This celebrated seven-volume biography (18378) draws on personal accounts of Sir Walter Scott (17711832), correspondence and autobiographical sketches.As son-in-law and literary executor to Sir Walter Scott (17711832), John Gibson Lockhart (17941854) was uniquely placed to produce a definitive biography of the great poet and novelist. This celebrated seven-volume work, published in 18378, is based on personal memories, correspondence, and Scott's own autobiographical sketches.As son-in-law and literary executor to Sir Walter Scott (17711832), John Gibson Lockhart (17941854) was uniquely placed to produce a definitive biography of the great poet and novelist. This celebrated seven-volume work, published in 18378, is based on personal memories, correspondence, and Scott's own autobiographical sketches.As son-in-law and literary executor to Sir Walter Scott (17711832), John Gibson Lockhart (17941854) was uniquely placed to produce a definitive biography of the great poet and novelist. First published in 18378, shortly after Scott's death, this celebrated seven-volume work is based on personal memories, correspondence, and Scott's own autobiographical sketches. Wide-ranging in his purview, Lockhart is also detailed in his descriptions: the Aberdeen Journal of the day observed that the volumes trace Scott's life and literary efforts with 'the most minute distinctness'. Volume 3 opens in 1812 with an account of 'one of the busiest summers of Scott's busy life', during which he finally moved into his beloved Abbotsford. Incorporating extracts from Scott's correspondence with the English poet George Crabbe, this volume covers the period in which Scott finished Waverley (1814) and published in verse The Field of Waterloo (1815).1. The 'flitting' to Abbotsford; 2. Affairs of John Ballantyne and Co.; 3. Insanity of Henry Weber; 4. Voyage to the Shetland Isles, etc.; 5. Diary on board the lighthouse yacht continued; 6. Diary continued; 7. Diary continued; 8. Diary coló!