The Fortunate Foundlings

The Fortunate Foundlings
Author: Eliza Haywood
Publisher: Lindhardt og Ringhof
Total Pages: 330
Release: 2021-02-11
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 8726553554

"The Fortunate Foundlings" is a picaresque novel from 1744 featuring twins Horatio and Louisa, whose journey in the world differs because of their gender. They were both abandoned in infancy and adopted, but soon leave their carer to go off on their one. Whilst Louisa must fight to preserve her virtue in a man’s world, her brother joins the army. This is an eighteenth century rollercoaster - action packed, passionate, melodramatic, and at times unashamedly sentimental. Eliza Haywood (1693– 1756), née Elizabeth Fowler, was a British author, actress and publisher, who was rediscovered in the 1980s. Little is known about the author, who herself left conflicting information about her life, and was extremely secretive about her personal life. She was a prolific author of romances and other novel’s focusing on women’s point of views, status, and rights. Among her most famous works are "Love in Excess; Or, The Fatal Enquiry" (1720), "Fantomina; Or Love in a Maze" (1725) and "The Anti-Pamela; Or Feign’d Innocence Detected" (1741). Haywood is an important figure of 18th century literature.

The Fortunate Foundlings

The Fortunate Foundlings
Author: Eliza Fowler Haywood
Publisher: Good Press
Total Pages: 270
Release: 2019-11-29
Genre: Fiction
ISBN:

"The Fortunate Foundlings" by Eliza Haywood is a novel that has charmed its readers for many years. Opening with a gentleman finding orphaned children, the story follows the heartwarming journey this new, found family takes in growing to love and care for one another. It also shows how, with just a little luck, one's life can truly change.

The Fortunate Foundlings

The Fortunate Foundlings
Author: Eliza Fowler Haywood
Publisher: BoD – Books on Demand
Total Pages: 230
Release: 2020-07-28
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 3752359706

Reproduction of the original: The Fortunate Foundlings by Eliza Fowler Haywood

Eliza Haywood, 'The Fortunate Foundlings'

Eliza Haywood, 'The Fortunate Foundlings'
Author: Carol Stewart
Publisher: MHRA
Total Pages: 280
Release: 2018-05-31
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1781882673

The Fortunate Foundlings was one of Eliza Haywood’s more successful novels, though it remains one of her lesser known works. Ittells the story of a brother and sister left as babies in the care of a gentleman. Like many another eighteenth-century foundling, the siblings leave their guardian behind and make their own way in the world: Horatio as a soldier and Louisa as a lady’s companion, finding love and adventure in the battlefields and courts of Europe. Haywood uses the Continental setting to explore different customs—especially those that might benefit women—and different political choices. Also published here for the first time is her anonymous pamphlet of 1750, A Letter from H--- G---g, Esq., ostensibly a letter from Charles Edward Stuart’s aide-de-camp, travelling with him after the prince’s expulsion from France. Seemingly a straightforward expression of Jacobite sympathies, it also encodes support for the Patriot cause of the 1740s and ’50s. Both works were translated and adapted, having an extended afterlife in the writings of Crébillon fils, Edward Kimber and Robert Louis Stevenson. They add to our expanding sense of the author’s range, influence and political agenda.

Bastards and Foundlings

Bastards and Foundlings
Author: Lisa Zunshine
Publisher: Ohio State University Press
Total Pages: 240
Release: 2005
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0814209955

In this compelling interdisciplinary study of what has been called the "century of illegitimacy," Lisa Zunshine seeks to uncover the multiplicity of cultural meanings of illegitimacy in the English Enlightenment. Bastards and Foundlings pits the official legal views on illegitimacy against the actual everyday practices that frequently circumvented the law; it reconstructs the history of social institutions called upon to regulate illegitimacy, such as the London Foundling Hospital; and it examines a wide array of novels and plays written in response to the same concerns that informed the emergence and functioning of such institutions. By recreating the context of the national preoccupation with bastardy, with a special emphasis on the gender of the fictional bastard/foundling, Zunshine offers new readings of "canonical" texts, such as Steele's The Conscious Lovers, Defoe's Moll Flanders, Fielding's Tom Jones, Moore's The Foundling, Colman's The English Merchant, Richardson's Clarissa and Sir Charles Grandison, Burney's Evelina, Smith's Emmeline, Edgewort's Belinda, and Austen's Emma, as well as of less well-known works, such as Haywood's The Fortunate Foundlings, Shebbeare's The Marriage Act, Bennett's The Beggar Girl and Her Benefactors, and Robinson's The Natural Daughter.

Orphans of Empire

Orphans of Empire
Author: Helen Berry
Publisher:
Total Pages: 381
Release: 2019
Genre: History
ISBN: 0198758480

The fascinating story of what happened to the orphaned and abandoned children of the London Foundling Hospital, and the consequences of Georgian philanthropy. From serving Britain's growing global empire in the Royal Navy, to the suffering of child workers in the Industrial Revolution, the Foundling Hospital was no simple act of charity.