Skip navigation
London Review of Books Christmas Books

Tousy-Mousy subscriber-only content

Anne Barton

  • Mary Shelley by Miranda Seymour
  • Mary Shelley in Her Times edited by Betty Bennett and Stuart Curran
  • Mary Shelley's Fictions edited by Michael Eberle-Sinatra

Richard Holmes published Shelley: The Pursuit in 1974. More than a decade later, in Footsteps: Adventures of a Romantic Biographer (1985), he recalled how obsessive his engagement gradually became, not just with Shelley, but with that whole group of English expatriates associated with him, as it moved from Geneva through Italy – Bagni di Lucca, Este, Venice, Rome, Naples, Ravenna, Pisa – shedding some members and adding others, before finally disintegrating when Shelley and Edward Williams were drowned off Leghorn in July 1822. Shortly thereafter, Byron and Trelawny embarked for Greece, Mary Shelley’s troubled and troubling step-sister Claire Clairmont departed to become a governess in Russia, and in 1823 Mary and her last surviving child returned to the England she had not seen since 1818. ‘The pursuit,’ Holmes confessed,

became so intense, so demanding of my own emotions that it continuously threatened to get out of hand. When I travelled alone I craved after intimacy with my subject, knowing all the time that I must maintain an objective and judicial stance. I came often to feel excluded, left behind, shut out from the magic circle of his family. I wanted to get in among them, to partake in their daily life, to understand what Shelley called ‘the deep truth’ of their situation . . . Indeed I came to suspect that there is something frequently comic about the trailing figure of the biographer: a sort of tramp permanently knocking at the kitchen window and secretly hoping he might be invited in for supper.

subscriber-only content Subscribers to the print edition can log in to view the entire article. For information about subscribing to the London Review of Books click here. This article is available for purchase online. Buy this article.

Anne Barton, a fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, is the author, most recently, of Essays, Mainly Shakespearean and a study of Byron’s Don Juan.

LRB cover artwork

From the archive

Four-Day Caesar
Mary Beard: Tacitus and the Emperors

Call me Ahab
Jeremy Harding on Moby-Dick

Where Does He Come From?
Sanjay Subrahmanyam: Placing V.S. Naipaul

Take a pig’s head, add one spoonful of medium rage
Iain Bamforth on the poetry of Günter Grass

Landlocked
Lorna Sage on Henry Green