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in
October 1806: "Those who delight in useless mysteries and unnecessary horrors may perhaps be gratified by reading these volumes: but, in our judgment, the contemplation of such stories is attended with worse consequences than the mere waste of time. It tends to produce a sickly and irritable state
137:, Kelly was one of several authors of the day, including Matthew Lewis, to attack celibacy, through her character Agatha, who refuses to go into a nunnery because it is cruelly oppressive to deny women "the normal blessings of home and children."
104:(1794, 2nd e. 1807) was well subscribed. She claimed that several pieces in it had been written before she was 14. It "includes pathos and social comedy.... She later called her poems 'too personal to please in general'."
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is innocent and instructive, but faults it for leading the heroine "through such a variety of trials and miseries, as could hardly fall to the lot of any human creature." In
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in 1832 that she had written ten novels, educational works, and some of a new historical novel that she knew was outdated. Several were published by
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officer and later courtier, and
Elizabeth (née Fraser). Both her parents had been disowned after their marriage by their wealthy Scottish families.
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Kelly's ten novels "cater to popular taste with seemingly haunted abbeys, cross-dressing for disguise, and the fruits of unchastity." She told the
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of mind, gives a temporary shock even to intellects that are sound and healthy, but enervates and permanently diseases those which are weak."
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239:(an elderly relative of hers seen by contemporaries as an archetypal Scots governess, published anonymously, 1823)
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Critics have noted a similarity to the work of Ann
Radcliffe in her approach to the Gothic novel. The
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Iain Powell: "Isabella Kelly – Genuine Gothic Genius?" Corvey "Adopt an Author"
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Richard Greene, "Kelly, Isabella (baptised 1759, died 1857)", rev. Pam
Perkins,
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77:. Another son William was strongly befriended as a boy by the writer
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92:), London, on 25 June 1857 and was buried in Kensal Green Cemetery.
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She married Robert Hawke Kelly (died in or before 1807, probably in
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Edwardina (1801) (published under the pseudonym "Catherine Harris")
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and baptised on 4 May 1759, as the daughter of
William Fordyce,
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Mary
Catherine Moran, "Fordyce , Henrietta (1734–1823)",
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A French grammar for children and other educational works
38:. Her novels have been said to resemble those of
215:Jane de Dunstaneville, or Characters as They Are
430:at the Eighteenth-Century Poetry Archive (ECPA)
316:The Feminist Companion to Literature in English
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423:Corvey Women Writers on the Web author page
237:A Memoir of the Late Mrs. Henrietta Fordyce
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174:Joscelina, or The Rewards of Benevolence
405:Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
283:Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
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156:Madeline, or The Castle of Montgomery
16:Scottish novelist and poet, 1759–1857
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186:Ruthinglenne, or The Critical Moment
164:(1795) ("by the author of Madeline")
203:A Modern Incident in Domestic Life
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379:Encyclopedia of Gothic Literature
129:, writing in 1798, concedes that
434:Works by or about Isabella Kelly
407:, Oxford University Press, 2004
285:, Oxford University Press, 2004
468:19th-century Scottish novelists
390:Quoted in Gothic Heroine blog.
231:Instructive Anecdotes for Youth
158:(1794) (published anonymously)
102:Collection of Poems and Fables
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346:See this analysis of Kelly's
250:List of Minerva Press authors
50:Isabella Fordyce was born at
168:The Ruins of Avondale Priory
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381:(New York, 2005), p. 11.
367:Retrieved 20 March 2015.
352:Retrieved 20 March 2015.
329:Retrieved 19 March 2015.
409:Retrieved 20 March 2015
392:Retrieved 19 March 2015
299:Retrieved 19 March 2015
287:Retrieved 19 March 2015
88:(presumably the one in
84:She died aged 98 at 20
463:Scottish women writers
377:Mary Ellen Snodgrass:
348:The Abbey of St. Asaph
162:The Abbey of St Asaph
334:27 July 2016 at the
197:The Baron's Daughter
71:Fitzroy Edward Kelly
365:, Vol. 11, p. 317.
114:Royal Literary Fund
363:The British Critic
350:by Tenille Nowak:
56:Scottish Highlands
30:(1759–1857) was a
28:Isabella Hedgeland
52:Cairnburgh Castle
32:Scottish novelist
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261:References
209:The Secret
142:The Secret
140:Her novel
90:Belgravia
332:Archived
244:See also
100:Kelly's
436:at the
54:in the
26:, also
24:Fordyce
233:(1819)
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108:Novels
67:Madras
46:Family
22:, née
96:Poems
36:poet
34:and
180:Eva
135:Eva
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