“So Shall She Now the Softest Coulours Chuse/To Paint thy Fate & Shadow out thy Woes”

This article will explore the ways in which literary forms empower emotional response to public events, using as a case study the wide range of literary texts – published and circulated in manuscript – inspired by the notorious Abergavenny scandal of 1729. Lady Abergavenny’s beauty, adultery and...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Quinault, Lucia
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Edizioni Ca’ Foscari 2017-05-01
Series:English Literature
Subjects:
Online Access:http://edizionicafoscari.unive.it/riviste/english-literature/2017/1/so-shall-she-now-the-softest-coulours-chuseto-pain/
id doaj-ec5ebc24b7c24c1198fc43b537f400e9
record_format Article
spelling doaj-ec5ebc24b7c24c1198fc43b537f400e92021-06-02T14:10:15ZengEdizioni Ca’ FoscariEnglish Literature2420-823X2017-05-014110.30687/EL/2420-823X/2017/01/008journal_article_1381“So Shall She Now the Softest Coulours Chuse/To Paint thy Fate & Shadow out thy Woes”Quinault, Lucia0Queen Mary, University of London (UK) This article will explore the ways in which literary forms empower emotional response to public events, using as a case study the wide range of literary texts – published and circulated in manuscript – inspired by the notorious Abergavenny scandal of 1729. Lady Abergavenny’s beauty, adultery and death, followed by a trial in which her husband was awarded a staggering £10,000 in compensation, stimulated poetry, drama and opera, giving voice to desire, remorse, pity, despair and contempt. Drama and poetry intersect in their treatment of the scandal, and while poetry offers its writers and readers an opportunity to explore a single viewpoint, and to circulate it privately, drama re-imagines the causes and conversations, and exposes them to public judgment. The alternating prose and verse of opera thus offer us a self-contained sample of the uses of different literary genres in expressing emotion and presenting the social and moral debates provoked by the affair. http://edizionicafoscari.unive.it/riviste/english-literature/2017/1/so-shall-she-now-the-softest-coulours-chuseto-pain/Abergavenny. Scandal. Emotion. Genre. Poetry.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Quinault, Lucia
spellingShingle Quinault, Lucia
“So Shall She Now the Softest Coulours Chuse/To Paint thy Fate & Shadow out thy Woes”
English Literature
Abergavenny. Scandal. Emotion. Genre. Poetry.
author_facet Quinault, Lucia
author_sort Quinault, Lucia
title “So Shall She Now the Softest Coulours Chuse/To Paint thy Fate & Shadow out thy Woes”
title_short “So Shall She Now the Softest Coulours Chuse/To Paint thy Fate & Shadow out thy Woes”
title_full “So Shall She Now the Softest Coulours Chuse/To Paint thy Fate & Shadow out thy Woes”
title_fullStr “So Shall She Now the Softest Coulours Chuse/To Paint thy Fate & Shadow out thy Woes”
title_full_unstemmed “So Shall She Now the Softest Coulours Chuse/To Paint thy Fate & Shadow out thy Woes”
title_sort “so shall she now the softest coulours chuse/to paint thy fate & shadow out thy woes”
publisher Edizioni Ca’ Foscari
series English Literature
issn 2420-823X
publishDate 2017-05-01
description This article will explore the ways in which literary forms empower emotional response to public events, using as a case study the wide range of literary texts – published and circulated in manuscript – inspired by the notorious Abergavenny scandal of 1729. Lady Abergavenny’s beauty, adultery and death, followed by a trial in which her husband was awarded a staggering £10,000 in compensation, stimulated poetry, drama and opera, giving voice to desire, remorse, pity, despair and contempt. Drama and poetry intersect in their treatment of the scandal, and while poetry offers its writers and readers an opportunity to explore a single viewpoint, and to circulate it privately, drama re-imagines the causes and conversations, and exposes them to public judgment. The alternating prose and verse of opera thus offer us a self-contained sample of the uses of different literary genres in expressing emotion and presenting the social and moral debates provoked by the affair.
topic Abergavenny. Scandal. Emotion. Genre. Poetry.
url http://edizionicafoscari.unive.it/riviste/english-literature/2017/1/so-shall-she-now-the-softest-coulours-chuseto-pain/
work_keys_str_mv AT quinaultlucia soshallshenowthesoftestcoulourschusetopaintthyfateampshadowoutthywoes
_version_ 1721403794666815488