The Coquette eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 214 pages of information about The Coquette.

The Coquette eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 214 pages of information about The Coquette.

Title:  The Coquette The History of Eliza Wharton

Author:  Hannah Webster Foster

Release Date:  May 25, 2004 [EBook #12431]

Language:  English

Character set encoding:  ASCII

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[Illustration:  Eliza Wharton]

The
coquette;
or,
the history of
Eliza Wharton.

A NOVEL:  FOUNDED ON FACT.

BY A LADY OF MASSACHUSETTS.

Historical preface,
including
A memoir of the author.

He who waits beside the folded gates of mystery, over which forever float the impurpled vapors of the past, should stand with girded loins, and white, unshodden feet.  So he who attempts to lift the veil that separates the real from the Ideal, or to remove the heavy curtain that for a century may have concealed from view the actual personages of a well-drawn popular fiction, or what may have been received as such, should bring to his task a tender heart and a delicate and gentle hand.

Thus, in preparing an introductory chapter for these pages which are to follow, many and various thoughts suggest themselves, and it is necessary to recognize and pursue them with gentleness and caution.

The romance of “Eliza Wharton” appeared in print not many years subsequent to the assumed transactions it so faithfully attempts to record.  Written as it was by one highly educated for the times,—­the popular wife of a popular clergyman, connected in no distant degree, by marriage, with the family of the heroine, and one who by the very profession and position of her husband was, as by necessity, brought into the sphere of actual intercourse with the principal characters of the novel, and as the book also took precedence in time of all American romances, when, too, the literature of the day was any thing but “light”—­it is not surprising that it thus took precedence in interest as well of all American novels, at least throughout New England, and was found, in every cottage within its borders, beside the family Bible, and though pitifully, yet almost as carefully treasured.

Since that time it has run through a score of editions, at long intervals out of print, and again revived at the public call with an eagerness of distribution which few modern romances have enjoyed.  Its author, Hannah Foster, was the daughter of Grant Webster, a well-known merchant of Boston, and wife of Rev. John Foster, of Brighton, Massachusetts, whose pedigree, but few removes backward in the line of her husband,[A]

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Coquette from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.