Charlotte Yonge

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Standard Name: Yonge, Charlotte
Birth Name: Charlotte Mary Yonge
Pseudonym: Aunt Charlotte
CY was a staggeringly prolific author. Her more than two hundred works include domestic and historical novels for both adults and children, biographies, history and language textbooks, religious manuals, and a fragment of autobiography. She became famous without adopting many of the habits of the Victorian professional author: she published anonymously and donated most of her earnings to charity. Though her most successful titles remained household names for generations, many others in the Macmillan Uniform Edition were quickly forgotten.
Delafield, E. M., and Georgina Battiscombe. “Introduction”. Charlotte Mary Yonge: The Story of an Uneventful Life, Constable and Company, pp. 9-15.
14
Her underlying purpose is always religious. Her biographer Georgina Battiscombe writes that filial duty is her great theme, to which both love and common sense must be sacrificed.
Battiscombe, Georgina, and E. M. Delafield. Charlotte Mary Yonge: The Story of an Uneventful Life. Constable and Company.
74-5
She advises submission as a Christian duty and not as an exclusively gendered ideal. She deals also in religious scruples and struggles: confirmation (as the climax of an education in spiritual self-examination) is often an issue for her characters.

Connections

Connections Sort ascending Author name Excerpt
Textual Production Frances Trollope
FT published a novel entitled The Life and Adventures of a Clever Woman, Illustrated with occasional extracts from her diary.
Charlotte Yonge had not yet published her novel The Clever Woman of the Family...
Textual Production E. M. Delafield
EMD contributed an introduction to Georgina Battiscombe 's biography Charlotte Mary Yonge : The Story of an Uneventful Life.
British Book News. British Council.
(1943): 931
OCLC WorldCat. http://www.oclc.org/firstsearch/content/worldcat/. Accessed 1999.
Textual Production Elizabeth Jenkins
EJ contributed an introduction to a volume, the seventh in John Lehmann 's The Chiltern Library, published in 1947 and containing two titles by Elizabeth Gaskell . In her introduction to Thackeray 's Vanity...
Textual Production Frances Mary Peard
FMP was one of those involved in 1883 (with Charlotte Yonge , Frances Awdry , Mary Bramston , Christabel Coleridge , Mary Susanna Lee , A. E. Mary Anderson Morshead , Eleanor C. Price ...
Textual Production Frances Mary Peard
The National Society's Depository , an offshoot of the Anglican National Society , had been founded to publish religious reading-matter for the young.
“About The National Society (Church of England) for Promoting Religious Education”. The National Society for Promoting Religious Education: The Society.
It issued a number of titles by FMP , many of them...
Textual Production Anne Mozley
In 1842 AM founded the informal family paper The Magazine for the Young (also known as The Pink Mag), which she subsequently handed over to Charlotte Yonge .
Battiscombe, Georgina, and E. M. Delafield. Charlotte Mary Yonge: The Story of an Uneventful Life. Constable and Company.
66
Textual Production Margaret Kennedy
During the early 1960s MK read her paper Harriett Mozley : A Forerunner of Charlotte Yonge, at the Charlotte M. Yonge Society , of which, along with many of her writing friends, she had...
Textual Features Mary Cholmondeley
MC details the various manuscripts left by Hester: a journal describing everything she read, a journal about bee-keeping, and a notebook containing brief biographies of important figures, as well as notebooks of quotations, poetry, and...
Textual Features Marghanita Laski
The book aims at literary recuperation. Here ML blends analysis with celebration, but she recalls her marginalised writers primarily to raise questions about the present state of writing for children. She says that her subjects...
Textual Features Ellen Wood
The plot and pacing of the novel differ markedly from East Lynne, and are more in the style of Charlotte Yonge than EW 's sensational contemporary Mary Elizabeth Braddon . While the theft of...
Textual Features Ivy Compton-Burnett
The protagonist, a clergyman's daughter, lives up to her name. She is a child at her mother's graveside in the book's opening scene: by the age of thirty-three she has repeatedly sacrificed her hopes of...
Textual Features Dinah Mulock Craik
The figure of John Halifax dominates the entire book, and DMC attempts to represent him both as a model entrepreneur (and thus an individualist) and as a perfect Christian.
In this latter role, he has...
Textual Features Rose Macaulay
RM 's editor Constance Babington Smith describes this as a sombre story.
Macaulay, Rose. Letters to a Friend from Rose Macaulay 1950-1952. Editor Babington Smith, Constance, Fontana.
14
LeFanu notes that it takes the themes of inheritance and unjust accusation so characteristic of the novels of Charlotte Yonge and Sir Walter Scott
Textual Features Rose Macaulay
This was the first full-length critical work on Forster. It expressed admiration for his writing, but some amusement or impatience over what it presents as his obsession with Englishness and with the all-male educational world...
Textual Features Elizabeth Charles
A sequel to Winifred Bertram and the World She Lived In (published a decade earlier), it traces a branch of the Schönberg-Cotta family who have now become part of the sheltered, orderly English middle-class.
Charles, Elizabeth. The Bertram Family. Garland.
5

Timeline

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Texts

Yonge, Charlotte. “Preface to First Edition”. History of Christian Names, Macmillan, 1884, p. v - viii.
Yonge, Charlotte. Reasons Why I Am a Catholic and Not a Roman Catholic. Wells Gardner, Darton, 1901.
Yonge, Charlotte. Scenes and Characters. James Burns, 1847.
Yonge, Charlotte. The Caged Lion. Macmillan, 1870.
Yonge, Charlotte. The Chaplet of Pearls. Macmillan, 1868.
Yonge, Charlotte. The Clever Woman of the Family. Macmillan, 1865.
Yonge, Charlotte. The Daisy Chain. John Parker, 1856.
Yonge, Charlotte. The Daisy Chain. Macmillan, 1892.
Yonge, Charlotte. The Dove in the Eagle’s Nest. Macmillan, 1866.
Yonge, Charlotte. The Heir of Redclyffe. John Parker, 1853.
Yonge, Charlotte. The Lances of Lynwood. John Parker, 1855.
Yonge, Charlotte. The Little Duke. John Parker, 1854.
Awdry, Frances et al. The Miz Maze. Macmillan, 1883.
Yonge, Charlotte, and Christabel Coleridge, editors. The Monthly Packet. J. and C. Mozely.
Yonge, Charlotte. The Pigeon Pie. J. and C. Mozley, 1860.
Yonge, Charlotte. The Pillars of the House. Macmillan, 1873.
Yonge, Charlotte. The Prince and the Page. Macmillan, 1866.
Yonge, Charlotte. The Seal. 1869.
Yonge, Charlotte. The Stokesley Secret. J. and C. Mozeley, 1861.
Yonge, Charlotte. The Three Brides. Macmillan, 1876.
Yonge, Charlotte. The Trial. Macmillan, 1864.
Yonge, Charlotte. The Two Guardians. Joseph Masters, 1852.
Yonge, Charlotte. The Young Step-Mother. Parker, Son and Bourn, 1861.
Yonge, Charlotte. Unknown to History. Macmillan, 1882.
Ewing, Juliana Horatia et al. Victorian Tales for Girls. Editor Laski, Marghanita, Pilot Press, 1947.