
Transcriber's Note:
REMARKS - ON - CLARISSA,
Addressed to the Author. - Occasioned by some critical Conversations on the Characters and Conduct of that Work.
LONDON: - Printed for J. Robinson in Ludgate-street.
REMARKS - ON - CLARISSA, &c.
A sharp‑tongued, eighteenth‑century essay arrives in the form of a letter addressed to the novel’s author. Its writer gathers the chorus of objections that greeted the first two volumes—complaints about length, tediousness, and the flood of letters between lovers—while also noting the moments of beauty that convinced him to stay silent. He promises a fair accounting, neither softening the critics’ points nor inflating the heroine’s virtues, and sets the stage for a balanced discussion of Clarissa’s character and the surrounding cast.
The piece unfolds amid a lively salon where the novel’s plot is sketched in brisk summary: a genteel family, a determined young woman, a charismatic suitor, and the clash of duty versus desire. By juxtaposing the heated gossip with thoughtful reflection, the author offers listeners a window into the early modern reception of a landmark work, illuminating the moral and narrative debates that shaped its legacy.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (92K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Chris Curnow, Meredith Bach, Joseph Cooper and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2009-01-08
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1710–1768
Best known for The Adventures of David Simple and The Governess, this pioneering 18th-century writer helped shape both the English novel and children's literature. Her fiction is remembered for its warmth, moral seriousness, and unusual attention to the inner lives of women and children.
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