Hannah Webster Foster

American writer
Also known as: A Lady of Massachusetts, Hannah Webster
Quick Facts
Née:
Hannah Webster
Born:
Sept. 10, 1758, Salisbury, Mass. [U.S.]
Died:
April 17, 1840, Montreal, Que., Can. (aged 81)

Hannah Webster Foster (born Sept. 10, 1758, Salisbury, Mass. [U.S.]—died April 17, 1840, Montreal, Que., Can.) was an American novelist whose single successful novel, though highly sentimental, broke with some of the conventions of its time and type.

Hannah Webster received the genteel education prescribed for young girls of that day. In April 1785 she married the Reverend John Foster, a Unitarian minister. In 1797, signing herself merely “A Lady of Massachusetts,” she published The Coquette; or, The History of Eliza Wharton, a highly sentimental novel that enjoyed much success. Advertised as “founded on fact,” The Coquette was loosely based on an actual case of seduction, elopement, and tragic death. It both followed and—in some particulars, notably characterization—transcended the imperatives of the formula for such fiction, in which to stray from the path of virtue was to invite inevitable and terrible retribution. The book exhibited also in its epistolary form the marked influence of Samuel Richardson’s Clarissa. Sales of the book warranted 13 editions during the author’s lifetime and kept it in print for decades after her death, and in an 1866 edition her name was placed on the title page for the first time. Her second book, The Boarding School; or, Lessons of a Preceptress to her Pupils (1798), was a failure. Little else is known of Foster’s life.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.
Key People:
Maria Susanna Cummins
Related Topics:
novel

sentimental novel, broadly, any novel that exploits the reader’s capacity for tenderness, compassion, or sympathy to a disproportionate degree by presenting a beclouded or unrealistic view of its subject. In a restricted sense the term refers to a widespread European novelistic development of the 18th century, which arose partly in reaction to the austerity and rationalism of the Neoclassical period. The sentimental novel exalted feeling above reason and raised the analysis of emotion to a fine art. An early example in France is Antoine-François Prévost’s Manon Lescaut (1731), the story of a courtesan for whom a young seminary student of noble birth forsakes his career, family, and religion and ends as a card shark and confidence man. His downward progress, if not actually excused, is portrayed as a sacrifice to love.

The assumptions underlying the sentimental novel were Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s doctrine of the natural goodness of man and his belief that moral development was fostered by experiencing powerful sympathies. In England, Samuel Richardson’s sentimental novel Pamela (1740) was recommended by clergymen as a means of educating the heart. In the 1760s the sentimental novel developed into the “novel of sensibility,” which presented characters possessing a pronounced susceptibility to delicate sensation. Such characters were not only deeply moved by sympathy for their fellow man but also reacted emotionally to the beauty inherent in natural settings and works of art and music. The prototype was Laurence Sterne’s Tristram Shandy (1759–67), which devotes several pages to describing Uncle Toby’s horror of killing a fly. The literature of Romanticism adopted many elements of the novel of sensibility, including responsiveness to nature and belief in the wisdom of the heart and in the power of sympathy. It did not, however, assimilate the novel of sensibility’s characteristic optimism.