… can also be its own punishment: the melancholy man removes himself increasingly from company, friends and family, from all that makes living in a society worthwhile, and sooner or later might end up paying the ultimate price. …
Community | Depression | Poetry | Salvation | Solitude
… with the disapproval of his poetic peers, such as Byron , 8 it secured much needed financial support for his growing family. It also brought him closer to Lord Lonsdale, an important figure of Toryism in the north-west of England. In the …
Correspondence | Domesticity | French Revolution | Politics | Solitude