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This person is mentioned in the diary a total of 39 times, but was not at home (N) 10 times, and was a venue (V) 10 times.
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19 December 1818 28 December 1818 (N)
8 January 1819 22 January 1819 (N) 12 February 1819 5 April 1819 9 April 1819 22 April 1819 14 May 1819 (NV) 1 June 1819 (N) 2 July 1819 20 August 1819 8 November 1819 (NV) 13 November 1819 18 November 1819
19 January 1820 23 January 1820 2 February 1820 13 February 1820 7 April 1820 9 April 1820 12 July 1820 (NV) 14 July 1820 24 July 1820 25 July 1820 30 July 1820
12 October 1829 13 October 1829 (NV) 20 October 1829 28 October 1829 (NV) 30 October 1829 (NV) 2 November 1829 9 November 1829 27 November 1829 (V)
7 January 1830 (V) 13 January 1830 (V) 28 February 1830 6 March 1830 (NV) 25 March 1830
Washington Irving (3 April 1783 – 28 November 1859) was a young American novelist ‘whom Godwin greatly admired’ (St Clair, p. 424) and later befriended. It seems as though the admiration was mutual – Irving's biographer wrote, ‘it was not until 1797 that his career as an author began, by the publication of Alcuin: a Dialogue on the Rights of Women. This and the romances which followed it show the powerful influence upon him of the school of fiction of William Godwin, and the movement of emancipation of which Mary Wollstonecraft was the leader.’ (Charles Dudley Warner, Washington Irving , chapter 1) He was known to have ‘admitted that he hardly knew an Englishman who could write so well’ (Leary, Washington Irving, p. 22). Irving dines with Godwin when in London, and the two exchanged letters in 1829 about the possibility of publishing Chaucer in America (MS Abinger). All the occurrences of the name ‘Irving’ appear in 1818, 1819, 1820, 1829, and 1830 sometimes with and sometimes without his first name/initial. These are concurrent with his 17-year sojourn to England from May 1815 onwards (Leary).
There are five isolated mentions of ‘Irving’ that have not been coded – these appear in 1802 (no first name mentioned, and Irving was a law clerk in the office of Josiah Ogden Hoffman at the time, and was not to travel abroad until 1804), 1810 (also no first name – listed as a dinner guest– interestingly with ‘Cooper’ whom he was remotely connected with through Mary Fairlie - and an adv.) and once in 1823. Swartwout, who appears with Irving in 1810 is an American, which is suggestive, but there is no evidence that Irving is in London at this time and biographical sources suggest he is in Wshington lobbying against restrictions in trade. . The 1823 reference could be Irving, as he was in Paris that year, but it has not been coded.
The entry 'Hear Irving, Caledonian Church' (29.6.1823), is a reference to someone different and is uncoded - see notes on lectures
This table lists the people this person is most frequently noted with in the diary.
Name | Number of Meetings |
---|---|
Hazlitt, William | 2 |
Mulready, William | 2 |
Leslie, Charles Robert | 2 |
Ogilvie, James (Ogilvy) | 2 |
Boinville, Harriet | 1 |
Boinville, Cornelia (Turner) | 1 |
Turner, Thomas | 1 |
Kenney, James | 1 |
Lytton, Edward George Earle Lytton Bulwer (first Baron Lytton) | 1 |
Shepherd, Lady Mary (née Primrose) | 1 |
Shelley, Mary Wollstonecraft (née Godwin) | 1 |
Lloyd, Charles | 1 |
Curran, William Henry | 1 |
Ticknor, George | 1 |
Booth, David | 1 |
Hume, Joseph | 1 |
Bevan, Joseph | 1 |