In volume VIII, the materials of 1820 include E. J. Trelawny's account and commonplace book of 1820?1822; letters by Keats and others mentioning him; hitherto established letters from Peacock and others relevant to Shelley's debt to a Bath upholstery firm; Shelley's annotations in copies of Godwin's Political Justice and Spinoza's Traclatus Theologico-Politicus; three newly discovered letters of Shelley to his Florentine banker, as well as other important letters by Shelley, Godwin, and Leigh Hunt; and a web of correspondence between Teresa Guiccioli and Byron while they carried on their affair from different apartments in the Palazzo Guiccioli.
These primary materials, all meticulously transcribed (those in Italian and Latin also accompanied by full translations) are complemented by detailed commentaries on events, people, ideas, and problems reused by the manuscripts, as well as by the following major essays: ?Shelley as Athanase? by Donald H. Reiman; ?Countesses and Cobblers' Wives: Byron's Venetian Mistresses? by Doucet Devin Fischer; ?Mixed Company: Byron's Beppo and the Italian Medley? by Jerome J. McGann; ?Countess Guiccioli's Byron? by Doucet Devin Fischer; ?Trelawny's Lost Years? by William St. Clair; and ?Shelley and the Upholsterers of Bath? by Donald H. Reiman.
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