Martha Harley Explained

Martha Harley
Pseudonym:"a young lady"; "by the author of"; "Mrs. Harley"; "Mrs. Hugill"
Language:English
Occupation:novelist
Period:Romantic era
Subject:Gothic
Years Active:1786—1798
Portaldisp:yes

Martha Harley (later Hugill;[1] fl. 1786—1798) was the successful author of six Gothic novels.

Life

Little is known of Harley's life other than that she published half a dozen popular novels[2] and lived at least part of her life in London.[3] Judging by her publishing history, she was born "Harley" and changed her name to "Hugill" at some point between 1794 and 1797, presumably through marriage.[4]

Work

Harley's first novel, St. Bernard's priory (1786), was printed privately, published anonymously, and sold by subscription. Her five subsequent novels were all handled by professional publishers and garnered her a degree of commercial success. Her second and third novels were also published anonymously, "by the author of &". Her fourth and fifth novels, Juliana Ormeston and The prince of Leon, were published under the name "Mrs. Harley," and her final novel, Isidora of Gallicia, as "Mrs. Hugill." Isidora of Gallicia was translated into French, and two of her novels were published by the highly successful purveyor of popular fiction and founder of the Minerva Press, William Lane.

The early novels were reviewed favourably, though there would seem to have been a decrease in critical enthusiasm by the end of her career.

Harley was one of the 106 "lost" women writers Dale Spender listed in Mothers of the Novel in 1986.

Works

See also

Etexts

References

Notes and References

  1. Harley is listed variously as Mrs. Harley (Summers), Mrs. Hugill (Summers), M. Hugill (Spender), Martha Harley (Brown et al.), Martha Hugill (WPHP), M. Harley (OL), Mrs. M. Harley (Google Books; Internet Archive; OL), and "Mrs. afterwards HUGELL HARLEY" (Google Books).
  2. Summers.
  3. Todd p. 168.
  4. Todd p. 168.
  5. Title of second (commercial) edition: "Priory of St. Bernard."
  6. Now lost, according to Janet Todd, p. 168.