From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #15243 Reply-To: ammf@fruvous.com Sender: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest Thursday, December 19 2024 Volume 14 : Number 15243 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Discover the Secret to Thicker, Harder, Larger Erections â 100% ["Morning] ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Thu, 19 Dec 2024 13:49:01 +0100 From: "Morning Wood" Subject: Discover the Secret to Thicker, Harder, Larger Erections â 100% Discover the Secret to Thicker, Harder, Larger Erections b 100% http://financiallock.click/C0ccX_VGJirApSYN0tazDyfeTQykyxw1VU7SFf1LOHx_Pv7ikQ http://financiallock.click/Pj5VCHygjEZaw0L-N-FDKq2NvYsfgqIOCukjc-pdE2nwv_rJ3w omen writers also published novels. Susanna Rowson is best known for her novel Charlotte: A Tale of Truth, published in London in 1791. In 1794 the novel was reissued in Philadelphia under the title, Charlotte Temple. Charlotte Temple is a seduction tale, written in the third person, which warns against listening to the voice of love and counsels resistance. She also wrote nine novels, six theatrical works, two collections of poetry, six textbooks, and countless songs. Reaching more than a million and a half readers over a century and a half, Charlotte Temple was the biggest seller of the 19th century before Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin. Although Rowson was extremely popular in her time and is often acknowledged in accounts of the development of the early American novel, Charlotte Temple often is criticized as a sentimental novel of seduction. Hannah Webster Foster's The Coquette: Or, the History of Eliza Wharton was published in 1797 and was extremely popular. Told from Foster's point of view and based on the real life of Eliza Whitman, the novel is about a woman who is seduced and abandoned. Eliza is a "coquette" who is courted by two very different men: a clergyman who offers her a comfortable domestic life and a noted libertine. Unable to choose between them, she finds herself single when both men get married. She eventually yields to the artful libertine and gives birth to an illegitimate stillborn child at an inn. The Coquette is praised for its demonstration of the era's con ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #15243 ***********************************************