"Have at the masters"?: literary allusions in Elizabeth Gaskell's Mary Barton.

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From: Studies in the Novel
Date: 20070622
Author:Wilkes, Joanne

When Elizabeth Gaskell published her first novel, Mary Barton, in 1848, she gave it the subtitle, A Tale of Manchester Life, and announced in her preface that the book's aim was to "give some utterance to the agony which from time to time convulses [the] dumb people" of Manchester (7). (1) An important aspect of this giving utterance was the use of the Lancashire dialect for the speech of her working-class characters. This was something with which Gaskell took particular care, as is evident from the corrections and changes she made to the successive editions of the novel that she ...

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