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Reread these for pleasure, after some years. Gronow was a professional dandy, who was quite young at the time of the Regency, so his reminiscences are in fact colored by later experience--he gets some of the language wrong . . . in the same way that Georgette Heyer does. All of a sudden, a lot of Heyer's Regency tales spring into focus after I reread this. For example, Gronow talks about the bon ton, a phrase that I haven't found anywhere before the 1820s or so, though the OED gives an example or two. "Ton" during the Regency--in all the letters and diaries, and in Jane Austen--meant style, it was not a designation for the Upper Ten Thousand until later.
I know, picky picky picky. Gronow is far more entertaining than Harriett Wilson; his style is wry, the details fascinating. But then Wilson was writing to defend herself (and to make money) and Gronow was just reminiscing. He was also witty, and Wilson . . . wasn't.
Anyway, highly recommended for anyone who loves Regency era romances and comedies of manners.