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Corvey 'Adopt an Author'
Maria Regina Roche
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The Corvey Project at
Sheffield Hallam University |
A Biography of Regina Maria Roche by Emma Hodinott
Regina Maria Roche (nee. Dalton) is considered today as
a minor Gothic novelist who wrote very much in the shadow of Ann Radcliffe.
She was however a best seller in her own time, the popularity of her third
novel, The Children of the Abbey, rivalling that of Ann Radcliffe's
The Mysteries of Udolpho. Born in Waterford, Southern Ireland in
1764, the daughter of Captain Blundell Dalton who was an officer in His
Majesty's Fortieth Regiment, she moved to Dublin as a child, where she
remained until after her marriage to Ambrose Roche in around 1794, when
the couple moved to England.
Her first two novels, The Vicar of Lansdowne, or Country
Quarters (1789) and The Maid of the Hamlet (1793), were published
under her maiden name and written, by her own admission, ‘at so early
a period that those not acquainted with my dear father ascribed (them)
to him.’1 In the preface to her debut novel, Roche, demonstrating
a keen understanding of the general critical reception of works of popular
fiction, appealed to the critics to ‘disregard this humble TALE.’ Certainly,
this appeal gained her some attention, her following novel being reviewed
far more extensively than her two most enduring works, The Children
of the Abbey and Clermont, which were published in 1796 and
1798 respectively, after Roche had moved to England.
The Children of the Abbey was one of the period's
most popular novels, a sentimental Gothic Romance, that although written
after her marriage was still written during a period when Roche considered
herself ‘so young as to know little more of the world.’2 Clermont
was Roche's only real attempt at writing a Gothic novel, and is decidedly
more 'horrible' than anything else she wrote. Both novels went
through several editions and were translated into both French and Spanish.
The Nocturnal Visit, Roche's fifth novel, was published in 1800.
However, during the period 1800 to 1807, this prolific novelist all but
disappeared from the literary world, a pause in production that can be
attributed to financial difficulties that she and her husband found themselves
in. Cheated out of her patrimony and her husband's life interests through
the machinations of an unscrupulous solicitor by the name of Boswell,
Roche seemed unable to continue writing until she received financial aid
from The Royal Literary Fund. She then went on to produce a further 11
novels between 1807 and 1834: Alvondown Vicarage: A Novel (1807
– apparently lost), The Discarded Son; or Haunt of the Banditti. A
Tale (1807), The Houses of Osma and Almeria; or, Convent of St.
Ildefonso. A Tale (1810), The Monastery of St. Colomb; or, The
Atonement. A Novel (1813), Trecothick Bower; or, the Lady of the
West Country. A Tale (1814), The Munster Cottage Boy. A Tale (1820),
Bridal of Dunamore; and Lost and Won. Two Tales (1823), The
Tradition of the Castle; or, Scenes in the Emerald Isle (1824), The
Castle Chapel. A Romantic Tale (1825), Contrast (1828) and
The Nun’s Picture. A Tale (1834). Roche’s later works reflect her
return to Ireland in the eighteen-twenties in their use of regional Irish
settings.
Certain records suggest that Roche was also the author
of Eliza; or, The Pattern of Women (1802), London Tales; or,
Reflective Portraits (1814) and Anna; or, Edinburgh. A Novel (1815).
Most critics agree however that these novels were not written by her,
being of an inferior quality to the rest of her body of work and not published
by Newman or Lane, Roche’s usual publishers.
That illness and even depression punctuated the later
stages of her career is alluded to in her preface to Contrast (1828),
in which she describes briefly her ‘long nights of sickness and privation’,
which left her in a state of ‘gloom and despair’. Certainly, this was
not a happy time for Roche, the death of her ‘dear husband’3
in 1829, leaving her ‘destitute and broken-hearted’4. That
much of Roche's sense of despair was borne out of the sufferings of her
husband is quite likely, as she refers to his life as an ‘afflicted’5
one. However, she did herself suffer from bouts of debilitating sickness.
Regina Maria Roche's novels were published predominantly
by The Minerva Press, her blend of Gothic and Romance with the emphasis
tacitly on morality, being very much characteristic of the popular fiction
that they published. She was one of this famous publishing house's great
success stories, a fact supported by references that Jane Austen made
to two works of Roche's in Emma (1816) and Northanger
Abbey (1818). The Children of the Abbey was one of Harriet
Smith's favourite novels in Emma and Clermont was one of
the 'horrid novels' in Northanger Abbey. Roche's inclusion in this
list of seven novels has helped to revive interest in her works and Clermont
indeed was republished as part of the series of these 'horrid novels'
in 1968.
However, despite being immortalised by this canonised
writer, Regina Maria Roche, even in her own time, had none of the enduring
popularity that Ann Radcliffe enjoyed and she faded from fame to die in
literary obscurity at the age of 81 in her home town of Waterford. Her
obituary in The Gentleman's Magazine remembers her as a ‘distinguished
writer (who) had retired from the world and the world had forgotten her.
But many young hearts, now old must remember the effect upon them of her
graceful and touching compositions.’
1 Cross, Nigel (ed), 1984, The
Royal Literary Fund: 1790-1918, London, World Mircofilms Publications,
Reel 17, Case 590.
2 Ibid.
3 Ibid.
4 Ibid.
5 Ibid.
Bibliography
Austen Jane, 1990, Emma, Oxford, Oxford University
Press.
Austen, Jane, 1995, Northanger Abbey, London,
Penguin.
Cross, Nigel (ed), 1984, The Royal Literary Fund:
1790-1918, London, World Mircofilms Publications, Reel 17, Case 590.
Roche, Regina Maria, 1789, 'Address' in The Vicar
of Lansdowne, or Country Quarters, London, William Lane.
Roche, Regina Maria, 1828, ‘Preface’ to Contrast,
London, Newman.
Schroeder, Natalie, 'Regina Maria Roche, Popular Novelist,
1789-1834: The Rochean Canon', in The Papers of the Bibliographical
Society of America, 73, 1979.
The Gentleman's Magazine, July 1845, 86.
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