In 1845 and 1846, Charles Lewis Meryon published the two three-volume sets "The Memoirs of the Lady Hester Stanhope and The Travels of the Lady Hester Stanhope", which are still the most
important source for the early life and first travels of Lady Hester. Towards the end of his life, he wrote the Additional Memoirs for the years 1819-1820, the manuscript of which has lain
virtually untouched and unknown for the last 150 years. "The Additional Memoirs" contains invaluable and fascinating new information about the life-not only of Lady Hester, covering in addition
to the period 1819-1820 anecdotes and stories from the rest of her life-but also of Meryon himself, finally solving the mystery behind his lengthy and time-consuming journey back to Lebanon in
1819 and the reasons why he left Lady Hester again almost immediately upon arrival. Many have speculated on the reasons for this journey and why it came to such an abrupt end, and now Meryon
himself tells the whole story in his own words. "The Additional Memoirs" is essential eye-witness reading for anyone with an interest in nineteenth-century England and Europe, Middle East
travel, and the Stanhope family. "The Memoirs" is a companion volume to Mark Guscin’s "A Very Good Sort of Man: A Life of Dr Charles Lewis Meryon (1783-1877), Physician to Lady Hester Stanhope"
(ISBN 9781845198725). [Subject: History, Biography, Women’s Studies]