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Reference
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Cambridge History
>
The Period of the French Revolution
>
The Growth of the Later Novel
> Tales for the Young
The Absentee; Ormond
Charlotte Smith; Regina Maria Roche; Eaton Stannard Barrett
CONTENTS
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VOLUME CONTENTS
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BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
Volume XI. The Period of the French Revolution.
XIII.
The Growth of the Later Novel
.
§ 13. Tales for the Young.
Still, there are some, who, whether in gratitude for benefits bestowed upon their first childhood or because of the approach of their second, regard the third division of Maria Edgeworths work not merely with most affection but with most positive and critical admiration. The supremest grace of congruity which has been granted to the Irish books and passages must, indeed, again be denied to this third group, at least as universally present. No schoolboys, and certainly no Eton schoolboys, ever talked like the personages of
Eton Montem;
and the personal crotchets of her father and the general crotchets of his school too frequently appear. One is sometimes reminded of the bad, though oftener of the good, side of Edgeworths friend Day in dealing with similar subjects. But, the fact remains that, in
The Parents Assistant
(17961801) and
Early Lessons
(1801), in
Moral Tales
(1801) and
Popular Tales
(1804),
Frank
(1822) and
Harry and Lucy
(1825), real children, save for a few touches in Shakespeare and still fewer elsewhere, first appearnot the little misses and little masters of her own earlier times, but children, authentic, independent of fashion and alive. It is not in the least necessary to be a child-worshipper in order to see this: it is only necessary to be what, perhaps, is not so common, a person who has eyes. Rosamund, whose charm may, possibly, be enhanced by the contrast of her very detestable mamma; Frederick, in
The Mimic;
Frank himself, in not a few of his appearances, both earlier and later, not to mention many others, are examples of that strange power of fiction in reconciling, and more than reconciling, us to what might be tedious in fact. You might, in real life, after a short time, at any rate, wish that their nurses would fetch themon paper, they are a joy for ever. While, as for strict narrative faculty, the lady who could write both
Simple Susan
and
lAmie Inconnue,
with the unmawkish simplicity of the first and the unmannerised satire of the second, had it as it has been possessed by very few indeed of her class.
25
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Absentee; Ormond
Charlotte Smith; Regina Maria Roche; Eaton Stannard Barrett
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