Regularly the subject of cartoonists and satirical novelists, Mary Robinson achieved public notoriety as the mistress of the young Prince of Wales (George IV). Her association with figures such as William Godwin and Mary Wollstonecraft, and comparisons with Charlotte Smith, make her a serious figure for scholarly research.
Part II Volume 5 Editor: William D Brewer Walsingham; or, The Pupil of
Nature: A Domestic Story (1797) For the first three volumes of Walsingham,
Sir Sidney Aubrey appears to be the title-character's male rival, 'the
seducer' of the woman he loves, but near the end of the fourth and final
volume the protagonist abruptly learns that Sir Sidney is a woman. Although
Sidney's position as a rich male baronet gives her freedoms denied late
eighteenth-century women, her closeted sexual identity becomes a burden that
nearly destroys her. The novel suggests that gender is performative and,
through its portrait of an emotionally volatile 'pupil of nature' who
(unwittingly) fights a duel with one woman and seduces and ultimately
destroys another, critiques the eighteenth-century valorization of the man of
feeling. Volume 6 Editor: Julie A Shaffer The False Friend: A Domestic Story
(1799) In The False Friend Robinson explores two themes that recur throughout
her writings: incest and illegitimacy. The novel focuses on the quest of the
orphaned Gertrude St. Leger to discover her parentage and form an identity in
a corrupt society swarming with manipulative, treacherous, and predatory men
(false friends). Her mysterious and mercurial guardian, Lord Denmore, fails
to tell his ward that she is his daughter, the product of an adulterous love
affair, and she becomes infatuated with him, not realizing that her passion
for him is incestuous. Gertrude's loss of her maternal genealogy, symbolized
by the erasure of her dead mother's portrait and her accidental fragmentation
of Sappho's bust (for which her mother was the model), stunts her emotional
and social development. The mistakes of her parents doom the innocent and
chronically depressed heroine of this darkly pessimistic novel. Volume 7
Editor: Hester Davenport The Natural Daughter. With Portraits of the
Leadenhead Family. A Novel (1799) Set in England and revolutionary France,
The Natural Daughter invites comparisons between male
William D Brewer