Castle Rackrent

Castle Rackrent

by Maria Edgeworth
Castle Rackrent

Castle Rackrent

by Maria Edgeworth

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Overview

The story of the Edgeworth Family, if it were properly told, should be as long as the ARABIAN NIGHTS themselves; the thousand and one cheerful intelligent members of the circle, the amusing friends and relations, the charming surroundings, the cheerful hospitable home, all go to make up an almost unique history of a county family of great parts and no little character. The Edgeworths were people of good means and position, and their rental, we are told, amounted to nearly L3000 a year. At one time there was some talk of a peerage for Mr. Edgeworth, but he was considered too independent for a peerage. The family tradition seems to have been unconven-tional and spirited always. There are records still extant in the present Mr. Edgeworth's possession, - papers of most wonderful vitality for parchment, - where you may read passionate remonstrances and adjurations from great-grandfathers to great-great-grandfathers, and where great-great-grandmothers rush into the discussion with vehement spelling and remonstrance, and make matters no better by their interference.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940000762400
Publisher: B&R Samizdat Express
Publication date: 01/01/2009
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 275 KB

About the Author

Kathryn Kirkpatrick is Assistant Professor at the Department of English, Appalachian State University.

Table of Contents

Preface vii

A Note on the Text xi

List of Illustrations xii

The Text of Castle Rackrent 1

Preface 5

Castle Rackrent 9

Continuation of the Memoirs of the Rackrent Family 28

Glossary 63

Backgrounds and Contexts 79

Letters 83

To Fanny Robinson, August 1782 83

To Fanny Robinson, September 15, 1783 84

To Miss Sophy Ruxton, January 29, 1800 84

Richard Lovell Edgeworth to David Augustus Beaufort, April 26, 1800 84

To Miss. Mary Sneyd, September 27, 1802 85

To Michael Pakenham Edgeworth, February 19, 1834 85

To Mrs, Stark, September 6, 1834 86

Reception and Reviews 87

The Monthly Review: Ireland, May 1800 87

The British Critic: Novels, November 1800 88

Joseph Cooper Walker: Letter, November 23, 1800 89

Edinburgh Review: [The Irish Novel], October 1830-January 1831 89

W. B. Yeats: [Miss Edgeworth], 1891 91

Biography 93

Lord Byron: [Reading the Edgeworths], January 19, 1821 93

Gentleman's Magazine: Miss Edgeworth, July-December 1849 94

[Maria Edgeworth's Publication Earnings] 96

Edgeworth and Scott 99

Sir Walter Scott: From A Postscript Which Should Have Been a Preface, 1814 99

Maria Edgeworth to the Author of "Waverley," October 23, 1814 100

Sir Walter Scott: From General Preface to the 1829 Edition of Waverley 101

Juvenilia 103

From The Double Disguise 103

Criticism 111

General Studies 113

Walter Allen: [Castle Rackrent's Originality] 113

W. J. McCormack: [The Black Book of Edgeworthstown] 115

Seamus Deane: [The Irish Novel] 117

Brian Hollingworth: [Castle Rackrent's Composition] 125

Jacqueline Belanger: From Educating the Reading Public: British Critical Reception of Maria Edgeworth's Early Irish Writing 128

Marilyn Butler: [Edgeworth's Ireland] 137

Narrative Voices 145

Stanley J. Solomon: From Ironic Perspective in Maria Edgeworth's Castle Rackrent 145

Susan Glover: [Thady and the Editor] 149

Katherine O'Donnell: [Oral Culture] 161

Patriarchy and Paternalism 167

Elizabeth Kowaleski-Wallace: [Patriarchal Complicity] 167

Mary Jean Corbett: [Patriarchy and the Union] 175

Julie Nash: [Servants and Paternalism] 182

Hiberno-English 193

Joyce Elynn: [Edgeworth's Use of Hiberno-English] 193

Brian Hollingworth: From Maria Edgeworth's Irish Writing 199

Maria Edgeworth: A Chronology 205

Selected Bibliography 209

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