Afbeelding van de auteur.

Charlotte M. Yonge (1823–1901)

Auteur van The Little Duke; or Richard the Fearless

193+ Werken 3,211 Leden 29 Besprekingen Favoriet van 8 leden

Over de Auteur

Fotografie: Charlotte M. Yonge, May 8th 1866 Photographer: Charles Lutwidge Dodgson

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Werken van Charlotte M. Yonge

The Heir of Redclyffe (1854) 235 exemplaren
A Book of Golden Deeds (1864) 208 exemplaren
The Daisy Chain; or, Aspirations (1856) 195 exemplaren
The Clever Woman of the Family (1865) 178 exemplaren
The Dove in the Eagle's Nest (1866) 72 exemplaren
Child's Bible Reader (1898) 49 exemplaren
Countess Kate (1862) 42 exemplaren
The Lances of Lynwood (1855) 40 exemplaren
Heartsease (1854) 32 exemplaren
Two Penniless Princesses (1891) 24 exemplaren
The Three Brides (1876) 22 exemplaren
History of Christian Names (1863) 22 exemplaren
Grisly Grisell (1893) 20 exemplaren
Young Folks' History of England (1879) 20 exemplaren
History of France (1882) 20 exemplaren
Young Folks' History of Rome (1877) 19 exemplaren
Little Lucy's Wonderful Globe (1871) 16 exemplaren
The Caged Lion (1870) 16 exemplaren
Chantry House (1887) 15 exemplaren
Young Folks' History of Greece (1876) 14 exemplaren
Beechcroft at Rockstone (1887) 13 exemplaren
The Long Vacation (1895) 13 exemplaren
Young Folks' History of France (1879) 13 exemplaren
The Two Sides of the Shield (1885) 13 exemplaren
Scenes and Characters (1847) 12 exemplaren
Abbeychurch (1844) 11 exemplaren
Nuttie's Father (1885) 10 exemplaren
Friarswood Post Office (1867) 10 exemplaren
The Carbonels (1896) 10 exemplaren
The Pigeon Pie (1860) 10 exemplaren
The Stokesley Secret (1861) 9 exemplaren
Henrietta's Wish (1899) 9 exemplaren
Modern Broods (1900) 9 exemplaren
Young Folks' History of Germany (1878) 9 exemplaren
The Armourer's Prentices (1889) 9 exemplaren
Old Times at Otterbourne (1891) 8 exemplaren
The Chosen People (1862) 8 exemplaren
That Stick (1892) 7 exemplaren
More Bywords (1890) 7 exemplaren
John Keble's Parishes (1898) 7 exemplaren
The Herd Boy and His Hermit (1900) 6 exemplaren
Sowing and Sewing (1882) 6 exemplaren
A Modern Telemachus (1886) 6 exemplaren
Womankind (1877) 5 exemplaren
The Monthly Packet — Redacteur — 3 exemplaren
Village Children (1967) 3 exemplaren
Strolling Players (1893) 3 exemplaren
Langley School: A Tale (1850) 3 exemplaren
Willie's Trouble and How He Came Out of It — Auteur — 2 exemplaren
The History of Sir Thomas Thumb (1859) 2 exemplaren
The Railroad Children (1849) 2 exemplaren
How to Teach the New Testament (1881) 2 exemplaren
The Wardship of Steepcoombe (1896) 2 exemplaren
The Treasures in the Marshes (1893) 2 exemplaren
Chantry House, Volume 1 (1886) 2 exemplaren
Child's History of France (1881) 2 exemplaren
Cameos from English History (2012) 1 exemplaar
Historical Dramas 1 exemplaar
New Ground (1868) 1 exemplaar
The Sea Spleenwort 1 exemplaar
Hannah More (1888) 1 exemplaar
Complete Novels 1 exemplaar
Ben Sylvester's Word (1856) 1 exemplaar
Daily Food for Christians (1911) 1 exemplaar
The Rubies of St. Lo (1894) 1 exemplaar
Nuttie's Father, Volume 1 (2016) 1 exemplaar
The Six Cushions (1867) 1 exemplaar
A Book of Golden Deeds, Book 1 (2013) 1 exemplaar
The Strayed Falcon 1 exemplaar

Gerelateerde werken

Mensen in oorlog de beste oorlogsverhalen (1942) — Medewerker — 288 exemplaren
The Treasure Chest (1932) — Medewerker — 259 exemplaren
The Junior Classics Volume 07: Stories of Courage and Heroism (1912) — Medewerker — 52 exemplaren
A Chaplet for Charlotte Yonge (1965) — Medewerker — 7 exemplaren
Hole in the Wall and Other Stories (1968) — Medewerker — 4 exemplaren
Victorian Tales for Girls (1947) — Medewerker — 2 exemplaren

Tagged

Algemene kennis

Officiële naam
Yonge, Charlotte Mary
Geboortedatum
1823-08-11
Overlijdensdatum
1901-05-24
Graflocatie
Otterbourne, Hampshire, England, UK
Geslacht
female
Nationaliteit
UK
Geboorteplaats
Otterbourne, Hampshire, England, UK
Plaats van overlijden
Otterbourne, Hampshire, England, UK
Woonplaatsen
Otterbourne, Hampshire, England, UK
Beroepen
children's writer
teacher
novelist
magazine editor
author
Relaties
Battiscombe, Georgina (biographer)
Keble, John (parish priest)
Organisaties
Church of England
Korte biografie
Miss Charlotte M. Yonge was a successful fiction writer publishing some 120 volumes during her lifetime. She is most noted for her story "The Heir of Redclyffe" and her Book of Golden Deeds. She was greatly devoted to missionary work. She devoted some of her earnings to fund a missionary schooner for cruising the South Seas and funded the building of a missionary college in New Zealand.

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Besprekingen

A relatively short book, presumably intended for children, but not written down to them. The Ninth Crusade is the background to a story about the relationships among the sons of Simon de Montfort. Sounds unpromising, perhaps, but nuanced and engaging.
 
Gemarkeerd
booksaplenty1949 | Apr 25, 2024 |
The Carbonels (1895) by Charlotte M. Yonge was based on and inspired by her parents’ early years in the Hampshire village of Otterbourne and what an entertaining novel she produced from such source material.

In the summer of 1822 Captain Edmund Carbonel, who ‘had been in the army just in time for the final battles of the Peninsular war’, comes to live at Greenhow Farm ‘an estate bringing in about £500 a year.’ It is the local ‘big house’ in the village of Uphill. He is accompanied by his young wife Mary and her sister Dorothea; another younger sister Sophia is still at school in London. The Uphill people are described as ‘a thoroughly bad lot … no one will do anything with them.’ Astonished at their poverty and crudity, the Carbonels decide to reform Uphill.

While dealing with serious societal shifts of the early nineteenth century, CMY’s gentle humour illuminates young people slightly out of their depth in dealing with their cunning rural neighbours. There is the involved saga of the upside-down length of wallpaper in their drawing-room, ‘very delicate white, on which were traced in tender colouring – baskets of vine leaves and laburnhams.’ But as Dora exclaims, ‘see, the laburnhams and grapes are hanging upward.’ The origin of this interior design disagreement sets up a dangerous antipathy between one of the workmen, Dan Hewlett and Captain Carbonel. Its denouement takes place in the thrilling final chapters of the novel with the Captain Swing riots of 1830.

Before that there is the old-fashioned (and to the Carbonels) ugly church with its enormous pews and the three-decker pulpit they find peculiar. They are shocked by Dame Verdon’s school, only kept in order by her young but energetic granddaughter. Villagers are differentiated with their many and overlapping stories: the mischievous but fascinating Tirzah Todd (with her ‘gypsy connections’ ) who disposes of her poacher husband’s game; the hypocritical Nanny Barton who always puts on ‘a white apron and brought out a big Bible when she saw the ladies’ about to visit and the gentle invalid Judith Grey and her poor sister Molly, wife of Dan who ‘had been going deeper into the mire ever since.’

To modern readers the Carbonels approach to improving the villagers’ lives and prospects can often be both crass and patronising. There is a shocking scene where Dora and Sophia cut off the dirty, ragged and pungent hair of the schoolgirls in triumphant delight. ‘Lend me your scissors, Mrs Thorpe’ is Dora’s battle cry before being carried away despite the shock and weeping of the children. Captain Carbonel, with the assent of Mary, reprimands Dora, ‘but the children were not your slaves … You have done more harm than you will undo in a hurry.’ Tirzah Todd warns her neighbours against the ‘gentlefolk, with their soft words and such’ who will treat them all, ‘just like the blackamoors.’

This is a slight Charlotte M. Yonge novel in comparison with many of her earlier and best works, one more of her many publications for the National Society. Nonetheless The Carobonels is full of argument, memorable characters and there was a sequel too.

This book was part of the November 2023 CMY Fellowship book group read.
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
Sarahursula | Dec 26, 2023 |
In Founded on paper or Uphill and downhill between the two Jubilees (1898), the sequel to something of her parents’ story in The Carbonels (1895), Charlotte M. Yonge moves closer to her own experience of village life and the changes and improvements that can be wrought by a good family in residence.

This novel was published by the National Society for Promoting Religious Education. According to Ellen Jordan, this was ‘one of the books Yonge wrote with the specific audience of the "weary hardworked women" who belonged to Mothers' Unions in mind.’

Miss Yonge returned to the Carbonels, but this time there is only the unmarried Miss Sophia Carbonel in residence at Greenhow Farm. She ‘was still lady of all work to Uphill and something between a mother and a companion to Estrid and Malvina’, her grandnieces and patroness to the residents of Uphill who lives have reflected the social changes of Victorian England. The young hero of The Carbonels Johnnie Hewlett has become ‘Mr. Hewlett … churchwarden and head of the firm, hale and hearty as any man near upon seventy could wish to be’.

The daughter of the good schoolmistress of The Carbonels is the widowed Jane Truman. Her large family ‘she contrived to bring up in a somewhat superior way, between the boys' work and her own, as a good laundress and charwoman, with the proceeds also of a large garden and orchard.’

As the novel opens Mrs Truman has her ambitious son Wilfred at home with his crosspatch invalid sister Laura, terribly injured in an accident leaving her blind in one eye, scarred and dependent. Laura was a clever and talented child but increasingly introspective, making a little money with her needlework but preferring her awkward poetry. Charlotte Yonge is fascinated by the effect her accident has on Laura.

‘She had always been used to notice, and to be sympathised with was almost as good as to be admired. She loved and entered into religious poetry and good books, and could really believe that it was a wise and thankworthy dispensation that had cut her off from vanity in her good looks.’

While Laura is the most interesting female character, the one who causes a certain havoc is the nursery maid Lucy Darling. She is Wilfred’s beloved but unwittingly pursued by a gentleman artist who wishes her to model for his painting of St Elizabeth of Hungary and Thuringia. Wilfred Truman and Lucy Darling are shadowed in the narrative by the hopeless ne’er-do-wells from Birmingham, Alf Greylark and his bedraggled wife Eva.

Charlotte Yonge wrote in What Books to Lend and What to Give, that the female readers of this kind of novel wanted ‘incident, pathos and sentiment to attract them’. My goodness, whatever ‘class of woman’ reader you are, Miss Yonge packs incident after incident into the last third of this novel, and swipes at grieving, hypocritical relations, and the gutter press as well as a satisfying (and of course sentimental) ending for Lucy Darling.

This book was part of the November 2023 CMY Fellowship book group and read in conjunction with The Carbonels.
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
Sarahursula | Dec 26, 2023 |
3.5 stars- rounded down.

Set in the 15th century, this medieval tale reminded me of reading Ivanhoe in both language and style. A young girl, Christina, is taken from the shelter of her Uncle and Aunt who have raised her by a father she literally does not know. He takes her to a baronetcy perched in the Austrian alps to be a companion and nurse to an even younger girl who is the baron’s daughter. The place is so high and removed that it resembles an eagle’s aerie and Christina, a devout Christian, becomes a symbolic dove in the eagle’s nest.

Christina comes into this violent and coarse environment and, through her faith and goodness, affects changes that transform both the people and the system. This is a time of change generally in society as the independent barons are giving way to being governed by a Kaiser. The Adlersteins are among the last small group of what one wishes to call “ronin” rulers. The historical elements of the novel fascinate me, especially the role of women in Germanic society during this time. The religious elements are important but do not overshadow the progress of the story.

The story is multi-generational, following Christina’s story with that of her sons, Eberhard and Friedel. Considering the sometimes stilted language, the characters are amazingly absorbing. And, while the plot is sometimes a bit predictable, that is primarily because it is the kind of story people have found worthwhile to tell more than once.

One of the nice things about participating in the challenges in the Catching Up on Classics group is that I find myself reading books that would otherwise never make my list. This wasn’t anything like a favorite, but it was interesting and enjoyable, so I am glad to have read it.
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
mattorsara | 1 andere bespreking | Aug 11, 2022 |

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Statistieken

Werken
193
Ook door
7
Leden
3,211
Populariteit
#7,969
Waardering
½ 3.5
Besprekingen
29
ISBNs
831
Talen
5
Favoriet
8

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