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Lord Fitzhenry

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Lord Fitzhenry
AuthorElizabeth Gunning
PublisherJoseph Bell
Publication date
December 1794

Lord Fitzhenry (1794) is a novel by Elizabeth Gunning. Its marriage plot follows a young English aristocrat who falls in love with his friend's fiancee; he attempts to resist his feelings out of respect for his friend and because he cannot marry a Catholic. Eventually, he discovers that she is in fact his long-lost (Protestant) cousin, and that his friend would prefer to marry someone else, allowing the novel to end happily with multiple weddings. The story was originally developed as a subplot in her first novel, The Packet (1794), but Gunning sold it as a standalone novel to avoid over-delivering on her contract to write four volumes for The Packet. Reviews of the novel in December 1794 praised Gunning's character development and lively prose.

Synopsis

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Lord Fitzhenry, a young English aristocrat, takes a holiday to Wales for his health. He visits his friend Frederic Wardour. Wardour is engaged to a Miss Melmoth, but is in love with someone else. Fitzhenry falls in love at first sight with Miss Melmoth, but vows to resist his feelings. Returning to his parents, Fitzhenry is introduced to a wealthy but unsophisticated nouveau riche heiress, Miss Clarinda Owens. Miss Owens' unpleasant mother tries to encourage a marriage, but Fitzhenry is not interested. Fitzhenry writes to Wardour with a long inserted tale of his aunt's unhappiness married to Lord Hillford, a Catholic who, among other cruelties, separated her from her child in an attempt to force her to convert; the baby died. Fitzhenry's father vowed never to allow his children to marry Catholics, another bar between Fitzhenry's relationship with Miss Melmoth (a Catholic).[1]

After some time rejecting additional romantic prospects in London, Fitzhenry travels to France for his grand tour, accompanied by Mr. Courtenay (the great-nephew of his aunt's former Protestant chaplain, Dr. Burnett). Fitzhenry learns that Wardour is in love with his sister Elizabeth, while Mr. Courtenay is in love with his sister Jemima. In Naples, Fitzhenry visits his unhappy aunt, Lady Hillford; to his surprise, Miss Melmoth is living with her and Lord Hillford. Fitzhenry learns that Miss Melmoth is secretly Lady Olivia, the daughter of an aristocrat. With his aunt's assistance, he proposes, and Olivia accepts.[2]

Lord Hillford opposes Fitzhenry's connection to Olivia, and tries to have Fitzhenry assassinated. Twice, Fitzhenry kills the assassins, then flees back to England. Meanwhile, Olivia has disappeared; Fitzhenry searches for her. Fitzhenry duels Wardour in mistaken jealousy over Olivia. Lord Hillford is murdered by his hired assassins. An Italian priest reveals that Olivia is Lady Hillford's long-lost daughter, and therefore actually of Protestant heritage. The novel ends with a happy triple wedding: Fitzhenry marries his cousin Olivia, while Wardour and Mr. Courtenay marry Fitzhenry's sisters.[3]

Composition and publication

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Lord Fitzhenry was Gunning's second novel, published when she was twenty-five.[4] It was first published as a three-volume book in London by Joseph Bell in 1794,[5] followed by a two-volume Dublin edition the same year.[6]

The story was originally intended to form part of her first novel, The Packet (published earlier in 1794) but was expanded into a standalone work instead.[7] Gunning's contract with her publisher for The Packet specified that she would write them a four-volume work; when her story began to exceed that length, she split out a subplot so she could be paid for two novels instead. Lord Fitzhenry's story in The Packet ends on a cliffhanger, with the character fleeing London after a duel, and Gunning included a note advising readers to purchase her next book to see how his story concludes. Lord Fitzhenry also includes a few notes suggesting that readers should buy The Packet for the full backstory of some plot developments. The literary historian Pam Perkins describes Gunning's publication decisions as those of a savvy professional, despite her preface to The Packet claiming she was a reluctant amateur.[8]

Reception

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The novel was reviewed in the December 1794 editions of The Critical Review and The British Critic. The Critical Review praised the "vivacity" of Gunning's prose and the "ingenious" plot structure, and expressed satisfaction with the story's happy ending.[9] The British Critic had more quibbles with the plot, criticizing the inclusion of a duel in which Fitzhenry is "too glaringly in the wrong" and the death of the chaplain Dr. Burnett, which "produces no effect".[a] Nonetheless, the reviewer praised the work as a whole, saying that "Miss Gunning continues to bear away the palm from most of her rivals, by unaffected, original, simplicity, and liveliness of narration". They highlight the "correctness" of Gunning's depiction of aristocratic life, especially the amusing contrast between Lady Owen's vulgarity and the other characters' elegance.[7]

Analysis

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The literary scholar Kate Rumbold mentions Lord Fitzhenry as an example of "banal Shakespeare" in the eighteenth century. As a newly re-popularized figure of English literature, Shakespeare was widely quoted in eighteenth-century literature, often to the point of cliché. Lord Fitzhenry is one of many novels in which a character quotes the line "Angels and Ministers of Grace defend us" from Hamlet as an exclamation of surprise, diluting its originally-tragic impact; it is used as a greeting between long-lost acquaintances.[10]

In Reading Smell in Eighteenth-Century Fiction, Emily C. Friedman describes Miss Owens' ostentatious but unnecessary use of smelling salts as a sign for eighteenth-century readers of her character flaws: she displays the accessories of the culture of sensibility, but her lack of personal response signals that she is in fact an unempathetic person.[11]

Notes

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  1. ^ Dr. Burnett dies at the beginning of volume three, causing Mr. Courtenay to return to England early and leave Fitzroy alone in Italy.

References

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  1. ^ Gunning, Miss (Elizabeth) (1794). Lord Fitzhenry: a novel. By Miss Gunning. In three volumes. 1794: Vol 1. Internet Archive.
  2. ^ Gunning, Miss (Elizabeth) (1794). Lord Fitzhenry: a novel. By Miss Gunning. In three volumes. 1794: Vol 2. Internet Archive.
  3. ^ Gunning, Miss (Elizabeth) (1794). Lord Fitzhenry: a novel. By Miss Gunning. In three volumes. 1794: Vol 3. Internet Archive.
  4. ^ "Lord Fitzhenry critical essay". english.unl.edu. Retrieved 2025-06-27.
  5. ^ "Lord Fitzhenry: A novel. By Miss Gunning. In three volumes". womensprinthistoryproject.com. Retrieved 2025-06-27.
  6. ^ "Lord Fitzhenry: a novel. By Miss Gunning. In two volumes". womensprinthistoryproject.com. Retrieved 2025-06-27.
  7. ^ a b The British Critic 1794-12: Vol 4. Internet Archive. Open Court Publishing Co. 1794.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  8. ^ Perkins, Pam (1996). "The Fictional Identities of Elizabeth Gunning". Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature. 15 (1): 83–98. doi:10.2307/463975. ISSN 0732-7730.
  9. ^ "Lord Fitzhenry reviews". english.unl.edu. Retrieved 2025-06-27.
  10. ^ Rumbold, Kate (2007). "'So Common-Hackneyed in the Eyes of Men': Banal Shakespeare and the Eighteenth-Century Novel". Literature Compass. 4 (3): 610–621. doi:10.1111/j.1741-4113.2007.00444.x. ISSN 1741-4113.
  11. ^ Friedman, Emily C. (2016-06-27). Reading Smell in Eighteenth-Century Fiction. Bloomsbury Publishing PLC. p. 68. ISBN 978-1-61148-753-4.