"Clarissa" explains it all 

Posted by Carolyn Vega Friday, March 11, 2011 5:20:00 PM

Over 250 years after its publication, Samuel Richardson’s Clarissa still has the honor of being the longest novel in the English language. This melodramatic epistolary novel clocks in at over 950,000 words, and was initially published in seven volumes. It follows the beautiful and virtuous Clarissa as she resists her family’s attempts to arrange a "suitable" (i.e., well-connected) marriage. She is then tricked into running away with the villain Lovelace, who, in his attempts to force Clarissa to marry him, imprisons and finally rapes her. She continues to resist his proposals, and finally escapes -- but she becomes very ill and eventually dies. Clarissa’s family, realizing the misery they caused, is devastated at the news of her death.

Immediately after first reading Clarissa, a young Miss Frances Grainger, the daughter of Richardson’s neighbor, the pawnbroker Thomas Grainger, wrote to the author (the final volume was published on December 6, 1748; Richardson’s initial reply to Miss Grainger is dated the 20th of that month), and a lively correspondence sprang up. Richardson answers Miss Grainger’s pointed queries about Clarissa, discussing the characters at length. He also touches more generally on the relationship between parents and their children. Frequently citing his own novel to support these views, he praises prudent children, like Clarissa and Miss Grainger, and disparages all “Tyrant-Parents."

Samuel Richardson to Frances Grainger, 1 February 1750

In this letter from February 1, 1750, he even remarks on his own experience as a parent, noting: “I often complain that my own Girls seem more to fear me, to keep Distance to me, than I wish them to do. My dear Girls, I often say, let me have nothing but your Love. Open to me all the Secrets of your Hearts. I will be favorable and kind even to your Faults. All that you say to one another, that say to me.” Richardson had five daughters, four of whom survived him, and a son, and his letters to Miss Grainger, which are closely written in a very neat hand, are lively and subtly explore the dynamics of family relationships.

For more information about this letter, click here. For more information about the drawing above, click here.

 

The Leon Levy Foundation is generously underwriting a major project to upgrade catalog records for the Morgan's collection of literary and historical manuscripts. The project is the most substantive effort to date to improve primary research information on a portion of this large and highly important collection.

Tweet This
Comments are closed on this post.
Printable View

© The Morgan Library & Museum, 225 Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10016, (212) 685-0008

Home Museum »
Visit the Museum
Exhibitions
Calendar
Public Programs
Education
Collection »
Collection highlights
Online Exhibitions
Music Manuscripts Online
Collection News
Conservation
Multimedia
CORSAIR Collection Catalog
Research »
CORSAIR Collection Catalog
Research Services
Reading Room
Research Guides
Photography & Rights
About »
Press
History of the Morgan
The Morgan Campus
Employment
Internships
Volunteer
Support »
Become a Member
Make a Donation
Corporate Membership
Corporate Entertaining
Shop Contact

E-News | Site Index | Terms and Conditions

The programs of The Morgan Library & Museum are made possible with public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council, and from the New York State Council on the Arts, a state agency.