The Review of English Studies Advance Access originally published online on February 9, 2007
The Review of English Studies 2007 58(237):669-683; doi:10.1093/res/hgl155
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© The Author 2007. Published by Oxford University Press 2007; all rights reserved
Elia, the Real: The Original of Lamb's Nom De Plume
Doshisha University, Kyoto
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In August 1820 Charles Lamb began using the pseudonym Elia in the London Magazine, and it was as Elia that he produced the body of work on which his reputation as one of the great English essayists largely rests. In June 1821 he revealed to his publisher, John Taylor, that there had been an ELIA, the real from whom he usurped the name. This real Elia, who has–oddly, but revealingly–not been investigated by Lamb scholars, was the minor littérateur Felix Elia, or Ellia, born in London, like Lamb, in 1775. He died in 1820, approximately one month after Lamb's usurpation of his name: one of the strangest coincidences in English literary history. This article provides an account of the life and work of Felix Ellia, then proceeds to consider his relationship to the fictional Elia of the London Magazine, and Lamb's reasons for using the name.