216p PERSEPHONE
BOOKS ISBN 1903155223
This book about Thomas and Jane Carlyle's
life together at 5 (now 24) Cheyne Row, Chelsea was written
in the 1960s
by a former actress who was then living there as co-custodian
of the house with her husband. The Carlyles at Home evokes
everyday life from the day the Carlyles moved in, in 1834,
until Jane's death in 1866. Each of the eleven chapters
describes different aspects of the house, whether it is
yet another builders' drama or a maid giving birth in the
china closet while 'Mr Carlyle was taking tea in the dining-room
with Miss Jewsbury talking to him!!! Just a thin small
door between!'
The door is seen, open, on the endpapers reproducing 'A
Chelsea Interior', painted to be 'amazingly interesting
to Posterity a hundred years hence'. The New Statesman called
this 'a delightful reissue', the Scotsman 'a small,
intimate book which deals neatly and sympathetically with
the Carlyles' life in Chelsea' and the Sunday Telegraph Magazine
published a four page article by Maureen Cleave about the
house and this 'delightful' book. The Carlyles at Home,
said the Independent on Sunday, is 'replete with
incident, whether in the form of difficult, demanding neighbours,
sullen maids, itinerant geniuses or constant artistic and
financial worries.'
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| 'A Chelsea Interior',
Robert Tait 1857 © The National Trust |
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