Difference between revisions of "Abbess, A Romance"

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By William Henry Ireland.
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{{DISPLAYTITLE:''The Abbess, A Romance''}}
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===by William Henry Ireland===
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[[wikipedia:William Henry Ireland|William Henry Ireland]] (1775 – 1835) was a poet and author, but is renowned for his [[wikipedia:Ireland Shakespeare forgeries|forging of a cache of documents and letters purportedly in the hand of William Shakespeare]], in 1794-1795. Ireland's father accepted the forgeries as genuine, put them on display for the public, and published them in a volume, ''Miscellaneous Papers and Legal Instruments Under the Hand and Seal of William Shakspeare Including the Tragedy of King Lear and a Small Fragment of Hamlet, from the Original Mss. in the Possession of Samuel Ireland'' (1796). The documents were quickly exposed as forgeries by Shakespearian scholars and experts.
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[[File:IrelandAbbess1801Vol1Subscribers.jpg|thumb|right|400px|List of subscribers from Vol. 1 of William Henry Ireland's 1801 American edition of [[Abbess, A Romance|The Abbess]], including [[Thomas Jefferson]], James Madison, James Monroe, and [[George Wythe]].]]
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Ireland's Gothic novel, [[wikipedia:The Abbess|''The Abbess'']], was originally published in London in 1799, in four volumes. The American edition was published in Baltimore in three volumes, in 1801. The title page proudly credits Ireland as "The Avowed Author of the Shakspear Papers." Based on an earlier novel by Matthew Lewis, ''The Monk,'' (1796), it has a similarly lurid and scandalous plot.
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In April of 1801, John West Butler, the American publisher of Ireland's novel, wrote to President [[Thomas Jefferson]] asking if he might subscibe to this new work by the author of "Shakespeare's Papers":
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<blockquote>
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Having issued proposals for printing the enclosed work, and intending shortly to commence a tour through many of the States, particularly Virginia, for the purpose of obtaining Subscribers, I have ventured to solicit the early patronage of a Character so well known, and justly respected, both on account of his high office, and the brilliant talents which have placed him in it; conscious, that a name so celebrated and beloved, will not only add a pleasing lustre and respectibility to the Proposals, but insure a large increase of Subscribers to a work that is approved by, and graced with, the illustrious name of Jefferson. And, believe me, Sir, your name will by no means be dishonoured by patronizing the "Abbess"; a work, allowed by the highest judges, to bear the strongest marks of worth and genius. What better proof, Sir, can be produced or required, of the truth of this assertion, than, that it was written by the author of "Shakespeare's Papers," a work, the spirit and genius of which, bore so near an alliance and close imitation of the British Homer, that the greatest literary judges and warmest admirers of the English Bard, not only gave it their decided voice in favour of its originating in Shakespeare's fertile brain, but even the Reviewers, those literary dictators, passed on it a long Eulogium, and congratulated the lovers of wit, taste, and genius, on the restoration of those unlooked for, those valuable, inimitable, and long lost "Papers" of the immortal Shakespeare!<ref>"To Thomas Jefferson from John West Butler, 13 April 1801," [http://founders.archives.gov/documents/Jefferson/01-33-02-0503 Founders Online,] National Archives.</ref>
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Jefferson replied to Butler on May 8, to subscribe to the book: "Tho'a stranger to the work I have not hesitated to give this mark of my personal respect for yourself as well as of my desire to encourage the art of printing in this country generally."
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[[Category:English Literature]]
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[[Category:Titles in Wythe's Library]]

Revision as of 11:28, 16 September 2016

by William Henry Ireland

William Henry Ireland (1775 – 1835) was a poet and author, but is renowned for his forging of a cache of documents and letters purportedly in the hand of William Shakespeare, in 1794-1795. Ireland's father accepted the forgeries as genuine, put them on display for the public, and published them in a volume, Miscellaneous Papers and Legal Instruments Under the Hand and Seal of William Shakspeare Including the Tragedy of King Lear and a Small Fragment of Hamlet, from the Original Mss. in the Possession of Samuel Ireland (1796). The documents were quickly exposed as forgeries by Shakespearian scholars and experts.

File:IrelandAbbess1801Vol1Subscribers.jpg
List of subscribers from Vol. 1 of William Henry Ireland's 1801 American edition of The Abbess, including Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, James Monroe, and George Wythe.

Ireland's Gothic novel, The Abbess, was originally published in London in 1799, in four volumes. The American edition was published in Baltimore in three volumes, in 1801. The title page proudly credits Ireland as "The Avowed Author of the Shakspear Papers." Based on an earlier novel by Matthew Lewis, The Monk, (1796), it has a similarly lurid and scandalous plot.

In April of 1801, John West Butler, the American publisher of Ireland's novel, wrote to President Thomas Jefferson asking if he might subscibe to this new work by the author of "Shakespeare's Papers":

Having issued proposals for printing the enclosed work, and intending shortly to commence a tour through many of the States, particularly Virginia, for the purpose of obtaining Subscribers, I have ventured to solicit the early patronage of a Character so well known, and justly respected, both on account of his high office, and the brilliant talents which have placed him in it; conscious, that a name so celebrated and beloved, will not only add a pleasing lustre and respectibility to the Proposals, but insure a large increase of Subscribers to a work that is approved by, and graced with, the illustrious name of Jefferson. And, believe me, Sir, your name will by no means be dishonoured by patronizing the "Abbess"; a work, allowed by the highest judges, to bear the strongest marks of worth and genius. What better proof, Sir, can be produced or required, of the truth of this assertion, than, that it was written by the author of "Shakespeare's Papers," a work, the spirit and genius of which, bore so near an alliance and close imitation of the British Homer, that the greatest literary judges and warmest admirers of the English Bard, not only gave it their decided voice in favour of its originating in Shakespeare's fertile brain, but even the Reviewers, those literary dictators, passed on it a long Eulogium, and congratulated the lovers of wit, taste, and genius, on the restoration of those unlooked for, those valuable, inimitable, and long lost "Papers" of the immortal Shakespeare![1]

Jefferson replied to Butler on May 8, to subscribe to the book: "Tho'a stranger to the work I have not hesitated to give this mark of my personal respect for yourself as well as of my desire to encourage the art of printing in this country generally."
  1. "To Thomas Jefferson from John West Butler, 13 April 1801," Founders Online, National Archives.