Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

The Draper’s Assistant and Mary Shelley’s Lost Journal

View through CrossRef
Among the Abinger Papers in the Bodleian Library is a document, MS. Abinger c. 73, fols. 99–104, the testimony of one William Tyler, a draper’s assistant from Marlow, Buckinghamshire who wrote poems and saw the Shelleys plain. Jane, Lady Shelley (the wife of the Shelleys’ only surviving son, Sir Percy Florence) gathered as many reminiscences of her father-in-law as she could. Tyler’s is by far the longest. (Appended to this essay is a transcription of his testimony reproduced in full for the first time). Tyler has been virtually erased from the literary and biographical records of the Shelleys, save for one footnote. Edward Dowden made use of his testimony for The Life of Percy Bysshe Shelley (1886), but whilst some of Tyler’s words are artfully deployed to bolster the memories of another, others are cut from the record altogether. This essay tells the remarkable story of Tyler, a man unknown to fame, who deserves to be remembered. For one, he provides the only surviving verbatim record of the contents of a journal kept by Mary Shelley which covered the events of May 1815 to June 1816. Who was William Tyler and how did he come to turn those lost pages?
Edinburgh University Press
Title: The Draper’s Assistant and Mary Shelley’s Lost Journal
Description:
Among the Abinger Papers in the Bodleian Library is a document, MS.
Abinger c.
73, fols.
99–104, the testimony of one William Tyler, a draper’s assistant from Marlow, Buckinghamshire who wrote poems and saw the Shelleys plain.
Jane, Lady Shelley (the wife of the Shelleys’ only surviving son, Sir Percy Florence) gathered as many reminiscences of her father-in-law as she could.
Tyler’s is by far the longest.
(Appended to this essay is a transcription of his testimony reproduced in full for the first time).
Tyler has been virtually erased from the literary and biographical records of the Shelleys, save for one footnote.
Edward Dowden made use of his testimony for The Life of Percy Bysshe Shelley (1886), but whilst some of Tyler’s words are artfully deployed to bolster the memories of another, others are cut from the record altogether.
This essay tells the remarkable story of Tyler, a man unknown to fame, who deserves to be remembered.
For one, he provides the only surviving verbatim record of the contents of a journal kept by Mary Shelley which covered the events of May 1815 to June 1816.
Who was William Tyler and how did he come to turn those lost pages?.

Related Results

Percy Bysshe Shelley
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Percy Bysshe Shelley (b. 1792–d. 1822) is now recognized as a major writer, chiefly a poet, of the Romantic period. His life was short, peripatetic, and frequently dogged by scanda...
“The Shelley Legend”
“The Shelley Legend”
Late in 1945 appeared a book entitled The Shelley Legend. It was published by Charles Scribner's Sons, and was written by Professor Robert M. Smith of Lehigh University in collabor...
The Fourth International Milton Symposium
The Fourth International Milton Symposium
Matthew Allen. “‘Entertaining the Irksome Hours’: Paradise Lost 2.521–76 as the Fallen Counterpart of Milton's Curriculum in Of Education.”Peter Auksi. “‘Considerate Building’: The...
The State of the Art in Evaluating the Performance of Assistant and Associate Deans as Seen by Deans and Assistant and Associate Deans
The State of the Art in Evaluating the Performance of Assistant and Associate Deans as Seen by Deans and Assistant and Associate Deans
AbstractThis study explores the little‐understood process of evaluating the performance of assistant and associate deans at dental colleges in the United States and Canada. Specifi...
Browning and Shelley
Browning and Shelley
The question of Shelley's influence on the young Robert Browning is hardly a disputed one, but the question of how far it continues into the life and work of the later Browning is ...
Beatrice Unbound: Adaptations of Shelley’s The Cenci
Beatrice Unbound: Adaptations of Shelley’s The Cenci
This essay considers three twentieth-century re-imaginings of Shelley’s The Cenci : Artaud’s play Les Cenci , Bernold Goldschmidt’s ...
Mourning Life: William Wordsworth and Percy Bysshe Shelley
Mourning Life: William Wordsworth and Percy Bysshe Shelley
What does it mean that Shelley publicly mourns the death a living Wordsworth in his poetry? This essay argues that Percy Bysshe Shelley's renunciation of a narrow concept of selfho...

Back to Top