Penelope Aubin
Penelope Aubin (c. 1679 – 1738) was an English novelist, poet, and translator. She was the daughter of Sir Richard Temple and Anne Charleton. Her mother Anne was the daughter of the physician and natural philosopher Walter Charleton. Aubin married her husband, Abraham Aubin, in 1696, and they had three children: Marie, Abraham, and Penelope. Aubin died in April 1738, survived by her husband until his death in April 1740.
Works
- The Stuarts : A Pindarique Ode (1707)
- The Extasy: A Pindarick Ode to Her Majesty The Queen (1708)
- The Wellcome : A Poem to his Grace the Duke of Marlborough (1708)
- The Strange Adventures of the Count de Vinevil and His Family (1721)
- The Life of Madam de Beaumount, a French Lady (1721)
- The Life and Amorous Adventures of Lucinda (1721)
- The Doctrine of Morality (1721). Translation by T.M. Gibbs of M. De Gomberville. Republished in 1726 as Moral Virtue Delineated.
- The Noble Slaves: Or the Lives and Adventures of Two Lords and Two Ladies (1722)
- The Adventures of the Prince of Clermont, and Madam De Ravezan (1722). Translation of Mme Gillot De Beaucour.
- Anne de Sola has edited a modern (2003) critical edition: ISBN 0-7734-6610-X
- History of Genghizcan the Great (1722). Translation of M. Petis de le Croix.
- The Life of Charlotta Du Pont, an English lady; taken from her own memoirs (1723). Online edition at www.chawton.org
- The Life and Adventures of the Lady Lucy (1726)
- The Illustrious French Lovers (1726). Translation of Les Illustres Françaises by Robert Challe
- Anna de Sola has edited a modern (2000) critical edition: ISBN 0-7734-7701-2
- The Life and Adventures of The Young Count Albertus, The Son of Count Lewis Augustus, by the Lady Lucy (1728)
- The Life of the Countess de Gondez (1729). Translation.
Further reading
- Eve Tavor Bannet, Transatlantic Stories and the History of Reading, 1720-1810: Migrant Fictions. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2011, Ch. 2.
- David Brewer and Angus Whitehead, "The Books of Lydia Languish's Circulating Library Revisited," Notes and Queries 57.4 (2010): 551-53.
- Joel Baer, "Penelope Aubin and the Pirates of Madagascar: Biographical Notes and Documents," Eighteenth-Century Women: Studies in Their Lives, Work, and Culture, vol. 1, ed. Linda V. Troost (New York: AMS Press, 2001).
- Roger Dooley, "Penelope Aubin: Forgotten Catholic Novelist," Renascence 11 (1959): 65-71.
- Aparna Gollapudi, 'Virtuous Voyages in Penelope Aubin's Fiction', Studies in English Literature 1500–1900 45:3 (Summer 2005), pp. 669–690
- Edward Kozaczka, "Penelope Aubin and Narratives of Empire," Eighteenth-Century Fiction, Volume 25, Number 1 (2012), pp. 199–226
- William H. McBurney, 'Mrs Penelope Aubin and the Early-Eighteenth Century English Novel', Huntington Library Quarterly, 20 (1956–7), pp. 245–267
- Chris Mounsey, ' '...bring her naked from her bed, that I may ravish her before the Dotard's face, and then send his Soul to Hell': Penelope Aubin, Impious Pietist, Humourist or Purveyor of Juvenile Fantasy?', British Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 26 (2003), pp. 55–75
- C.M.Owen, 'The Virginal Individual', The Female Crusoe: hybridity, trade and the eighteenth-century female individual, Amsterdam: Rodopi Books, 2010: 139-164.
- Sarah Prescott, 'Penelope Aubin and the Doctrine of Morality: a reassessment of the pious woman novelist', Women's Writing, Volume 1, No.1 (1994), pp. 99–112
- Debbie Welham, 'The Particular Case of Penelope Aubin', Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, Volume 31, Number 1 (2008), pp. 63–76
- Debbie Welham, "Delight and Instruction? Women's Political Engagement in the Works of Penelope Aubin," (PhD diss., University of Winchester, 2009).
External links