Not Wisely, but Too Well. A novel. By the Author of "Cometh up as a Flower" [Miss Rhoda Broughton]. British Library, Historical Print EditionsThe British Library is the national library of the United Kingdom. It is one of the world's largest research libraries holding over 150 million items in all known languages and books, journals, newspapers, sound recordings, patents, maps, stamps, prints and much more. Its collections include around 14 million books, along with substantial additional collections of manuscripts and historical items dating back as far as 300 BC.The NOVELS OF THE 18th & 19th CENTURIES collection includes books from the British Library digitised by Microsoft. The collection includes major and minor works from a period which saw the development and triumph of the English novel. These classics were written for a range of audiences and will engage any reading enthusiast. ++++The below data was compiled from various identification fields in the bibliographic record of this title. This data is provided as an additional tool in helping to insure edition ++++ British Library Broughton, Rhoda; 1867. 3 vol.; 8 . 12626.bb.14.
What an incredible read! This account of how a green girl grows into a solemn, determined woman with demons and angels grabbing at her skirts as she navigates the commonplace cruelties of living life should be canon. Wrongly labeled as a sensuous romance and sensation novel by Victorian Secrets who republished it (in an otherwise wonderful critical edition); this is a very spiritual book with a morbidly beautiful central theme on the glory (or shame) of death and the afterlife. It also contains a very realistic, tender portrayal of a suicidal woman. It is one of my new favorites and I will forever hold it dearly to my heart.
I found this book mentioned in another book I read recently and knowing that I find gems this way, I had to read this story. I read this edition and I strongly recommend it, for many reasons besides the annotated which was excellent, it included the original version which has differences and a completely different conclusion. "Not Wisely" was published in serial form from DUM (Dublin University Magazine) but later was released in 3 volume format with changes. When reading I would read "x" number of pages and then look briefly at the changes which helped see the differences in the stories. The DUM version had the character of Dare more a brute and blackguard, whereas in volume 3, he was a rake but softened a bit. I liked the 3 volume better but the DUM version was quite shocking and good too. When reading this story it reminded me of Richardson's Clarissa Harlowe, a truly favorite of mine, but they are quite different. Kate, in Not Wisely must control her passions of Dare, who would like her to take the step unfooled, whereas Lovelace of Clarissa fools Clarissa into that "one step". Clarissa and Kate must decide do they want to be closer to heaven or walk a path of sin. Kate is not your typical Victorian heroine which makes her actions more interesting, and Broughton brings Kate to life. A story that is not easily forgotten.
DNF 36%. I'm sorry but this is just agonizing. The pacing is TERRIBLE. IDK why so many people make this out to be more scandalous than CUAAF when it's just noooot. So damn boring. I'm just going to read about it in secondary scholarship and call it a day.
Somehow this was not what I expected, especially since I knew its scandalous reputation. The narrator is odd, too: often ironic, going into lengthy musings on side topics, with lots of classical allusions, and also positioned as a character who knows the people intimately, and is in love with the main character, but who is never identified or explained. But the parts that deal with the heroine's interior life, and her reactions to things, are very vivid and well-realized. Maybe the generally detached tone provides a grounding background for the extravagant emotionalism, so it never comes off like an over-heated romance, but a character study of someone feeling extravagant emotions. So quite interesting, and and a good addition to your collection of novels about sex and romance in the 19th century. I'm sure you all have one.
For the novel itself, 3.5 stars. For the presentation of the book - the extended Introduction and the extensive (just under 700!) annotations - 4.5 stars.
difficult to read because of the writing (run-on sentences filled with unnecessary commas plus an omniscient narrator who pops up in the middle of the story for no reason.) but i appreciated the story for what it was.