660

[CHETWODE ( Anna ) ?]

Currency:EUR Category:Antiques / Books & Manuscripts Start Price:10.00 EUR Estimated At:350.00 - 450.00 EUR
[CHETWODE ( Anna ) ?]

Bidding Over

The auction is over for this lot.
The auctioneer wasn't accepting online bids for this lot.

Contact the auctioneer for information on the auction results.

Search for other lots to bid on...
Auction Date:2012 Oct 20 @ 11:00 (UTC+1)
Location:38 Molesworth Street, Dublin, Dublin, ., Ireland
[CHETWODE ( Anna ) ?]. Blue-Stocking Hall. In three volumes. Henry Colburn, 1827FIRST EDITION, pages iv, 320 : (4), 328 : (4), 258 , (1, errata), (1, blank), (4, adverts), with the half-titles in vols 2 and 3 (none called for in volume one), 3 vols, large 12mo, original brown cloth, with printed paper spine labels : with some light spotting and browning and very slight wear to spines but bindings strong, with no cracked joints : a very good copy.Wolff 6202. Garside 1827:60. Attributed by all the usual sources to William Pitt Scargill but J. Windele, writing only ywo years after publication of this novel, in his 'Historical and Descriptive Notices of the City of Cork', cites Miss Chetwode as the author. This seems likely, not only because Windele is a contemporary source, but also because in the 'Preface' the author speaks of making a 'début' with this novel, and Scargill had already had works published in 1827. The BL lists his 'Essays on Various Subjects' of 1815, and 'Moral Discourses' of 1816, as well as 'Truth a Novel. By the Author of Nothing' (1826), which is attributed to Scargill. Miss Chetwode was the daughter of the Rev John Chetwode of Glanmire, near Cork, and as a young woman travelled to Russia, where she lived in Moscow with the Russian Princess Daschkaw, a highly educated woman who became Director of the Academy of Arts and Sciences in St Petersburg and first President of the Russian Academy. It is not known whether Miss Chetwode's interest in the learning of women predated her excursion, but it was undoubtedly fostered by her friendship with the princess. 'Blue-Stocking Hall' is mostly set in Co Kerry, and partly in England and on the continent, and strongly advocates the education of women through a series of letters written by the mnain protagonists. As well as the main theme of the importance of learning in women, the novel deals with the education of the lower classes in Ireland. Marriage is also a topic of discussion and is presented as an intellectual partnership. Marriage for money or social aggrandizement is seen as abhorrent, and remaining single is a preferred alternative. Contemporary literature, such as Maria Edgeworth's 'Absentee' is discussed, as well as religion and politics. Edgeworth herself wrote of 'Blue-Stocking Hall' that 'notwithstanding its horrid title … I thought there was a great deal of good, and of good sense in it.' - F. A. Edgeworth, 'A Memoir of Maria Edgeworth', 1867, III.31.(3)ENGLISH LITERATURE; NOVELS; FICTION; WOMEN WRITERS; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;