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CATHERINE GRACE FRANCES GORE (1799-1861)

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Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 254 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CATHERINE GRACE FRANCES GORE (1799-1861)  ,
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English novelist and dramatist, the daughter of Charles Moody, a wine-merchant, was born in 1799 at East Retford, Nottinghamshire . In 1823 she was married to Captain Charles Gore; and, in the next
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year, she published her first
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work, Theresa Marchmont, or the Maid of Honour . Then followed, among others, the Lettre de Cachet (1827), The Reign of Terror (1827), Hungarian Tales (1829), Manners of the Day (183o), Mothers and Daughters (1831), and The
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Fair of May Fair (1832), Mrs Armytage (1836) . Every succeeding year saw several volumes from her pen: The
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Cabinet Minister and The Courtier of the Days of Charles II., in 1839; Preferment in 1840 . In 1841
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Cecil, or the Adventures of a Cox-comb, attracted considerable attention . Greville, or a Season in Paris appeared in the same year; then Ormington, or Cecil a Peer, Fascination, The Ambassador's Wife; and in 1843 The Banker's Wife . Mrs Gore continued to write, with unfailing fertility of invention, till her
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death on the 29th of
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January 1861 . She also wrote some dramas of which the most successful was the School for Coquettes, produced at the Haymarket (1831) . She was a woman of versatile talent, and set to
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music Burns's " And ye shall walk in
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silk attire," one of the most popular songs of her day . Her extraordinary
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literary industry is proved by the existence of more than seventy distinct
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works . Her best novels are Cecil, or the Adventures of a Coxcomb, and The Banker's Wife . Cecil gives extremely vivid sketches of
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London fashionable
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life, and is full of happy epigrammatic touches .

For the know-ledge of London clubs displayed in it Mrs Gore was indebted to

William Beckford, the author of Vathek . The Banker's Wife is distinguished by some
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clever studies of character, especially in the persons of Mr Hamlyn, the cold calculating
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money-maker, and his warm-hearted country neighbour, Colonel Hamilton . Mrs Gore's novels had an immense temporary popularity; they were parodied by,Thackeray in
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Punch, in his " Lords and Liveries by the author of Dukes and Dejeuners "; but, tedious as they are to
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present-day readers, they presented on the whole faithful pictures of the contemporary life and pursuits of the English upper classes .

End of Article: CATHERINE GRACE FRANCES GORE (1799-1861)
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