Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- 1 The Burney family
- 2 Evelina and Cecilia
- 3 Camilla and The Wanderer
- 4 Burney as dramatist
- 5 Journals and letters
- 6 Burney and politics
- 7 Burney and gender
- 8 Burney and society
- 9 Burney and the literary marketplace
- 10 The afterlife and further reading
- Further reading
- Index
- Series List
1 - The Burney family
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 September 2007
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- 1 The Burney family
- 2 Evelina and Cecilia
- 3 Camilla and The Wanderer
- 4 Burney as dramatist
- 5 Journals and letters
- 6 Burney and politics
- 7 Burney and gender
- 8 Burney and society
- 9 Burney and the literary marketplace
- 10 The afterlife and further reading
- Further reading
- Index
- Series List
Summary
A few weeks before he died in December 1784, the great lexicographer and essayist Samuel Johnson wrote a short note to his friend Charles Burney which he ends by sending his respects 'to dear Doctor Burney, and all the dear Burneys little and great'. Johnson, without a family himself, was intrigued by and enamoured of the Burneys, 'little and great'. By 1784, the family comprised Charles Burney, the musician and scholar, and his second wife Elizabeth, along with their combined household of six children from Charles's first marriage and the two much younger children from his second. The second Mrs Burney also had three children from her first marriage. Such a blended family of siblings, half-siblings and step-siblings was not unusual, but the Burneys appear to have been peculiarly close-knit, drawn together by the powerful personality of their father. Johnson declared of them, 'I love all of that breed whom I can be said to know, and one or two whom I hardly know I love upon credit, and love them because they love each other.'
The Burneys were a talented clan of musicians, writers, scholars, geographers and artists. And their shared habit of 'journalising', recording their encounters in vivid, as-they-happened letters and diaries that were written for each other but with an awareness, too, of their potential historical significance, has ensured that they will never be forgotten. Between them, the Burneys left behind more than 10,000 items of correspondence. Reading through this enormous written record is to be entertained by an everyday saga of family life that is not so very different from our own: Dr Burney is mugged, his house is burgled, and his daughters fall out with their stepmother.
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- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Frances Burney , pp. 7 - 22Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2007