Sarah Harriet Burney

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Standard Name: Burney, Sarah Harriet
Birth Name: Sarah Harriotte Burney
Nickname: Sally
Used Form: the Author of Clarentine
SHB was an early nineteenth-century novelist and letter-writer (though she began to publish before the end of the eighteenth century). Her achievements in both these genres have been obscured by those of her sister Frances. She wrote from financial necessity—I must scribble, or I cannot live
Burney, Sarah Harriet. The Letters of Sarah Harriet Burney. Editor Clark, Lorna J., University of Georgia Press, 1997.
197
—but her later works especially rank high for quality and interest.

Connections

Connections Sort descending Author name Excerpt
Literary responses Elizabeth Griffith
The original letters were immensely popular with readers (among others Sarah Harriet Burney was a devotee); their authors became famous under their pseudonyms. Not everyone agreed in admiring them, however. Lady Bradshaigh remarked to Samuel Richardson
Literary responses Laetitia-Matilda Hawkins
This novel was reviewed in the same listing as Sense and Sensibility, by a Lady.
Critical Review. W. Simpkin and R. Marshall, 5 series.
3d ser. 24 (1811): 336
Readers (like Sarah Harriet Burney ) generally and justifiably identified the heroine with...
Literary responses Mary Brunton
Brunton's English publisher, Longman , registered in the year of publication that the book was in great demand and very much admired on the whole, though some complain of the later part of the work...
Literary responses Catherine Hutton
The Miser Married was admired by Sarah Harriet Burney (who struck up acquaintance with Hutton on the strength of it) as a clever amusing little book.
Burney, Sarah Harriet. The Letters of Sarah Harriet Burney. Editor Clark, Lorna J., University of Georgia Press, 1997.
205
It was the only one of her works...
Literary responses Frances Burney
Burney's family were delighted. Her young half-sister Sarah Harriet (who was about to publish her own first novel) sent her a perfect rhapsody of praise.
Burney, Sarah Harriet. The Letters of Sarah Harriet Burney. Editor Clark, Lorna J., University of Georgia Press, 1997.
17-18
A long review in the Analytical Review, probably...
Literary responses Mary Charlton
Sarah Harriet Burney was clearly more impressed by what she regarded as a popular, even a trashy novel, than she was willing to admit. She called it (in implicit contrast with Walter Scott ) a...
Literary responses Hannah More
Sarah Harriet Burney had high praise for it. The chapter on the smaller-scale faults and virtues, she said, merits to be written in letters of gold.
Burney, Sarah Harriet. The Letters of Sarah Harriet Burney. Editor Clark, Lorna J., University of Georgia Press, 1997.
139
Around the same time Harriet Martineau (in her...
Literary responses Maria Edgeworth
But Sarah Harriet Burney wrote: Nobody more thoroughly venerates the admirable author than I do—And in this last work, she has really excelled herself. Every young man ought to study it . . ....
Literary responses Susan Ferrier
This novel too was a success, if not quite so resoundingly as Marriage (to whose reputation more than one reviewer referred).
Cullinan, Mary. Susan Ferrier. Twayne, 1984.
68-9
The author's sister Helen (Mrs Kinloch ), an early reader, approached it...
Reception Elizabeth Hervey
The publisher, Henry Colburn , sent a pretty bound copy to Sarah Harriet Burney . She (unfortunately for the literary historian, since her opinion would be worth having) apparently thanked him for it before she...
Reception Germaine de Staël
Sarah Harriet Burney , like her famous sister, was troubled at GS 's unconventionality. She wrote that she yawned over De l'Allemagneand yet, here and there, was electrified by a flash of sublimity. Do...
Textual Features Anna Maria Porter
This is set during the Thirty Years War. As Sarah Harriet Burney remarked, the period at which she makes her people act and talk, is during the Protestant War in Germany; she carries you...
Textual Production Anna Maria Bennett
Several novels were attributed to AMB which are probably not hers. Titles that have been ascribed to her include Henry Bennett et Julie Johnson, 1794 (a French translation, bearing her name, of John Raithby

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