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This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1914 edition. Excerpt: ... CHAPTER V The Narrative Technique Of "The Counterfeit Lady" Kirkman's statement that he had gathered " all that hath been written of her," is true as to the more important writings about Mary. He had before him "A Westminster Wedding," John Carleton's " Ultimum Vale," the " Life and Character" (comprising Mary's " Case " and the " Appendix "), and the " Memoires." 1 Having mastered these books, he strove to compose one which should surpass each of them in fullness, coherence, and verisimilitude. To make his readers believe that he was a cautious historian, Kirkman often admits that he is uninformed or uncertain about some details of Mary's life. He cannot explain what led this girl, with her head full of romances, to marry a humble shoemaker; "what ever she conceited I know not," he confesses, "but married she was to one Stedman, a gentleman of the gentle craft." She ran away from Stedman, "but whether it was to Barbadoes or what other place, I cannot learn." Then she married Day, but "what means she used to manage this affair I know not." Whether, on her flight to the continent, " it was France or Holland where she first landed, I know not." Some of the 1 Counterfeit Lady, pp. 67-81. -- Cf. ibid., pp. 15, 27, 74, 76, 93, 95, 107, with Ultimum Vale, pp. 11, 17, 20, 25, 28, 29, 33, 37, 38. --The link with which the author of the Life and Character joined the Appendix to the Case is followed verbatim in The Counterfeit Lady, pp. 66-67. The Case is mentioned on pp. vi and 27, and both it and the Appendix are constantly borrowed from. -- The Memoires are mentioned on p. 180, and followed from there to the end. -- The Memories Kirkman does not seem to have used. thefts she is accused of he doubts, and in one case he reports two accounts of a...
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Excerpt from The Mary Carleton Narratives, 1663-1673: A Missing Chapter in the History of the English Novel Since in fiction itself no direct development toward the modern realistic novel has been found, historians have sought it in other literary types of the seventeenth century. The influence that the century exercised on the growth of prose fiction, says Mr. Raleigh, the foundations it laid for the coming novel, are to be sought, not in the writers of romance, but in the followers of other branches of literature, often remote enough from fiction, in satirists and allegorists, newspaper scribes and biographers, writers of travel and adventure, and fashionable comic playwrights. For the novel least of all forms of literature can boast a pure extrac tion; it is of a mixed and often disreputable ancestry. 2 To complete the list of the novelist's predecessors, one should mention the writers of the character, of the familiar and the imaginary letter, of the conduct book, and of the moral essay.3 In many of these forms, the second half of the seven teenth century developed traits recognizably similar to vari ous elements of the coming novel. The prevalent theory is, then, that by observing such traits, for example, the realistic expression of passion in The Portuguese Letters or the conversational vigor of Restoration comedy, and thereupon combining them in a new way, novelists learned their art. About the Publisher Forgotten Books publishes hundreds of thousands of rare and classic books. Find more at www.forgottenbooks.com This book is a reproduction of an important historical work. Forgotten Books uses state-of-the-art technology to digitally reconstruct the work, preserving the original format whilst repairing imperfections present in the aged copy. In rare cases, an imperfection in the original, such as a blemish or missing page, may be replicated in our edition. We do, however, repair the vast majority of imperfections successfully; any imperfections that remain are intentionally left to preserve the state of such historical works.
Mary Carleton, commonly known as the German Princess, was a scandalous celebrity in Restoration London. Her notoriety arose from her 1663 trial and acquittal for bigamy, which became the occasion of the publication of The Case of Madam Mary Carleton. Here she narrates her version of her life as a 'German Princess', the daughter of the Earl of Cologne, though by most accounts she was born Mary Moders, the daughter of a Canterbury fiddler who married first a Canterbury shoemaker, Thomas Steadman, and then a surgeon, Thomas Day. Within her own time, Carleton was the subject of more than twenty-six pamphlets published in 1663 and 1673; this volume reprints Carleton's own The Case of Madam Mary Carleton along with representative selections of pamphlets written about her. Her trial produced its own 'pamphlet war' between Mary and her husband John and her story inspired a play and a mock epic, which significantly responded to Carleton's own emphasis on performance and epic romance in fashioning her aristocratic identity.
The shared aim of these important new critical interventions into the early modern period is to make fresh feminist attempts to uncover the writings of Elizabethan and Jacobean women. Subject to silence, censorship and manipulation in the terms of overriding political concerns of the day, the feminist history of the early modern period is still a largely unwritten story. New feminist analysis can expose the conditions of production in which the history of the period was constructed: this revealing new Collection thereby exposes the untold stories which underpin the official texts. By beginning to explore this period from women's point of view, Women, Texts and Histories shows the crucial and fascinating ways in which women's writing may undermine many of the received assumptions on which the history of the period has depended.
This title investigates and documents fascinating accounts written by 17th-century Englishwomen, which explore the shifting relationships between past and future.