Скачать книгу

tion>

       James Cotter Morison

      Gibbon

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4057664568861

       CHAPTER I.

       GIBBON'S EARLY LIFE UP TO THE TIME OF HIS LEAVING OXFORD.

       CHAPTER II.

       AT LAUSANNE.

       CHAPTER III.

       IN THE MILITIA.

       CHAPTER IV.

       THE ITALIAN JOURNEY.

       CHAPTER V.

       LITERARY SCHEMES.—THE HISTORY OF SWITZERLAND.—DISSERTATION ON THE SIXTH ÆNEID.—FATHER'S DEATH.—SETTLEMENT IN LONDON.

       CHAPTER VI.

       LIFE IN LONDON.—PARLIAMENT.—THE BOARD OF TRADE.—THE DECLINE AND FALL.—MIGRATION TO LAUSANNE.

       CHAPTER VII.

       THE FIRST THREE VOLUMES OF THE DECLINE AND FALL.

       CHAPTER VIII.

       THE LAST TEN YEARS OF HIS LIFE IN LAUSANNE.

       CHAPTER IX.

       THE LAST THREE VOLUMES OF THE DECLINE AND FALL.

       CHAPTER X.

       LAST ILLNESS.—DEATH.—CONCLUSION.

       ENGLISH MEN OF LETTERS.

       EDITED BY JOHN MORLEY.

       OPINIONS OF THE PRESS.

       MACMILLAN'S GLOBE LIBRARY.

       MACMILLAN & CO., LONDON.

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      Edward Gibbon[1] was born at Putney, near London, on 27th April in the year 1737. After the reformation of the calendar his birthday became the 8th of May. He was the eldest of a family of seven children; but his five brothers and only sister all died in early infancy, and he could remember in after life his sister alone, whom he also regretted.

      FOOTNOTES:

       Table of Contents

      [1] Gibbon's Memoirs and Letters are of such easy access that I have not deemed it necessary to encumber these pages with references to them. Any one who wishes to control my statements will have no difficulty in doing so with the Miscellaneous Works, edited by Lord Sheffield, in his hand. Whenever I advance anything that seems to require corroboration, I have been careful to give my authority.

      He is at some pains in his Memoirs to show the length and quality of his pedigree, which he traces back to the times of the Second and Third Edwards. Noting the fact, we pass on to a nearer ancestor, his grandfather, who seems to have been a person of considerable energy of character and business talent. He made a large fortune, which he lost in the South-Sea Scheme, and then made another before his death. He was one of the Commissioners of Customs, and sat at the Board with the poet Prior; Bolingbroke was heard to declare that no man knew better than Mr. Edward Gibbon the commerce and finances of England. His son, the historian's father, was a person of very inferior stamp. He was educated at Westminster and Cambridge, travelled on the Continent, sat in Parliament, lived beyond his means as a country gentleman, and here his achievements came to an end. He seems to have been a kindly but a weak and impulsive man, who however had the merit of obtaining and deserving his son's affection by genial sympathy and kindly treatment.

Скачать книгу