Gypsy Breynton is the heroine of an eponymous series of books written by Elizabeth Stuart Phelps.
Author | Elizabeth Stuart Phelps |
---|---|
Genre | Sunday School |
Publication date | 1866 |
The books were written in 1866–67 for Sunday schools and so are of an improving nature.[1] Gypsy, as the name indicates, is an impetuous tomboy who lives a chaotic life lacking a system.[2] Her development and experiences provide the basis for the restrained moralizing of the stories.[3]
All that Mrs. Breynton said does not matter here; but Gypsy is not likely soon to forget it. A few words spoken, just as the conversation ended, became golden mottoes that helped her over many rough places in her life.
"It is all the old trouble, Gypsy,— you 'didn't think.' A little self-control, a moment's quiet thought, would have saved all this."
"Oh, I know it!" sobbed Gypsy. "That's what always ails me. I'm always doing things, and always sorry for them. I mean to do right, and I cannot remember. ... What shall I do with myself, mother?"
The four books in the series are
- Gypsy Breynton
- Gypsy's Cousin Joy
- Gypsy's Sowing and Reaping
- Gypsy's Year at the Golden Crescent
Gypsy Benton was part of an era introducing tomboyism in American literature. Around this same period, several other similar characters were created, including those in Little Women (1868) by Louisa May Alcott and What Katy Did (1872) by Sarah Chauncey Woolsey.[4]
References
edit- ^ Denise D. Knight (2003), Writers of the American Renaissance, Bloomsbury Academic, p. 294, ISBN 9780313321405
- ^ Lisa A. Long (15 November 2001), The Cambridge companion to nineteenth-century American women's writing, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 9780521669757
- ^ Faye Riter Kensinger (1987), Children of the series and how they grew, Popular Press, pp. 124–5, ISBN 9780879723767
- ^ Abate, Michelle Ann. Tomboys: A Literary and Cultural History. Temple University Press, 2008, XV. ISBN 9781592137237
External links
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