The Corvey Novels Project at the University of Nebraska

— Studies in British Literature of the Romantic Period —

 

 

Biographical Information about Louisa Sydney Stanhope

 

According to the Feminist Companion to Literature in English, Louisa Sydney Stanhope was the:

Obscure author of 17 novels, many for the Minerva Press, ( Dorothy Blakey, 1939, comments adversely on her work and suspects a pseudonym). Louisa Sydney Stanhope begins in 1806 in the mode of Rousseauvian sensibility: Ideal woman is gentle, sensitive, weak, and passive, but also the 'natural slave; of passionate feelings. She attacks the French, frivolous high society, libertinism, and arranged marriages with women as merchandise 'consigned over, passing from vendor to buyer.' Titles include The Bandit's Bride, 1807. The Crusader's Bride, 1830, and Rosalie, or, The Outlaw's Bride (1842). The historical novels (for which she claims diverse chronicle sources) set narrative comments on the list virtues of subordination, filial obedience, wifely submission, and chivalry against present day license. In The Crusaders,1820, a powerful plea for sexual equality 'subsides into the usual images of propriety and submission. Runnemede (1825) and The Seer of Tiviotdale (1827) stand out with strong, active women and some hint of more liberal politics, but Louisa Sydney Stanhope retreats into conservatism in the 1830s.

Stanhope was one of the most prolific authors from 1800-1829, publishing 14 novels in 52 volumes.


- Prepared by Elizabeth Kistler, University of Nebraska, December 2002