
PREFATORY NOTE.
H.D.T. - STERNE. - CHAPTER I. - BIRTH, PARENTAGE, AND EARLY YEARS.
CHAPTER II. - SCHOOL AND UNIVERSITY.—HALIFAX AND CAMBRIDGE.
CHAPTER III. - LIFE AT SUTTON.—MARRIAGE.—THE PARISH PRIEST.
CHAPTER IV. - "TRISTRAM SHANDY," VOLS. I. AND II.
CHAPTER V. - LONDON TRIUMPHS.—FIRST SET OF SERMONS.—"TRISTRAM SHANDY," VOLS. III. AND IV.—COXWOLD.—VOLS. V. AND VI.—FIRST VISIT TO THE CONTINENT.—PARIS.—TOULOUSE.
CHAPTER VI. - LIFE IN THE SOUTH.—RETURN TO ENGLAND.—VOLS. VII. AND VIII.—SECOND SET OF SERMONS.
CHAPTER VII. - FRANCE AND ITALY.—MEETING WITH WIFE AND DAUGHTER.—RETURN TO ENGLAND.—"TRISTRAM SHANDY," VOL. IX.—"THE SENTIMENTAL JOURNEY."
CHAPTER VIII. - LAST DAYS AND DEATH.
CHAPTER IX. - STERNE AS A WRITER.—THE CHARGE OF PLAGIARISM.—DR. FERRIAR'S "ILLUSTRATIONS."
A careful portrait emerges from the fragments that survive of Laurence Sterne’s life. The author weaves together the scant autobiographical notes Sterne left for his daughter, a trove of letters, and the occasional contemporary reference, turning what might be a patchwork of facts into a coherent narrative. Readers learn why earlier attempts at a full biography fell short and how this new work builds on the diligent research of previous scholars, offering fresh insight while acknowledging the inevitable gaps.
The story begins with Sterne’s birth in 1713, set against the backdrop of a disbanded regiment returning from the Treaty of Utrecht. His father, a former subaltern, faced sudden unemployment, while his mother’s modest fortune and the family’s respectable Yorkshire roots provided a precarious safety net. Tracing his lineage to a former Archbishop of York, the book sketches the social and political currents that shaped the young Sterne’s early world, hinting at the wit and restlessness that would later define his literary voice.
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (312K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-04-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1842–1900
A sharp Victorian man of letters, he moved easily between satire, criticism, biography, and journalism. His career touched major British papers and magazines, but his writing is often remembered for its wit, range, and literary intelligence.
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