Liber Amoris, Or, The New Pygmalion by William Hazlitt
Okay, let's set the scene. It's the 1820s. William Hazlitt, a respected essayist and critic in his forties, takes lodgings in London. His landlord's daughter, Sarah Walker, is about nineteen. What starts as a friendly acquaintance explodes into an all-consuming obsession for Hazlitt. 'Liber Amoris' is his record of it – a messy blend of real diary entries, feverish letters, and reconstructed conversations he published under a thin veil of fiction.
The Story
The 'plot' is simple: a man falls desperately in love and watches his own life unravel. We follow Hazlitt (called 'H' in the book) as he becomes fixated on Sarah. He idealizes her, calling her a perfect, angelic being. He hangs on her every smile and casual remark, interpreting them as secret signals of love. Then, the doubt creeps in. Is she just being kind? Is she seeing someone else? The book becomes a cycle of ecstatic hope and crushing despair. He proposes; she deflects. He rants to friends; he writes her frantic letters. It's a real-time map of a heart and mind in freefall, ending not with romantic closure, but with exhausted, bitter resignation.
Why You Should Read It
This book is fascinating because it's so embarrassingly human. Hazlitt doesn't paint himself as a noble lover. He shows us his pettiness, his jealousy, his pathetic neediness. As a reader, you're not swooning; you're watching a car crash in slow motion, equal parts horrified and sympathetic. It strips away all the pretty lies we tell about 'grand passions.' This isn't Romeo and Juliet; it's a brilliant, lonely man making a public spectacle of his private agony. It feels shockingly modern in its psychological nakedness. You read it and think, 'Oh god, I've felt a tiny bit of that irrationality before.' It’s a cautionary tale about the stories we tell ourselves in love.
Final Verdict
This isn't a feel-good romance. It's for readers who love messy, true-to-life psychology over neat plots. Perfect for anyone who's ever enjoyed a memoir of personal disaster, or fans of novels about obsessive, unreliable narrators. If you like your historical figures polished and heroic, steer clear. But if you want to see a great mind brought low by a very ordinary human emotion, laid bare with zero vanity, then this unique, uncomfortable, and unforgettable book is for you. Think of it as the 19th-century version of a brutally honest blog post that went viral for all the wrong reasons.
This is a copyright-free edition. Knowledge should be free and accessible.
William Smith
2 months agoGiven the current trends in this field, it addresses the common misconceptions in a very professional manner. Finally, a source that prioritizes accuracy over hype.
Paul Thomas
1 year agoA must-have for graduate-level students in this discipline.
Matthew Gonzalez
1 month agoThis digital copy caught my eye due to its reputation, the emphasis on ethics and sustainability within the topic is commendable. It definitely lives up to the reputation of the publisher.
Thomas Taylor
1 year agoI stumbled upon this title during my weekend research and the historical context mentioned in the early chapters is quite enlightening. A solid investment for anyone's personal development.
Mary Anderson
8 months agoI decided to give this a try based on a colleague's recommendation, the way the author breaks down the core concepts is remarkably clear. It cleared up a lot of the confusion I had previously.