A Simple StoryAfter its publication in early 1791, A Simple Story was widely read in England and abroad, going into a second edition in March of the same year. The novel’s young heroine, Miss Milner, scandalously declares herself in love with her guardian, Dorriforth, a Catholic priest. Dorriforth returns her love and is released from his vows. Though the pair go on to marry, the second half of the novel reveals the disastrous and far-reaching consequences of Miss Milner’s subsequent adulterous affair. The critical introduction to this Broadview edition considers such issues as Catholicism, theatricality, the theatre, and the masquerade, while the appendices provide a wide selection of cultural, biographical, and literary contexts for the novel. |
From inside the book
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... perhaps , have been more advisable than in London , but my sisters did not like to accompany me , and I did not like to leave them behind.1 Her strong reaction illustrates the unusual closeness felt by the entire family , a bond that ...
... perhaps more so , or indeed more so , than anyone in her circle " ( 299 ) , and Inchbald's informal statement that girls are actually " inclined to literature " was probably more sincere than the apology she makes in her Preface . Her ...
... perhaps to keep readers from sympathizing too much with ( or , perhaps , from imi- tating ) her behavior . As a novelist , Inchbald was following the legacies of Samuel Richardson and Henry Fielding , who defined their own work in ...
... perhaps the best evidence that A Simple Story was written over a period of many years is found in the evolving literary form of the novel itself . The two very different halves of A Simple Story illustrate how quickly novelistic ...
... perhaps the most notable example . During Mary's three - year reign , 280 heretics were burned at the stake in an attempt to reestablish the supremacy of Catholicism . More than a century later , in 1685 , James II ( a convert to ...
Contents
11 | |
A Brief Chronology | 47 |
Inchbalds Other Writings | 343 |
EighteenthCentury Reception of A Simple | 369 |