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Maria Edgeworth's Letters From Ireland

Maria Edgeworth's Letters From Ireland

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Edited by: Valerie Pakenham \n \nJanuary 1 2018 will be the 250th anniversary of Maria EdgeworthÕs birth. Valerie PakenhamÕs sparkling new selection of over four hundred letters, many hitherto unpublished, will help to celebrate her memory. Born in England, she was brought to live in Ireland at the age of fourteen and spent most of the rest of her life at the family home at Edgeworthstown, Co. Longford. Encouraged by her remarkable father, Richard Lovell Edgeworth, whose memoirs she edited, she became, in turn, famous for her childrenÕs stories, her practical guides to education and her novels Ð or, as she preferred to call them, ÔMoral TalesÕ. By 1813, when visiting London, she was, as Byron testified, as great a literary lion as he had been the season before, and she was hugely admired by fellow novelists Sir Walter Scott and Jane Austen. \n \nMaria Edgeworth's posthumous fame has dwindled and only her first novel, Castle Rackrent (1800), a brilliant burlesque account of the Irish squirearchy, is still widely read. She was, however, a prolific and fascinating letter writer. She insisted that her letters were for private consumption only, but after her death, her stepmother and half-sisters produced a private memoir for friends using carefully selected extracts. Their literary quality was spotted by Augustus Hare, whose shortened version, The Life and Letters of Maria Edgeworth, appeared in 1894. \n \nIn the 1970s MariaÕs great great niece, Christina Colvin edited Maria EdgeworthÕs Letters from England and Maria Edgeworth in France & Switzerland. No one, however, has revisited fully MariaÕs original letters from the place she loved and knew best: Ireland. From 1825, MariaÕs letters reflect sixty years of Irish history, from the heady days of GrattanÕs Parliament, through the perils of the 1798 Rebellion to the rise of OÕConnell and the struggle for Catholic Emancipation. In old age, she worked actively to alleviate the Great Famine and wrote her last story to raise money aged 82. A treasure trove of stories, humour, local and high-level gossip, her letters show the extraordinary range of her interests: history, politics, literature and science. \n \nMaria almost single-handedly took over the management of her family estate and restored it to solvency. Her later letters brim with delight at these practical undertakings and her affection for the local people she worked with. Two of her half-sisters and her stepmother were gifted artists, and Valerie Pakenham has been able to use many of their unpublished drawings and sketches to illustrate this book. \n \nEDITOR \n \nValerie Pakenham worked as a journalist in London at CondŽ Nast and the Daily Mail before her marriage to the writer Thomas Pakenham. Her most recent book is The Big House in Ireland, an anthology published in 2001. She has lived in Westmeath, fourteen miles from Maria EdgeworthÕs old family home in Edgeworthstown, for over fifty years and is familiar with many of the places described in these letters. The Pakenham and Edgeworth families intermarried in the early eighteenth century and were close friends across several generations. \n \n 

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