Today in fiction
On Feb. 27, 1800, Hetty gives birth to Arthur's child.
-- "Adam Bede" (1859)
by George Eliot
From "The Book of Fictional Days"
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Today in Literary History "Let us love! Let us love! in this fugitive hour,
Let us hasten, enjoy!
Man has no port, time has no shore
It flows, and we pass! ... "
The Alpine retreat where Lamartine wrote the poem was not many miles or years away from the English Romantics -- Shelley's "Mont Blanc," or the "Frankenstein" evenings of the Shelleys and Lord Byron at Lake Geneva. Byron was an inspirational figure in French literary and political life -- Lamartine wrote a fifth canto for Byron's "Childe Harold's Pilgrimage" -- and his death in the Greek independence struggles provided a model of Romantic idealism married to political commitment. In the end, Lamartine's politics proved to be all too idealistic: Though only appointed to the provisional government in February, and though confirmed by election in April, his proletarian leanings had him ousted by June. When he ran for the presidency of the Second Republic against Louis-Napoleon he came last in a field of five; when Louis-Napoleon moved up to emperor, Lamartine retreated to his family estates, and his writing.
-- Steve King
To find out more about "Today in Literary History," email Steve King.
