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Laurence Sterne

Laurence Sterne (24 November 1713 – 18 March 1768) was an Anglo-Irish novelist and Anglican cleric who wrote the novels The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman and A Sentimental Journey Through France and Italy, published sermons and memoirs, and indulged in local politics. He grew up in a military family, travelling mainly in Ireland but briefly in England. An uncle paid for Sterne to attend Hipperholme Grammar School in the West Riding of Yorkshire, as Sterne's father was ordered to Jamaica, where he died of malaria some years later. He attended Jesus College, Cambridge on a sizarship, gaining bachelor's and master's degrees. While Vicar of Sutton-on-the-Forest, Yorkshire, he married Elizabeth Lumley in 1741. His ecclesiastical satire A Political Romance infuriated the church and was burnt.


Laurence Sterne
Portrait by Sir Joshua Reynolds, 1760
Born(1713-11-24)24 November 1713
Clonmel, Ireland
Died18 March 1768(1768-03-18) (aged 54)
London, England
OccupationNovelist, clergyman
NationalityBritish
Alma materJesus College, Cambridge
Notable worksThe Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman
A Sentimental Journey Through France and Italy
A Political Romance
SpouseElizabeth Lumley

With his new talent for writing, he published early volumes of his best-known novel, The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman. Sterne travelled to France to find relief from persistent tuberculosis, documenting his travels in A Sentimental Journey Through France and Italy, published weeks before his death. His posthumous Journal to Eliza addresses Eliza Draper, for whom he had romantic feelings. Sterne died in 1768 and was buried in the yard of St George's, Hanover Square. His body was said to have been stolen after burial and sold to anatomists at Cambridge University, but was recognised and reinterred. His ostensible skull was found in the churchyard and transferred to Coxwold in 1969 by the Laurence Sterne Trust.

Biography edit

Early life and education edit

 
Plaque in memory of Sterne in the town walls of Clonmel
 
Laurence Sterne by Joseph Nollekens, 1766, National Portrait Gallery, London

Sterne was born in Clonmel, County Tipperary, on 24 November 1713.[1] His father, Roger Sterne, was an ensign in a British regiment recently returned from Dunkirk.[2] His great-grandfather Richard Sterne had been the Master of Jesus College, Cambridge, as well as the Archbishop of York.[3] Roger Sterne was the youngest son of Richard Sterne's youngest son, and consequently, Roger Sterne inherited little of Richard Sterne's wealth.[3] Roger Sterne left his family and enlisted in the army at the age of 25; he enlisted uncommissioned, which was unusual for someone from a family of high social position. Despite being promoted to an officer, he was of the lowest commission and lacked financial resources.[4] Roger Sterne married Agnes Hobert, the widow of a military captain.[5] Agnes was "born in Flanders but...was in fact Anglo-Irish and lived for much of her life in Ireland".[6]

The first decade of Laurence Sterne's life was spent from place to place, as his father was regularly reassigned to a new (usually Irish) garrison. "Other than a three-year stint in a Dublin townhouse, the Sternes never lived anywhere for more than a year between Laurence's birth and his departure for boarding school in England a few months shy of his eleventh birthday. Besides Clonmel and Dublin, the Sternes also lived in Wicklow Town; Annamoe, County Wicklow; Drogheda, County Louth; Castlepollard, County Westmeath; Carrickfergus, County Antrim; and Derry City."[7] In 1724, "shortly before the family's arrival in Derry",[8] Roger took Sterne to his wealthy brother, Richard, so that Laurence could attend Hipperholme Grammar School near Halifax.[9] Laurence never saw his father again as Roger was ordered to Jamaica where he died of malaria in 1731.[10] Laurence was admitted to a sizarship at Jesus College, in July 1733 at the age of 20.[11] He graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in January 1737 and returned in the summer of 1740 to be awarded his Master of Arts.[12]

Early career edit

Sterne was ordained as a deacon on 6 March 1737[13] and as a priest on 20 August 1738.[14] His religion is said to have been the "centrist Anglicanism of his time", known as "latitudinarianism".[15] A few days after his ordination as a priest, Sterne was awarded the vicarage living of Sutton-on-the-Forest in Yorkshire.[16] Sterne married Elizabeth Lumley on 30 March 1741, despite both being ill with consumption.[17] In 1743, he was presented to the neighbouring living of Stillington by Reverend Richard Levett, Prebendary of Stillington, who was patron of the living. Subsequently, Sterne did duty both there and at Sutton.[18] He was also a prebendary of York Minster.[19] Sterne's life at this time was closely tied with his uncle, Jaques Sterne, the Archdeacon of Cleveland and Precentor of York Minster. Sterne's uncle was an ardent Whig,[20] and urged Sterne to begin a career of political journalism, which resulted in some scandal for Sterne and a terminal falling-out between the two men.[21] This falling out occurred after Laurence ended his political career in 1742. He had previously written anonymous propaganda for the York Gazetteer from 1741 to 1742. [22] Sterne lived in Sutton for 20 years, during which time he kept up an intimacy that had begun at Cambridge with John Hall-Stevenson, a witty and accomplished bon vivant, owner of Skelton Hall in the Cleveland district of Yorkshire.[23]

Writing edit

 
Shandy Hall, Sterne's home in Coxwold, North Yorkshire

Sterne wrote a religious satire work called A Political Romance in 1759. Many copies of his work were destroyed.[24] According to a 1760 anonymous letter, Sterne "hardly knew that he could write at all, much less with humour so as to make his reader laugh".[25] At the age of 46, Sterne dedicated himself to writing for the rest of his life. It was while living in the countryside, failing in his attempts to supplement his income as a farmer and struggling with tuberculosis, that Sterne began work on his best-known novel, The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman, the first volumes of which were published in 1759. Sterne was at work on his celebrated comic novel during the year that his mother died, his wife was seriously ill, and his daughter was also taken ill with a fever.[26] He wrote as fast as he possibly could, composing the first 18 chapters between January and March of 1759.[27] Due to his poor financial position, Sterne was forced to borrow money for the printing of his novel, suggesting that Sterne was confident in the prospective commercial success of his work and that the local critical reception of the novel was favourable enough to justify the loan.[28]

The publication of Tristram Shandy made Sterne famous in London and on the continent. He was delighted by the attention, famously saying, "I wrote not [to] be fed but to be famous."[29] He spent part of each year in London, being fêted as new volumes appeared. Even after the publication of volumes three and four of Tristram Shandy, his love of attention (especially as related to financial success) remained undiminished. In one letter, he wrote, "One half of the town abuse my book as bitterly, as the other half cry it up to the skies — the best is, they abuse it and buy it, and at such a rate, that we are going on with a second edition, as fast as possible."[30] Baron Fauconberg rewarded Sterne by appointing him as the perpetual curate of Coxwold, North Yorkshire in March 1760.[31]

In 1766, at the height of the debate about slavery, the composer and former slave Ignatius Sancho wrote to Sterne,[32] encouraging him to use his pen to lobby for the abolition of the slave trade.[33] In July 1766, Sterne received Sancho's letter shortly after he had finished writing a conversation between his fictional characters Corporal Trim and his brother Tom in Tristram Shandy, wherein Tom described the oppression of a black servant in a sausage shop in Lisbon that he had visited.[34] Sterne's widely publicised response to Sancho's letter became an integral part of 18th-century abolitionist literature.[34]

Foreign travel edit

 
Sterne painted in watercolour by French artist Louis Carrogis Carmontelle, ca. 1762

Sterne continued to struggle with his illness and departed England for France in 1762 in an effort to find a climate that would alleviate his suffering. Sterne attached himself to a diplomatic party bound for Turin, as England and France were still adversaries in the Seven Years' War. Sterne was gratified by his reception in France, where reports of the genius of Tristram Shandy made him a celebrity. Aspects of this trip to France were incorporated into Sterne's second novel, A Sentimental Journey Through France and Italy.[35]

Eliza edit

Early in 1767, Sterne met Eliza Draper, the wife of an official of the East India Company, while she was staying on her own in London.[36] He was quickly captivated by Eliza's charm, vivacity, and intelligence, and she did little to discourage his attentions.[37][38] They met frequently and exchanged miniature portraits. Sterne's admiration turned into an obsession, which he took no trouble to conceal. To his great distress, Eliza had to return to India three months after their first meeting, and he died from consumption a year later without seeing her again.

In 1768, Sterne published his Sentimental Journey, which contains some extravagant references to her, and the relationship, though platonic, aroused considerable interest. He also wrote his Journal to Eliza, part of which he sent to her, and the rest of which came to light when it was presented to the British Museum in 1894. After Sterne's death, Eliza allowed ten of his letters to be published under the title Letters from Yorick to Eliza and succeeded in suppressing her letters to him, though some blatant forgeries were produced in a volume of Eliza's Letters to Yorick.[39]

Death edit

Less than a month after Sentimental Journey was published, Sterne died in his lodgings at 41 Old Bond Street on 18 March 1768, at the age of 54.[40] He was buried in the churchyard of St George's, Hanover Square on 22 March.[41] It was rumoured that Sterne's body was stolen shortly after it was interred and sold to anatomists at Cambridge University. Circumstantially, it was said that his body was recognised by Charles Collignon, who knew him[42][43] and discreetly reinterred him back in St George's, in an unknown plot. A year later a group of Freemasons erected a memorial stone with a rhyming epitaph near to his original burial place. A second stone was erected in 1893, correcting some factual errors on the memorial stone. When the churchyard of St. George's was redeveloped in 1969, amongst 11,500 skulls disinterred, several were identified with drastic cuts from anatomising or a post-mortem examination. One was identified to be of a size that matched a bust of Sterne made by Nollekens.[44][45]

The skull was held up to be his, albeit with "a certain area of doubt".[46] Along with nearby skeletal bones, these remains were transferred to Coxwold churchyard in 1969 by the Laurence Sterne Trust.[47][48][49] The story of the reinterment of Sterne's skull in Coxwold is alluded to in Malcolm Bradbury's novel To the Hermitage.[50]

Works edit

 
First editions of Tristram Shandy, part of the collection of the Laurence Sterne Trust at Shandy Hall

The works of Laurence Sterne are few in comparison to other eighteenth-century authors of comparable stature.[51] Sterne's early works were letters; he had two sermons published (in 1747 and 1750) and tried his hand at satire.[52] He was involved in and wrote about local politics in 1742.[52] His major publication prior to Tristram Shandy was the satire A Political Romance (1759), aimed at conflicts of interest within York Minster.[52] A posthumously published piece on the art of preaching, A Fragment in the Manner of Rabelais, appears to have been written in 1759.[53] Rabelais was by far Sterne's favourite author, and in his correspondence, he made clear that he considered himself as Rabelais' successor in humour writing, distancing himself from Jonathan Swift.[54][55]

Sterne's novel The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman sold widely in England and throughout Europe.[56] Translations of the work began to appear in all the major European languages almost immediately upon its publication, and Sterne influenced European writers as diverse as Denis Diderot[57] and the German Romanticists.[58] His work also had noticeable influence over Brazilian author Machado de Assis, who made use of the digressive technique in the novel The Posthumous Memoirs of Bras Cubas.[59]

English writer and literary critic Samuel Johnson's verdict in 1776 was that "Nothing odd will do long. Tristram Shandy did not last."[60] This is strikingly different from the views of European critics of the day, who praised Sterne and Tristram Shandy as innovative and superior. Voltaire called it "clearly superior to Rabelais", and later Goethe praised Sterne as "the most beautiful spirit that ever lived".[52] Swedish translator Johan Rundahl described Sterne as an arch-sentimentalist.[61] The title page to volume one includes a short Greek epigraph, which in English reads: "Not things, but opinions about things, trouble men."[62] Before the novel properly begins, Sterne also offers a dedication to Lord William Pitt.[63] He urges Pitt to retreat with the book from the cares of statecraft.[64]

The novel itself starts with the narration, by Tristram, of his own conception. It proceeds mostly by what Sterne calls "progressive digressions" so that we do not reach Tristram's birth before the third volume.[65][66] The novel is rich in characters and humour, and the influences of Rabelais and Miguel de Cervantes are present throughout. The novel ends after 9 volumes, published over a decade, but without anything that might be considered a traditional conclusion. Sterne inserts sermons, essays and legal documents into the pages of his novel; and he explores the limits of typography and print design by including marbled pages and an entirely black page within the narrative.[52] Many of the innovations that Sterne introduced, adaptations in form that were an exploration of what constitutes the novel, were highly influential to Modernist writers like James Joyce and Virginia Woolf, and more contemporary writers such as Thomas Pynchon and David Foster Wallace.[67] Italo Calvino referred to Tristram Shandy as the "undoubted progenitor of all avant-garde novels of our century".[67] The Russian Formalist writer Viktor Shklovsky regarded Tristram Shandy as the archetypal, quintessential novel, "the most typical novel of world literature."[68]

However, the leading critical opinions of Tristram Shandy tend to be markedly polarised in their evaluations of its significance. Since the 1950s, following the lead of D. W. Jefferson, there are those who argue that, whatever its legacy of influence may be, Tristram Shandy in its original context actually represents a resurgence of a much older, Renaissance tradition of "Learned Wit" – owing a debt to such influences as the Scriblerian approach.[69] A Sentimental Journey Through France and Italy has many stylistic parallels with Tristram Shandy, and the narrator is one of the minor characters from the earlier novel.[70] Although the story is more straightforward, A Sentimental Journey is interpreted by critics as part of the same artistic project to which Tristram Shandy belongs.[71] Two volumes of Sterne's Sermons were published during his lifetime; more copies of his Sermons were sold in his lifetime than copies of Tristram Shandy.[72] The sermons, however, are conventional in substance.[73] Several volumes of letters were published after his death, as was Journal to Eliza.[74] These collections of letters, more sentimental than humorous, tell of Sterne's relationship with Eliza Draper.[75]

Publications edit

  • 1743 – The Unknown World: Verses Occasioned by Hearing a Pass-Bell (disputed, possibly written by Hubert Stogdon)[76]
  • 1747 – The Case of Elijah and the Widow of Zerephath
  • 1750 – The Abuses of Conscience
  • 1759 – A Political Romance
  • 1759 – Tristram Shandy vols. 1 and 2
  • 1760 – The Sermons of Mr. Yorick vol. 1 and 2
  • 1761 – Tristram Shandy vols. 3–6
  • 1765 – Tristram Shandy vols. 7 and 8
  • 1766 – The Sermons of Mr. Yorick vols. 3 and 4
  • 1767 – Tristram Shandy vol. 9
  • 1768 – A Sentimental Journey through France and Italy
  • 1769 – Sermons by the Late Rev. Mr. Sterne vols. 5–7 (a continuation of The Sermons of Mr. Yorick)[77]

See also edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Keymer 2009, p. xii.
  2. ^ Ross 2001, pp. 20–21.
  3. ^ a b Ross 2001, pp. 22–23.
  4. ^ Ross 2001, pp. 23–24.
  5. ^ Ross 2001, p. 24.
  6. ^ Clare 2016, pp. 16.
  7. ^ Clare 2016, pp. 16–17.
  8. ^ Clare 2016, pp. 17.
  9. ^ Ross 2001, p. 33.
  10. ^ Ross 2001, pp. 29–30.
  11. ^ Ross 2001, pp. 36–37.
  12. ^ Ross 2001, pp. 43–44.
  13. ^ "Laurence Sterne's holy orders". British Library. Retrieved 7 February 2020.
  14. ^ Sichel 1971, p. 27.
  15. ^ "Laurence Sterne". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. 2004. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/26412. Retrieved 28 March 2017. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  16. ^ Ross 2001, pp. 48–49.
  17. ^ Ross 2001, pp. 58–60.
  18. ^ Cross 1909, p. 54.
  19. ^ Cross 1909, p. 37.
  20. ^ Ross 2001, pp. 45–47.
  21. ^ Ross 2001, pp. 64–70, 168–174.
  22. ^ Keymer 2009, pp. 6–7.
  23. ^ Ross 2001, pp. 41–42; Vapereau 1876, p. 1915
  24. ^ Ross 2001, pp. 190–196.
  25. ^ Howes 1971, p. 60.
  26. ^ "Cross (1908), chap. 8, The Publication of Tristram Shandy: Volumes I and II, p.197
  27. ^ Cross (1908), chap. 8, The Publication of Tristram Shandy: Volumes I and II, p. 178.
  28. ^ Ross 2001, p. 213.
  29. ^ Fanning, Christopher. "Sterne and print culture". The Cambridge Companion to Laurence Sterne: 125–141.
  30. ^ The Letters of Laurence Sterne: Part One, 1739–1764. University Press of Florida. 2009. pp. 129–130. ISBN 978-0813032368.
  31. ^ Howes 1971, p. 55.
  32. ^ Carey, Brycchan (March 2003). "The extraordinary Negro': Ignatius Sancho, Joseph Jekyll, and the Problem of Biography" (PDF). Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies. 26 (1): 1–13. doi:10.1111/j.1754-0208.2003.tb00257.x. Retrieved 8 January 2013.
  33. ^ Phillips, Caryl (December 1996). "Director's Forward". Ignatius Sancho: an African Man of Letters. London: National Portrait Gallery. p. 12.
  34. ^ a b "Ignatius Sancho and Laurence Sterne" (PDF). Norton.
  35. ^ The New Encyclopaedia Britannica. Chicago: Encyclopaedia Britannica. 1985. pp. 256–257. ISBN 0852294239.
  36. ^ Ross 2001, p. 360.
  37. ^ Ross 2001, p. 361
  38. ^ Sterne, Laurence. "The Project Gutenberg EBook of the Journal to Eliza and Various letters". Project Gutenberg. Retrieved 10 February 2020.
  39. ^ Sclater, William Lutley (1922). Sterne's Eliza; some account of her life in India: with her letters written between 1757 and 1774. London: W. Heinemann. pp. 45–58.
  40. ^ Ross 2001, p. 415.
  41. ^ Ross 2001, p. 419.
  42. ^ Arnold, Catherine (2008). Necropolis: London and Its Dead. Simon and Schuster. p. contents. ISBN 978-1847394934. Retrieved 11 November 2014 – via Google Books.
  43. ^ Ross 2001, pp. 419–420
  44. ^ "Is this the skull of Sterne?". The Times. 5 June 1969.
  45. ^ Loftis, Kellar & Ulevich 2018, pp. 220, 227
  46. ^ Loftis, Kellar & Ulevich 2018, p. 220.
  47. ^ Green, Carole (13 March 2009). "Laurence Sterne". BBC. Retrieved 4 March 2020.
  48. ^ "Laurence Sterne and the Laurence Sterne Trust". The Laurence Sterne Trust. Laurence Sterne Trust. Retrieved 4 March 2020.
  49. ^ Alas, Poor Yorick, Letters, The Times, 16 June 1969, Kenneth Monkman, Laurence Sterne Trust. "If we have reburied the wrong one, nobody, I feel beyond reasonable doubt, would enjoy the situation more than Sterne"
  50. ^ Suciu, Andreia Irina (2009). "The Sense of History in Malcolm Bradbury's Work". Economy Transdisciplinarity Cognition (2): 152–160. ProQuest 757935757.
  51. ^ New 1972, p. 1083.
  52. ^ a b c d e Washington 2017, p. 333.
  53. ^ New 1972, pp. 1083–1091.
  54. ^ Huntington Brown (1967), Rabelais in English literature pp. 190–191.
  55. ^ Cross (1908), chap. 8, The Publication of Tristram Shandy: Volumes I and II, p. 179.
  56. ^ Cash 1975, p. 296.
  57. ^ Cash 1975, p. 139.
  58. ^ Large 2017, p. 294.
  59. ^ Barbosa 1992, p. 28.
  60. ^ James Boswell, The Life of Samuel Johnson…, ed. Malone, vol. II (London: 1824) p. 422.
  61. ^ de Voogd & Neubauer 2004, p. 118.
  62. ^ Pierce & de Voogd 1996, p. 15.
  63. ^ King 1995, p. 293.
  64. ^ Havard 2014, p. 586.
  65. ^ Descargues-Grant 2006
  66. ^ Graham, Thomas (17 June 2019). "The best comic novel ever written?". BBC. Retrieved 26 February 2020.
  67. ^ a b Washington 2017, p. 334.
  68. ^ Gratchev & Mancing 2019, p. 139.
  69. ^ Jefferson 1951; Keymer 2002, pp. 4–11
  70. ^ Viviès 1994, pp. 246–247.
  71. ^ Line, Anne. "Two Englishmen in France: A Comparison of Laurence Sterne's Book 7 of "Tristram Shandy" and "A Sentimental Journey"". University of Oslo Research Archive. University of Oslo. Retrieved 28 February 2020.
  72. ^ Ross 2001, p. 245.
  73. ^ Pfister 2001, p. 26.
  74. ^ Keymer 2009, p. xv.
  75. ^ Pfister 2001, p. 15.
  76. ^ New, Melvyn (2011). "'The Unknown World': The Poem Laurence Sterne Did Not Write". Huntington Library Quarterly. 74 (1): 85–98. doi:10.1525/hlq.2011.74.1.85. JSTOR 10.1525/hlq.2011.74.1.85.
  77. ^ Sterne, Laurence (1851). Works of Laurence Sterne. Bohn.

References edit

  • Barbosa, Maria José Somerlate (May 1992). "Sterne and Machado: Parodic and Intertextual Play in 'Tristram Shandy' and 'Memórias'". The Comparatist. 16: 24–48. doi:10.1353/com.1992.0014. JSTOR 44366842. S2CID 201767984.
  • Cash, Arthur H. (1975). Laurence Sterne: The Early & Middle Years. London: Methuen & Co. ISBN 041682210X.
  • Clare, David (2016). "Under-regarded Roots: The Irish References in Sterne's Tristram Shandy". The Irish Review. 52 (1): 15–26. ISBN 9781782050629.
  • Cross, Wilbur L. (1909). The Life and Times of Laurence Sterne. New York: The Macmillan Company. p. 53. Retrieved 10 February 2020. Laurence Sterne Stillington Rev. Richard Levett.
  • Descargues-Grant, Madeleine (2006). "The Obstetrics of Tristram Shandy". Études anglaises. 59 (4): 401–413. doi:10.3917/etan.594.0401.
  • de Voogd, Peter; Neubauer, John, eds. (2004). The Reception of Laurence Sterne in Europe. London: Thoemmes Continuum. ISBN 0826461344. Retrieved 26 February 2020.
  • Gratchev, Slav N.; Mancing, Howard, eds. (2019). Viktor Shklovsky's Heritage in Literature, Arts, and Philosophy. Lanham: Lexington Books. ISBN 9781498597937. Retrieved 26 February 2020.
  • Havard, John Owen (Summer 2014). "Arbitrary Government: "Tristram Shandy" and the Crisis of Whig History". ELH. 81 (2): 585–613. doi:10.1353/elh.2014.0015. JSTOR 24475634. S2CID 154424358.
  • Howes, Alan B., ed. (1971). Laurence Sterne: The Critical Heritage. London: Routledge. ISBN 0415134250. Retrieved 10 February 2020.
  • Jefferson, D.W. (July 1951). "Tristram Shandy and the Tradition of Learned Wit". Essays in Criticism. I (3): 225–248. doi:10.1093/eic/I.3.225. Retrieved 26 February 2020.
  • Keymer, Thomas (2009). The Cambridge Companion to Laurence Sterne. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521849722.
  • Keymer, Thomas (2002). Sterne, the Moderns, and the Novel. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0199245924.
  • King, Ross (Summer 1995). ""Tristram Shandy" and the Wound of Language". Studies in Philosophy. 92 (3): 291–310. JSTOR 4174520.
  • Large, Duncan (2017). "'Lorenz Sterne' among German philosophers: reception and influence" (PDF). Textual Practice. 31 (2): 283–297. doi:10.1080/0950236X.2016.1228847. S2CID 171978531.
  • Loftis, Sonya Freeman; Kellar, Allison; Ulevich, Lisa, eds. (2018). Shakespeare's Hamlet in an Era of Textual Exhaustion. New York: Routledge. ISBN 9781315265537. Retrieved 4 March 2020.
  • New, Melvyn (October 1972). "Sterne's Rabelaisian Fragment: A Text from the Holograph Manuscript". PMLA. 87 (5): 1083–1092. doi:10.2307/461185. JSTOR 461185. S2CID 163743375.
  • Pfister, Manfred (2001). Laurence Sterne. Devon: Northcote House Publishers. ISBN 074630837X.
  • Pierce, David; de Voogd, Peter, eds. (1996). Laurence Sterne in Modernism and Postmodernism. Amsterdam: Rodopi. ISBN 9042000023. Retrieved 26 February 2020.
  • Ross, Ian Campbell (2001). Laurence Sterne: A Life. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0192122355.
  • Sichel, Walter (1971). Sterne: A Study. New York: Haskell House Publishers. Retrieved 7 February 2020.
  • Vapereau, Gustave (1876). Dictionnaire universal des littératures. Paris: Librairie Hachette. p. 1915. Retrieved 10 February 2020.
  • Venn, John; Venn, J.A., eds. (1927). Alumni Cantabrigienses. London: Cambridge University Press. Retrieved 10 February 2020.
  • Viviès, Jean (1994). "A Sentimental Journey, or Reading Rewarded" (PDF). Bulletin de la société d'études anglo-américaines des XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles. 38. Retrieved 12 February 2020.
  • Washington, Ellis (2017). The Progressive Revolution: History of Liberal Fascism through the Ages. Lanham: Hamilton Books. ISBN 9780761868507. Retrieved 26 February 2020.

Further reading edit

  • René Bosch, Labyrinth of Digressions: Tristram Shandy as Perceived and Influenced by Sterne's Early Imitators (Amsterdam, 2007)
  • W. M. Thackeray, in English Humourists of the Eighteenth Century (London, 1853; new edition, New York, 1911)
  • Percy Fitzgerald, Life of Laurence Sterne (London, 1864; second edition, London, 1896)
  • Paul Stapfer, Laurence Sterne, sa personne et ses ouvrages (second edition, Paris, 1882)
  • H. D. Traill, Laurence Sterne, "English Men of Letters", (London, 1882)
  • H. D. Traill. "Sterne". Harper & Brothers Publishers. Retrieved 22 March 2018 – via Internet Archive.
  • Texte, Rousseau et le cosmopolitisme littôraire au XVIIIème siècle (Paris, 1895)
  • H. W. Thayer, Laurence Sterne in Germany (New York, 1905)
  • P. E. More, Shelburne Essays (third series, New York, 1905)
  • L. S. Benjamin, Life and Letters (two volumes, 1912)
  • Rousseau, George S. (2004). Nervous Acts: Essays on Literature, Culture and Sensibility. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 1-4039-3454-1

External links edit

laurence, sterne, november, 1713, march, 1768, anglo, irish, novelist, anglican, cleric, wrote, novels, life, opinions, tristram, shandy, gentleman, sentimental, journey, through, france, italy, published, sermons, memoirs, indulged, local, politics, grew, mil. Laurence Sterne 24 November 1713 18 March 1768 was an Anglo Irish novelist and Anglican cleric who wrote the novels The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy Gentleman and A Sentimental Journey Through France and Italy published sermons and memoirs and indulged in local politics He grew up in a military family travelling mainly in Ireland but briefly in England An uncle paid for Sterne to attend Hipperholme Grammar School in the West Riding of Yorkshire as Sterne s father was ordered to Jamaica where he died of malaria some years later He attended Jesus College Cambridge on a sizarship gaining bachelor s and master s degrees While Vicar of Sutton on the Forest Yorkshire he married Elizabeth Lumley in 1741 His ecclesiastical satire A Political Romance infuriated the church and was burnt The ReverendLaurence SternePortrait by Sir Joshua Reynolds 1760Born 1713 11 24 24 November 1713Clonmel IrelandDied18 March 1768 1768 03 18 aged 54 London EnglandOccupationNovelist clergymanNationalityBritishAlma materJesus College CambridgeNotable worksThe Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy GentlemanA Sentimental Journey Through France and ItalyA Political RomanceSpouseElizabeth LumleyWith his new talent for writing he published early volumes of his best known novel The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy Gentleman Sterne travelled to France to find relief from persistent tuberculosis documenting his travels in A Sentimental Journey Through France and Italy published weeks before his death His posthumous Journal to Eliza addresses Eliza Draper for whom he had romantic feelings Sterne died in 1768 and was buried in the yard of St George s Hanover Square His body was said to have been stolen after burial and sold to anatomists at Cambridge University but was recognised and reinterred His ostensible skull was found in the churchyard and transferred to Coxwold in 1969 by the Laurence Sterne Trust Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life and education 1 2 Early career 1 3 Writing 1 4 Foreign travel 1 5 Eliza 1 6 Death 2 Works 3 Publications 4 See also 5 Citations 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksBiography editEarly life and education edit nbsp Plaque in memory of Sterne in the town walls of Clonmel nbsp Laurence Sterne by Joseph Nollekens 1766 National Portrait Gallery LondonSterne was born in Clonmel County Tipperary on 24 November 1713 1 His father Roger Sterne was an ensign in a British regiment recently returned from Dunkirk 2 His great grandfather Richard Sterne had been the Master of Jesus College Cambridge as well as the Archbishop of York 3 Roger Sterne was the youngest son of Richard Sterne s youngest son and consequently Roger Sterne inherited little of Richard Sterne s wealth 3 Roger Sterne left his family and enlisted in the army at the age of 25 he enlisted uncommissioned which was unusual for someone from a family of high social position Despite being promoted to an officer he was of the lowest commission and lacked financial resources 4 Roger Sterne married Agnes Hobert the widow of a military captain 5 Agnes was born in Flanders but was in fact Anglo Irish and lived for much of her life in Ireland 6 The first decade of Laurence Sterne s life was spent from place to place as his father was regularly reassigned to a new usually Irish garrison Other than a three year stint in a Dublin townhouse the Sternes never lived anywhere for more than a year between Laurence s birth and his departure for boarding school in England a few months shy of his eleventh birthday Besides Clonmel and Dublin the Sternes also lived in Wicklow Town Annamoe County Wicklow Drogheda County Louth Castlepollard County Westmeath Carrickfergus County Antrim and Derry City 7 In 1724 shortly before the family s arrival in Derry 8 Roger took Sterne to his wealthy brother Richard so that Laurence could attend Hipperholme Grammar School near Halifax 9 Laurence never saw his father again as Roger was ordered to Jamaica where he died of malaria in 1731 10 Laurence was admitted to a sizarship at Jesus College in July 1733 at the age of 20 11 He graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in January 1737 and returned in the summer of 1740 to be awarded his Master of Arts 12 Early career edit Sterne was ordained as a deacon on 6 March 1737 13 and as a priest on 20 August 1738 14 His religion is said to have been the centrist Anglicanism of his time known as latitudinarianism 15 A few days after his ordination as a priest Sterne was awarded the vicarage living of Sutton on the Forest in Yorkshire 16 Sterne married Elizabeth Lumley on 30 March 1741 despite both being ill with consumption 17 In 1743 he was presented to the neighbouring living of Stillington by Reverend Richard Levett Prebendary of Stillington who was patron of the living Subsequently Sterne did duty both there and at Sutton 18 He was also a prebendary of York Minster 19 Sterne s life at this time was closely tied with his uncle Jaques Sterne the Archdeacon of Cleveland and Precentor of York Minster Sterne s uncle was an ardent Whig 20 and urged Sterne to begin a career of political journalism which resulted in some scandal for Sterne and a terminal falling out between the two men 21 This falling out occurred after Laurence ended his political career in 1742 He had previously written anonymous propaganda for the York Gazetteer from 1741 to 1742 22 Sterne lived in Sutton for 20 years during which time he kept up an intimacy that had begun at Cambridge with John Hall Stevenson a witty and accomplished bon vivant owner of Skelton Hall in the Cleveland district of Yorkshire 23 Writing edit nbsp Shandy Hall Sterne s home in Coxwold North YorkshireSterne wrote a religious satire work called A Political Romance in 1759 Many copies of his work were destroyed 24 According to a 1760 anonymous letter Sterne hardly knew that he could write at all much less with humour so as to make his reader laugh 25 At the age of 46 Sterne dedicated himself to writing for the rest of his life It was while living in the countryside failing in his attempts to supplement his income as a farmer and struggling with tuberculosis that Sterne began work on his best known novel The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy Gentleman the first volumes of which were published in 1759 Sterne was at work on his celebrated comic novel during the year that his mother died his wife was seriously ill and his daughter was also taken ill with a fever 26 He wrote as fast as he possibly could composing the first 18 chapters between January and March of 1759 27 Due to his poor financial position Sterne was forced to borrow money for the printing of his novel suggesting that Sterne was confident in the prospective commercial success of his work and that the local critical reception of the novel was favourable enough to justify the loan 28 The publication of Tristram Shandy made Sterne famous in London and on the continent He was delighted by the attention famously saying I wrote not to be fed but to be famous 29 He spent part of each year in London being feted as new volumes appeared Even after the publication of volumes three and four of Tristram Shandy his love of attention especially as related to financial success remained undiminished In one letter he wrote One half of the town abuse my book as bitterly as the other half cry it up to the skies the best is they abuse it and buy it and at such a rate that we are going on with a second edition as fast as possible 30 Baron Fauconberg rewarded Sterne by appointing him as the perpetual curate of Coxwold North Yorkshire in March 1760 31 In 1766 at the height of the debate about slavery the composer and former slave Ignatius Sancho wrote to Sterne 32 encouraging him to use his pen to lobby for the abolition of the slave trade 33 In July 1766 Sterne received Sancho s letter shortly after he had finished writing a conversation between his fictional characters Corporal Trim and his brother Tom in Tristram Shandy wherein Tom described the oppression of a black servant in a sausage shop in Lisbon that he had visited 34 Sterne s widely publicised response to Sancho s letter became an integral part of 18th century abolitionist literature 34 Foreign travel edit Further information Great Britain in the Seven Years War and France in the Seven Years War nbsp Sterne painted in watercolour by French artist Louis Carrogis Carmontelle ca 1762Sterne continued to struggle with his illness and departed England for France in 1762 in an effort to find a climate that would alleviate his suffering Sterne attached himself to a diplomatic party bound for Turin as England and France were still adversaries in the Seven Years War Sterne was gratified by his reception in France where reports of the genius of Tristram Shandy made him a celebrity Aspects of this trip to France were incorporated into Sterne s second novel A Sentimental Journey Through France and Italy 35 Eliza edit Early in 1767 Sterne met Eliza Draper the wife of an official of the East India Company while she was staying on her own in London 36 He was quickly captivated by Eliza s charm vivacity and intelligence and she did little to discourage his attentions 37 38 They met frequently and exchanged miniature portraits Sterne s admiration turned into an obsession which he took no trouble to conceal To his great distress Eliza had to return to India three months after their first meeting and he died from consumption a year later without seeing her again In 1768 Sterne published his Sentimental Journey which contains some extravagant references to her and the relationship though platonic aroused considerable interest He also wrote his Journal to Eliza part of which he sent to her and the rest of which came to light when it was presented to the British Museum in 1894 After Sterne s death Eliza allowed ten of his letters to be published under the title Letters from Yorick to Eliza and succeeded in suppressing her letters to him though some blatant forgeries were produced in a volume of Eliza s Letters to Yorick 39 Death edit Less than a month after Sentimental Journey was published Sterne died in his lodgings at 41 Old Bond Street on 18 March 1768 at the age of 54 40 He was buried in the churchyard of St George s Hanover Square on 22 March 41 It was rumoured that Sterne s body was stolen shortly after it was interred and sold to anatomists at Cambridge University Circumstantially it was said that his body was recognised by Charles Collignon who knew him 42 43 and discreetly reinterred him back in St George s in an unknown plot A year later a group of Freemasons erected a memorial stone with a rhyming epitaph near to his original burial place A second stone was erected in 1893 correcting some factual errors on the memorial stone When the churchyard of St George s was redeveloped in 1969 amongst 11 500 skulls disinterred several were identified with drastic cuts from anatomising or a post mortem examination One was identified to be of a size that matched a bust of Sterne made by Nollekens 44 45 The skull was held up to be his albeit with a certain area of doubt 46 Along with nearby skeletal bones these remains were transferred to Coxwold churchyard in 1969 by the Laurence Sterne Trust 47 48 49 The story of the reinterment of Sterne s skull in Coxwold is alluded to in Malcolm Bradbury s novel To the Hermitage 50 Works edit nbsp First editions of Tristram Shandy part of the collection of the Laurence Sterne Trust at Shandy HallThe works of Laurence Sterne are few in comparison to other eighteenth century authors of comparable stature 51 Sterne s early works were letters he had two sermons published in 1747 and 1750 and tried his hand at satire 52 He was involved in and wrote about local politics in 1742 52 His major publication prior to Tristram Shandy was the satire A Political Romance 1759 aimed at conflicts of interest within York Minster 52 A posthumously published piece on the art of preaching A Fragment in the Manner of Rabelais appears to have been written in 1759 53 Rabelais was by far Sterne s favourite author and in his correspondence he made clear that he considered himself as Rabelais successor in humour writing distancing himself from Jonathan Swift 54 55 Sterne s novel The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy Gentleman sold widely in England and throughout Europe 56 Translations of the work began to appear in all the major European languages almost immediately upon its publication and Sterne influenced European writers as diverse as Denis Diderot 57 and the German Romanticists 58 His work also had noticeable influence over Brazilian author Machado de Assis who made use of the digressive technique in the novel The Posthumous Memoirs of Bras Cubas 59 English writer and literary critic Samuel Johnson s verdict in 1776 was that Nothing odd will do long Tristram Shandy did not last 60 This is strikingly different from the views of European critics of the day who praised Sterne and Tristram Shandy as innovative and superior Voltaire called it clearly superior to Rabelais and later Goethe praised Sterne as the most beautiful spirit that ever lived 52 Swedish translator Johan Rundahl described Sterne as an arch sentimentalist 61 The title page to volume one includes a short Greek epigraph which in English reads Not things but opinions about things trouble men 62 Before the novel properly begins Sterne also offers a dedication to Lord William Pitt 63 He urges Pitt to retreat with the book from the cares of statecraft 64 The novel itself starts with the narration by Tristram of his own conception It proceeds mostly by what Sterne calls progressive digressions so that we do not reach Tristram s birth before the third volume 65 66 The novel is rich in characters and humour and the influences of Rabelais and Miguel de Cervantes are present throughout The novel ends after 9 volumes published over a decade but without anything that might be considered a traditional conclusion Sterne inserts sermons essays and legal documents into the pages of his novel and he explores the limits of typography and print design by including marbled pages and an entirely black page within the narrative 52 Many of the innovations that Sterne introduced adaptations in form that were an exploration of what constitutes the novel were highly influential to Modernist writers like James Joyce and Virginia Woolf and more contemporary writers such as Thomas Pynchon and David Foster Wallace 67 Italo Calvino referred to Tristram Shandy as the undoubted progenitor of all avant garde novels of our century 67 The Russian Formalist writer Viktor Shklovsky regarded Tristram Shandy as the archetypal quintessential novel the most typical novel of world literature 68 However the leading critical opinions of Tristram Shandy tend to be markedly polarised in their evaluations of its significance Since the 1950s following the lead of D W Jefferson there are those who argue that whatever its legacy of influence may be Tristram Shandy in its original context actually represents a resurgence of a much older Renaissance tradition of Learned Wit owing a debt to such influences as the Scriblerian approach 69 A Sentimental Journey Through France and Italy has many stylistic parallels with Tristram Shandy and the narrator is one of the minor characters from the earlier novel 70 Although the story is more straightforward A Sentimental Journey is interpreted by critics as part of the same artistic project to which Tristram Shandy belongs 71 Two volumes of Sterne s Sermons were published during his lifetime more copies of his Sermons were sold in his lifetime than copies of Tristram Shandy 72 The sermons however are conventional in substance 73 Several volumes of letters were published after his death as was Journal to Eliza 74 These collections of letters more sentimental than humorous tell of Sterne s relationship with Eliza Draper 75 Publications edit1743 The Unknown World Verses Occasioned by Hearing a Pass Bell disputed possibly written by Hubert Stogdon 76 1747 The Case of Elijah and the Widow of Zerephath 1750 The Abuses of Conscience 1759 A Political Romance 1759 Tristram Shandy vols 1 and 2 1760 The Sermons of Mr Yorick vol 1 and 2 1761 Tristram Shandy vols 3 6 1765 Tristram Shandy vols 7 and 8 1766 The Sermons of Mr Yorick vols 3 and 4 1767 Tristram Shandy vol 9 1768 A Sentimental Journey through France and Italy 1769 Sermons by the Late Rev Mr Sterne vols 5 7 a continuation of The Sermons of Mr Yorick 77 See also editList of abolitionist forerunners List of Irish writersCitations edit Keymer 2009 p xii Ross 2001 pp 20 21 a b Ross 2001 pp 22 23 Ross 2001 pp 23 24 Ross 2001 p 24 Clare 2016 pp 16 Clare 2016 pp 16 17 Clare 2016 pp 17 Ross 2001 p 33 Ross 2001 pp 29 30 Ross 2001 pp 36 37 Ross 2001 pp 43 44 Laurence Sterne s holy orders British Library Retrieved 7 February 2020 Sichel 1971 p 27 Laurence Sterne Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press 2004 doi 10 1093 ref odnb 26412 Retrieved 28 March 2017 Subscription or UK public library membership required Ross 2001 pp 48 49 Ross 2001 pp 58 60 Cross 1909 p 54 Cross 1909 p 37 Ross 2001 pp 45 47 Ross 2001 pp 64 70 168 174 Keymer 2009 pp 6 7 Ross 2001 pp 41 42 Vapereau 1876 p 1915 Ross 2001 pp 190 196 Howes 1971 p 60 Cross 1908 chap 8 The Publication of Tristram Shandy Volumes I and II p 197 Cross 1908 chap 8 The Publication of Tristram Shandy Volumes I and II p 178 Ross 2001 p 213 Fanning Christopher Sterne and print culture The Cambridge Companion to Laurence Sterne 125 141 The Letters of Laurence Sterne Part One 1739 1764 University Press of Florida 2009 pp 129 130 ISBN 978 0813032368 Howes 1971 p 55 Carey Brycchan March 2003 The extraordinary Negro Ignatius Sancho Joseph Jekyll and the Problem of Biography PDF Journal for Eighteenth Century Studies 26 1 1 13 doi 10 1111 j 1754 0208 2003 tb00257 x Retrieved 8 January 2013 Phillips Caryl December 1996 Director s Forward Ignatius Sancho an African Man of Letters London National Portrait Gallery p 12 a b Ignatius Sancho and Laurence Sterne PDF Norton The New Encyclopaedia Britannica Chicago Encyclopaedia Britannica 1985 pp 256 257 ISBN 0852294239 Ross 2001 p 360 Ross 2001 p 361 Sterne Laurence The Project Gutenberg EBook of the Journal to Eliza and Various letters Project Gutenberg Retrieved 10 February 2020 Sclater William Lutley 1922 Sterne s Eliza some account of her life in India with her letters written between 1757 and 1774 London W Heinemann pp 45 58 Ross 2001 p 415 Ross 2001 p 419 Arnold Catherine 2008 Necropolis London and Its Dead Simon and Schuster p contents ISBN 978 1847394934 Retrieved 11 November 2014 via Google Books Ross 2001 pp 419 420 Is this the skull of Sterne The Times 5 June 1969 Loftis Kellar amp Ulevich 2018 pp 220 227 Loftis Kellar amp Ulevich 2018 p 220 Green Carole 13 March 2009 Laurence Sterne BBC Retrieved 4 March 2020 Laurence Sterne and the Laurence Sterne Trust The Laurence Sterne Trust Laurence Sterne Trust Retrieved 4 March 2020 Alas Poor Yorick Letters The Times 16 June 1969 Kenneth Monkman Laurence Sterne Trust If we have reburied the wrong one nobody I feel beyond reasonable doubt would enjoy the situation more than Sterne Suciu Andreia Irina 2009 The Sense of History in Malcolm Bradbury s Work Economy Transdisciplinarity Cognition 2 152 160 ProQuest 757935757 New 1972 p 1083 a b c d e Washington 2017 p 333 New 1972 pp 1083 1091 Huntington Brown 1967 Rabelais in English literature pp 190 191 Cross 1908 chap 8 The Publication of Tristram Shandy Volumes I and II p 179 Cash 1975 p 296 Cash 1975 p 139 Large 2017 p 294 Barbosa 1992 p 28 James Boswell The Life of Samuel Johnson ed Malone vol II London 1824 p 422 de Voogd amp Neubauer 2004 p 118 Pierce amp de Voogd 1996 p 15 King 1995 p 293 Havard 2014 p 586 Descargues Grant 2006 Graham Thomas 17 June 2019 The best comic novel ever written BBC Retrieved 26 February 2020 a b Washington 2017 p 334 Gratchev amp Mancing 2019 p 139 Jefferson 1951 Keymer 2002 pp 4 11 Vivies 1994 pp 246 247 Line Anne Two Englishmen in France A Comparison of Laurence Sterne s Book 7 of Tristram Shandy and A Sentimental Journey University of Oslo Research Archive University of Oslo Retrieved 28 February 2020 Ross 2001 p 245 Pfister 2001 p 26 Keymer 2009 p xv Pfister 2001 p 15 New Melvyn 2011 The Unknown World The Poem Laurence Sterne Did Not Write Huntington Library Quarterly 74 1 85 98 doi 10 1525 hlq 2011 74 1 85 JSTOR 10 1525 hlq 2011 74 1 85 Sterne Laurence 1851 Works of Laurence Sterne Bohn References editBarbosa Maria Jose Somerlate May 1992 Sterne and Machado Parodic and Intertextual Play in Tristram Shandy and Memorias The Comparatist 16 24 48 doi 10 1353 com 1992 0014 JSTOR 44366842 S2CID 201767984 Cash Arthur H 1975 Laurence Sterne The Early amp Middle Years London Methuen amp Co ISBN 041682210X Clare David 2016 Under regarded Roots The Irish References in Sterne s Tristram Shandy The Irish Review 52 1 15 26 ISBN 9781782050629 Cross Wilbur L 1909 The Life and Times of Laurence Sterne New York The Macmillan Company p 53 Retrieved 10 February 2020 Laurence Sterne Stillington Rev Richard Levett Descargues Grant Madeleine 2006 The Obstetrics of Tristram Shandy Etudes anglaises 59 4 401 413 doi 10 3917 etan 594 0401 de Voogd Peter Neubauer John eds 2004 The Reception of Laurence Sterne in Europe London Thoemmes Continuum ISBN 0826461344 Retrieved 26 February 2020 Gratchev Slav N Mancing Howard eds 2019 Viktor Shklovsky s Heritage in Literature Arts and Philosophy Lanham Lexington Books ISBN 9781498597937 Retrieved 26 February 2020 Havard John Owen Summer 2014 Arbitrary Government Tristram Shandy and the Crisis of Whig History ELH 81 2 585 613 doi 10 1353 elh 2014 0015 JSTOR 24475634 S2CID 154424358 Howes Alan B ed 1971 Laurence Sterne The Critical Heritage London Routledge ISBN 0415134250 Retrieved 10 February 2020 Jefferson D W July 1951 Tristram Shandy and the Tradition of Learned Wit Essays in Criticism I 3 225 248 doi 10 1093 eic I 3 225 Retrieved 26 February 2020 Keymer Thomas 2009 The Cambridge Companion to Laurence Sterne Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521849722 Keymer Thomas 2002 Sterne the Moderns and the Novel New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0199245924 King Ross Summer 1995 Tristram Shandy and the Wound of Language Studies in Philosophy 92 3 291 310 JSTOR 4174520 Large Duncan 2017 Lorenz Sterne among German philosophers reception and influence PDF Textual Practice 31 2 283 297 doi 10 1080 0950236X 2016 1228847 S2CID 171978531 Loftis Sonya Freeman Kellar Allison Ulevich Lisa eds 2018 Shakespeare s Hamlet in an Era of Textual Exhaustion New York Routledge ISBN 9781315265537 Retrieved 4 March 2020 New Melvyn October 1972 Sterne s Rabelaisian Fragment A Text from the Holograph Manuscript PMLA 87 5 1083 1092 doi 10 2307 461185 JSTOR 461185 S2CID 163743375 Pfister Manfred 2001 Laurence Sterne Devon Northcote House Publishers ISBN 074630837X Pierce David de Voogd Peter eds 1996 Laurence Sterne in Modernism and Postmodernism Amsterdam Rodopi ISBN 9042000023 Retrieved 26 February 2020 Ross Ian Campbell 2001 Laurence Sterne A Life New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0192122355 Sichel Walter 1971 Sterne A Study New York Haskell House Publishers Retrieved 7 February 2020 Vapereau Gustave 1876 Dictionnaire universal des litteratures Paris Librairie Hachette p 1915 Retrieved 10 February 2020 Venn John Venn J A eds 1927 Alumni Cantabrigienses London Cambridge University Press Retrieved 10 February 2020 Vivies Jean 1994 A Sentimental Journey or Reading Rewarded PDF Bulletin de la societe d etudes anglo americaines des XVIIe et XVIIIe siecles 38 Retrieved 12 February 2020 Washington Ellis 2017 The Progressive Revolution History of Liberal Fascism through the Ages Lanham Hamilton Books ISBN 9780761868507 Retrieved 26 February 2020 Further reading editRene Bosch Labyrinth of Digressions Tristram Shandy as Perceived and Influenced by Sterne s Early Imitators Amsterdam 2007 W M Thackeray in English Humourists of the Eighteenth Century London 1853 new edition New York 1911 Percy Fitzgerald Life of Laurence Sterne London 1864 second edition London 1896 Paul Stapfer Laurence Sterne sa personne et ses ouvrages second edition Paris 1882 H D Traill Laurence Sterne English Men of Letters London 1882 H D Traill Sterne Harper amp Brothers Publishers Retrieved 22 March 2018 via Internet Archive Texte Rousseau et le cosmopolitisme littoraire au XVIIIeme siecle Paris 1895 H W Thayer Laurence Sterne in Germany New York 1905 P E More Shelburne Essays third series New York 1905 L S Benjamin Life and Letters two volumes 1912 Rousseau George S 2004 Nervous Acts Essays on Literature Culture and Sensibility Basingstoke Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 1 4039 3454 1External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Laurence Sterne nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Laurence Sterne nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Laurence Sterne Works by Laurence Sterne in eBook form at Standard Ebooks Works by Laurence Sterne at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Laurence Sterne at Internet Archive Works by Laurence Sterne at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Tristram Shandy beta In Our Time BBC Radio 4 Laurence Sterne at the Google Books Search Laurence Sterne at Curlie Tristram Shandy Annotated with bibliography criticism Ron Schuler s Parlour Tricks The Scrapbook Mind of Laurence Sterne The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy amp A Sentimental Journey Munich Edited by Gunter Jurgensmeier 2005 The Shandean A Journal Devoted to the Works of Laurence Sterne tables of contents available online Laurence Sterne at the National Portrait Gallery London The Laurence Sterne Trust Laurence Sterne at Library of Congress with 182 library catalogue records Anonymous parodies of the kinds of letters written by Elizabeth Draper to Laurence Sterne as Yorick MSS SC 4 L Tom Perry Special Collections Harold B Lee Library Brigham Young University Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Laurence Sterne amp oldid 1181128473, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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