Elizabeth Gunning

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Standard Name: Gunning, Elizabeth
Birth Name: Elizabeth Gunning
Pseudonym: Miss Gunning
Nickname: Gunnilda
Nickname: Miss Charlemagne
Nickname: Miss Charly
Married Name: Elizabeth Plunkett
EG published, mostly during the later eighteenth century, a number of novels (including the one of her late mother 's which she finished), translations, a children's book, and two unacted plays. Many appeared before her marriage, and there has been some confusion with her mother's work. Both Gunnings are acutely class-conscious, centring many plots on wished-for ascent to the nobility (whose vices as a class they nevertheless strongly condemn): a motif which EG neatly reverses in her last.

Connections

Connections Sort ascending Author name Excerpt
Wealth and Poverty Susannah Gunning
SG 's estranged husband died abroad, leaving her and her daughter his entailed—but mortgaged—Irish estates.
Gantz, Ida. The Pastel Portrait. Cresset Press.
173, 175
Theme or Topic Treated in Text Sarah Green
M. G. Lewis is a more complicated case, treated with some nuance. SG admires The Monk but feels that after that Lewis's real talent was obscured by the baneful influence of German fiction: she agrees...
Theme or Topic Treated in Text Susannah Gunning
SG defends my glorious child . . . . my proud heart's darling,Elizabeth Gunning , against the efforts of art or machination to besmirch as fair a fame as ever yet has graced the...
Textual Production Annabella Plumptre
AP translated from German The Foresters, a play by Wilhelm Augustus Iffland , and published it with Vernor and Hood , with her name as Bell Plumptre.
This has no connection with Elizabeth Gunning
Textual Production Susannah Gunning
SG printed for the author her defence of her daughter and attack on her husband : A Letter . . . Address'd to His Grace the Duke of Argyll.
Critical Review. W. Simpkin and R. Marshall.
2d ser. 1 (1791): 341
Textual Production Susannah Gunning
SG 's final work, The Heir Apparent, A Novel, was posthumously published with her daughter 's revision and additions.
Critical Review. W. Simpkin and R. Marshall.
2d ser. 35 (1802): 477
Textual Features Sarah Trimmer
In addition to Catharine Cappe 's work on Sunday schools and versions of fairy stories by Marie-Catherine d'Aulnoy , the magazine reviewed work by a whole library of didactic, pedagogical, or improving writers, reprinted as...
Textual Features Charlotte Yonge
The second volume is again rich in women's writing. Its first item is Elizabeth Gunning 's Family Stories; or, Evenings at my Grandmother's. CY mentions with approval another item, A Puzzle for a Curious...
Textual Features Susannah Gunning
This historical tale, of a Roman father, Virginius, who exerts the ultimate control over his daughter's sexual destiny by killing her, carries oblique, disturbing reference to Elizabeth Gunning 's courtship story. In the poem the...
Textual Features Lady Mary Wortley Montagu
All the mock eclogues (written, like most of Montagu's more ambitious poetry, in heroic couplets with the occasional triplet) target actual individuals and refer to events which were gossip of the day. Monday, Wednesday...
Publishing Hannah Brand
It was printed at Norwich and sold through London publishers. The subscription list was impressive, including Anna Letitia Barbauld , John Brand (presumably HB 's brother) of Hemingston Hall in Suffolk, who took twenty copies...
Publishing Frances Arabella Rowden
Her book did well. Many clergy, many parents of girls in the Hans Place school, many relations of the author and of her dedicatee subscribed, plus Elizabeth Gunning , Richard Brinsley Sheridan , and Sarah Trimmer
Occupation Harriett Jay
HJ made her London debut the next month, on 22 December, in Buchanan's The Nine Days Queen. In this too she took on the lead role (this time as Lady Jane Grey ). Her...
Friends, Associates Mary Robinson
MR remained devoted to the idea of female friendship. She met the artist Maria Cosway in France and they became firm friends. In her last months she wrote to the novelist Elizabeth Gunning to sympathise...
Family and Intimate relationships Harriette Wilson
Meanwhile her next lover (whom, like the prince, she propositioned by letter) was the first man, she said, with whom she ever fell erotically in love. He represented another step up in society, being the...

Timeline

: The Gunning sisters arrived in London from...

Building item

Summer1751

The Gunning sisters arrived in London from Ireland, and created a sensation with their beauty: Maria was aged around seventeen and Elizabeth was a year younger.

By 22 July 1797: William Beckford published a second and more...

Women writers item

By 22 July 1797

William Beckford published a second and more marked burlesque attack on women's writing: Azemia: A Descriptive and Sentimental Novel. Interspersed with Pieces of Poetry.

Texts

Gunning, Elizabeth. Dangers through Life. J. Ebers, 1810.
Gunning, Elizabeth. Family Stories. B. Tabart, 1802.
Gunning, Elizabeth. Lord Fitzhenry. J. Bell, 1794.
Auvigny, Jean du Castre d’, and Pierre François Guyot Desfontaines. Memoirs of Madame De Barneveldt. Translator Gunning, Elizabeth, S. Low; E. Booker, 1795.
Jeanne-Isabelle-Pauline Polier de Bottens, baronne de Montolieu,. Sentimental Anecdotes. Translator Gunning, Elizabeth, C. Chapple, 1811.
Gunning, Elizabeth. The Exile of Erin. B. Crosby, 1808.
Gunning, Elizabeth. The Foresters. Sampson Low, 1796.
Gunning, Elizabeth. The Gipsy Countess. T. N. Longman and O. Rees, 1799.
Gunning, Susannah, and Elizabeth Gunning. The Heir Apparent. J. Ridgway and H. D. Symonds, 1802.
Gunning, Elizabeth. The Man of Fashion. M. Jones, 1815.
Gunning, Elizabeth. The Orphans of Snowdon. H. Lowndes, 1797.
Gunning, Elizabeth. The Packet. J. Bell, 1794.
Gunning, Elizabeth. The Packet. Burnside; J. Bell, 1794.
Gunning, Elizabeth. The Village Library. B. Crosby, 1802.
Gunning, Elizabeth. The War-Office. Published for the author, 1803.