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James Cotter Morison was also the author of biographies of Thomas Babington Macaulay and Edward Gibbon.
This work, first published in 1863 by the Victorian essayist and political reformer James Cotter Morison (1832-88), presents a vivid and lively account of the twelfth-century reformer Saint Bernard and his tumultuous era, from the foundation of the Abbey of Clairvaux to the preaching of the Second Crusade.
Described by his biographer as the author of 'monumental and supreme' histories, Edward Gibbon (1737-94) is widely acknowledged as a major figure of the Enlightenment and the father of modern historical scholarship. However, despite these epithets, the personal life of one of the eighteenth century's most successful authors remains unknown to many of his readers. Published in the first series of English Men of Letters in 1878 (and going into a second edition in the same year), this biography by James Cotter Morison (1832-88) provides a learned but accessible account of the man who wrote The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. Starting with a childhood plagued by ill health and infirmity, and covering Gibbon's time in the militia and travelling on the Grand Tour, Morison leads readers through a life which was apparently unremarkable, but in fact resulted in a work of enduring scholarly achievement.
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