Living in Genoa with Teresa, Byron's liveliest correspondence was with John Murray, Kinnaird, Hobhouse, and Moore. Of interest are his frank letters to Lady Hardy, those to Trelawny and Mary Shelley, and a growing number to Leigh Hunt and his brother John (publisher of The Liberal and Byron's poems after his break with Murray) on Don Juan .
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Living in Genoa with Teresa, Byron's liveliest correspondence was with John Murray, Kinnaird, Hobhouse, and Moore. Of interest are his frank letters to Lady Hardy, those to Trelawny and Mary Shelley, and a growing number to Leigh Hunt and his brother John (publisher of The Liberal and Byron's poems after his break with Murray) on Don Juan .
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Seller's Description:
Good in Good jacket. 6" x 8.75" Prior owner's name inked on first page upper right corner, else pages clean; binding tight; moderate wear to dustjacket. 288 pages. Volume I: In My Hot Youth.