Front cover image for Walsingham, or, The pupil of nature

Walsingham, or, The pupil of nature

Mary Shelley's Frankenstein is the single most widely read work of the English Romantic period, yet the author's other works remain relatively unknown. This is the first collection of all her novels, travel writing, journalism and prefaces. The edition makes a major contribution to the study of nineteenth-century English literature
eBook, English, ©2003
Broadview Press, Peterborough, ON, ©2003
Fiction
1 online resource (559 pages).
785196272
AcknowledgmentsIntroductionMary Darby Robinson: A Brief ChronologyA Note on the TextIndex to the PoetryWalsinghamAppendix A: Contemporary Reviews (1798) 1. The Monthly Review 2. The Critical Review 3. The Analytical Review 4. The Anti-Jacobin 5. The Monthly Magazine and British Register 6. The Monthly Mirror 7. The Monthly Visitor 8. British CriticAppendix B: Accounts of Real Eighteenth-Century Female-to-Male Cross-Dressers 1. Mrs. Charlotte Charke, A Narrative of the Life of Charlotte Charke (1755) 2. [Henry Fielding], The Female Husband (1746) 3. Anon, The Female Soldier (1750) 4. Giovanni Bianchi, An Historical and Physical Dissertation on the Case of Catherine Vizzani (1751)Appendix C: Fictional Eighteenth-Century Cross-Dressers 1. Selina Davenport, English Forbearance and Italian Vengeance (1828) 2. Miss A. Kendal, Tales of the Abbey (1800) 3. Sophia Lee, The Two Emilies (1798)Appendix D: Fictional Leniency Towards Sexually Fallen Woman 1. Miss Street, The Recluse of the Appenines (1793) 2. Sophia Woodfall, Frederick Montravers (1803) 3. Mary Robinson, The Natural Daughter (1799) 4. Elizabeth Helme, The Farmer of Inglewood Forest (1796) 5. Amelia Opie, The Father and Daughter (1800)Select Bibliography and Works Cited
In English, Originally published in English
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