Books and Reading

14:14

Read by Arden

The Old Margate Hoy

22:11

Read by Adrian Stephens

The Convalescent

9:18

Read by Arden

Sanity of True Genius

8:38

Read by Yaelin Lee

Captain Jackson

11:28

Read by drwebber

The Superannuated Man

16:14

Read by Arden

The Genteel Style in Writing

13:53

Read by Micfairy252

Barbara S—

13:48

Read by Jennifer Henry

The Tombs in the Abbey

7:00

Read by weezer

Amicus Redivivus

12:46

Read by Adrian Stephens

Some Sonnets of Sir Philip Sydney

21:57

Read by Adrian Stephens

Newspapers Thirty-five Years Ago

17:16

Read by Arden

Barrenness of the Imaginative Faculty in the Productions of Modern Art

23:54

Read by Arden

Rejoicings upon the New Year's Coming of Age

12:11

Read by Arden

The Wedding

16:10

Read by Paul Harvey

The Child Angel: a Dream

8:29

Read by Paul Harvey

A Death-Bed

3:36

Read by RomaSingh

Old China

15:33

Read by drwebber

Popular Fallacies: Fallacies 1-9

22:59

Read by Adrian Stephens

Popular Fallacies: Fallaices 10-12

22:57

Read by Adrian Stephens

Popular Fallacies: Fallacies 13-16

28:26

Read by Adrian Stephens

On Some of the Old Actors (London Magazine, Feb., 1822)

32:33

Read by Adrian Stephens

The Old Actors (London Magazine, April, 1822)

31:54

Read by Matea Bracic

The Old Actors (London Magazine, October, 1822)

15:29

Read by Matea Bracic