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Inchbald [ne Simpson], Elizabeth (17531821), writer and actress, was born on
15 October 1753 in Standingfield, near Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk, the youngest child
but one in the large family of John Simpson (d. 1761), farmer, and his wife, Mary (d.
1783), daughter of William Rushbrook of Flimpton.
From 1772 to 1776 the Inchbalds toured Scotland with West Digges's theatre
company, acting in Glasgow, Edinburgh, and Aberdeen. Despite her determined
practising, walking the hills and shores with her husband listening to her recitals,
Inchbald was never a very good actress, but she continued to perform a variety of
roles and to supplement her wages by walking on in the pantomime. The touring life
was a hard one: travelling, they were caught in storms and had to walk long distances
in the rain, and her health was undermined by the consequent attacks of ague and
fever. Her marriage was difficult, too. She did not enjoy her role as stepmother to her
husband's illegitimate son Robert, whose mother is not known. Robert was in the
same company playing children's roles, and Elizabeth insisted on his lodging
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separately from the couple in Edinburgh. Her husband also had another, older son,
George, whose mother may or may not have been the same as Robert's. Elizabeth and
her husband quarrelled over money and her independence: he objected to her
receiving her own salary separately from his, and to her friendships with other men,
and she objected to his drinking sessions with friends.
In 1776 the Inchbalds left Digges's company after an incident in which Joseph had
antagonized the audience. They now had to find alternative ways of earning a living.
Joseph decided to study painting in France, while Elizabeth, who had already been
studying the language, resolved to continue her French studies and to try and write
for the stage. After their brief stay in France, abandoned because of their shortage of
money, they were for a while destitute in Brighton, where they once went into the
fields to eat turnips instead of dining (Boaden, Inchbald, 1.68). At this point
Elizabeth was still on bad terms with her mother, and the latter had refused to help
the couple with money. Later Elizabeth seems to have been reconciled with her
mother, visiting her in Standingfield several times before Mary Simpson's death in
1783. Her family connections were important to her, and she sent money to members
of her family whenever she could, from her acting wages and later from the profits of
her writing. Perhaps she hoped in this way to make up for running away to the stage
and marrying Inchbald.
Later in 1776 the Inchbalds managed to get another theatrical engagement, with
Younger in Liverpool. Here Elizabeth met the actress Sarah Siddons, who became a
lifelong friend, and her brother, the actor John Philip Kemble. Her friendship with
Kemble was intense, and sometimes quarrelsome; the relationship between the
coquettish, passionate Miss Milner and her stern guardian in A Simple Story may be
based in part on it. Like her other friendships it aroused her husband's jealousy.
Siddons and Kemble seem to have been an intellectual stimulus to the incipient
writer, who was educating herself during this period by reading in English, and in
Latin literature in translation. She began writing a novel (possibly, but not certainly,
an early version of A Simple Story), and corresponded with Kemble about it. She
tried unsuccessfully to get this novel published in 1779.
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Indiana in The Constant Lover. She also played the cross-dressing heroine Bellario in
Philaster. She acted in new plays of the 1780s, including Hannah Cowley's The Belle's
Stratagem. She was painted as Lady Jane Grey and as the Lady Abbess in The
Comedy of Errors; but apart from this she never seems to have become well known
for any particular role, and her acting was never critically acclaimed. From at least
the mid-1770s, she was considering writing as a possible alternative to this only
moderately successful stage career. Her acting experience gave her a knowledge of
stage techniques, and familiarized her with a wide range of stage plots and character
types that she drew on for her own plays. Her stage experience was also put to use in
her fiction, with its tight, dramatic dialogues and its use of themes from earlier
dramatists. Her Shakespearian roles included Hermione in The Winter's Tale and
Perdita in an adaptation from the same play, Florizel and Perdita; and in A Simple
Story she used several motifs from this play including the tyrannical husband and
father, the motherdaughter pair of heroines, and the jump in time.
Inchbald's first farces were submitted to the theatre managers Harris and Colman in
1781, but were refused. Eventually her farce The Mogul Tale, submitted to Colman
under an assumed name, was accepted. Three English characters fly to the Orient in a
balloon; the topical interest of balloon ascents helped make the play popular, and it
had a good run at the Little Theatre in the Haymarket in July and August 1784.
Inchbald acted in it herselfstammering with nerves on the first nightand, once its
success was assured, declared her authorship and took applause for it from the stage.
Colman paid her 100 guineas for the farce, and agreed to accept a comedy she had
sent him previously, which he altered and put on at the Haymarket as I'll Tell You
What in 1785. This five-act comedy of contemporary life was also a success, and as
well as bringing her 300 for three benefit nights, it gave her a fame which increased
her value, and her wages, as an actress.
From this time on Inchbald became a prolific and highly popular dramatist, whose
most successful productions brought high financial rewards. She estimated her
proceeds from Such Things Are (1787) as 900. She used her earnings to buy
annuities, and by 1789, with an investment income of 58 a year, she was able to give
up her acting engagement at Covent Garden and rely on her writing. Altogether
nineteen of her comedies, sentimental dramas, and farces were performed at the
London theatres between 1784 and 1805. Some were original plots; others were
translations or adaptations from French plays, which she read in the original, and
German ones, which she had to approach through English translations. Her work
ranged from broad farce such as Appearance is Against them (1785), which was
criticized for indecent expressions, to serious sentiment, as in Such Things Are,
which has topical interest in its fanciful portrait of the prison reformer Howard as
Haswell, a benevolent Englishman visiting Sumatra, freeing prisonersone of them
the beloved wife of the very sultan who incarcerated her by mistakeand generally
sorting life out for the English expatriates. Like other dramatists of the time, Inchbald
wrote comedy about marriage and its problems, and parentchild relations. To
Marry, or not to Marry (1805) is a typically light-hearted exploration of its theme,
ending by answering the question it poses with a clear, sentimental affirmative. She
was interested in challenges to social convention: she included divorced couples in
some plays, and a favourite character type is the witty, irreverent young lady, a role in
which her friend the actress Elizabeth Farren specialized. One of her plays, Lover's
Vows (1798) from August Kotzebue's Child of Love, gave sympathetic treatment to a
fallen woman and her illegitimate son, and has since become famous as the
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dangerous drama performed in Austen's Mansfield Park. However, there were strict
limits to how far unconventionality could be explored in popular comedy at this date:
All on a Summer's Day (1787) was hissed by the audience and criticized in the
reviews for portraying a flirtatious, imprudent wife with sympathy. In general
Inchbald managed to please her audience by combining relatively liberal social views
with the maintenance of social order, often through the actions of a benevolent male
authority figure. In Everyone has his Fault (1792), for example, Mr Harmony
manages to reconcile Sir Robert Ramble to the virtuous former wife he had failed to
appreciate, and Lord Norland to the daughter he had disowned on her marriage to a
poor man; to induce Mr Placid to take a firmer line with his domineering wife, and to
marry the old bachelor Solus to Miss Spinster. A strong theme throughout this play is
the critique of aristocratic extravagance and the championship of poverty-stricken
middle-class virtue, also found in Next Door Neighbours (1791), one of her French
adaptations. Wives as they Were and Maids as they Are (1797) takes a sharp look at
modern life, touching on the current questioning of female subordination; but though
there is a memorably disturbing moment when a mistreated wife confirms that she
fears her husband and refuses to say she loves him, the comedy concludes in a
conservative way, with wifely submission praised and the witty, independent-minded
Miss Dorrillon learning that she cannot manage without fatherly guidance.
Once she was established as a playwright, Inchbald also returned to writing fiction,
this time with much greater success, and her first novel, A Simple Story, was highly
praised on its appearance in 1791. The 200 she got for it, though good pay for a
novel at this time, compared badly with the proceeds from dramatic hits, such as the
700 she made from Every One has his Fault (1793). However, if novels were less
lucrative than drama, they opened up new artistic opportunities, leaving her freer to
develop her challenging views both on family and sexual relations and on class
relations and political order. A Simple Story explores in much greater psychological
depth issues and behavioural patterns that also preoccupied her in her plays: paternal
authority as exercised by a stern father who rejects his dependants, and the challenge
to that authority represented by a passionate and wilful young woman. Miss Milner's
desire for a man who is a priest and her guardian makes her a disruptive heroine, and
though the novel concludes on a conventional note, its overall effect is to disturb
eighteenth-century complacency about the benevolence of paternal power in a way
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Inchbald's drama did not. Her second and final novel, Nature and Art (1796), was
openly critical of English social institutions and class structures. Through the story of
two brothers and their children, one selfish fatherson pair, both of whom rise in a
corrupt world, and one unselfish pair, condemned to poverty, Inchbald attacks the
system of patronage, the administration of justice, and the cruelties and hypocrisies
of sexual morality.
After her last comedy, To Marry or not to Marry, was performed at Covent Garden
in 1805, Inchbald turned to critical and editorial work, producing The British
Theatre, a twenty-five-volume collection of plays with critical introductions, in 1806
9; a seven-volume Collection of Farces and Afterpieces in 1809; and ten volumes of
The Modern Theatre in 1811. She wrote an article about the novel for the periodical
The Artist in 1807, but declined invitations to write for the Quarterly Review and to
edit La Belle Assemble.
For many years Inchbald was a well-known figure in London society, with a wide
circle of friends and a lively social life. Her fair, freckled, sandy-haired, slender
beauty was greatly admired and often painted. Her independent attitude, and her
ability to nudge the limits of acceptable feminine behaviour without ever laying
herself open to scandal, struck her contemporaries as remarkable. George Hardinge
commented: She lives aloneher character has no tache upon itand Mrs Siddons
said she was as cold as ice: but I cannot believe it (Nichols, Illustrations, 3.38). She
kept meticulous records of her considerable earnings and shrewd investments; but
despite her growing wealth she always lived very frugally, scrubbing her own floor
and carrying her own coals. She kept in touch with members of her family, all of them
in much poorer circumstances than she was, and helped them with money. For some
time she was estranged from her sister Debby, who seems to have entered
prostitution; and though they were reconciled before Debby's death in 1794, Inchbald
felt guilty about her earlier attitude. The sympathetic portrait of Hannah Primrose in
Nature and Art may owe something to her feelings about her sister. Another social
outcast for sexual reasons, the actress Mary (Becky) Wells, found Inchbald a constant
friend and source of financial support.
Final years
Inchbald's life was marked by tensions between, on the one hand, political
radicalism, a passionate nature evidently attracted to a number of her admirers, and
a love of independence, and on the other hand, a desire for social respectability and a
strong sense of the emotional attraction of authority figures. If her own analysis of it
contained anything like the psychological skill of her novels, it would have been a
marvellous insight into the making of a woman writer in the eighteenth century.
Unfortunately, the four-volume autobiography, which she began in 1795 and for
which at one stage she was offered 1000, was destroyed on the advice of her
confessor. She did leave extensive diaries, used by her biographer, which give a
detailed account of her reading, writing, earnings, investments, moods, migraines,
dizzy spells, flirtations, proposals, and friendships over fifty years. Some of these
volumes still survive.
Inchbald's last years were spent in retirement and increasing seclusion. After what
she called her years of no religious existence, from the late 1770s until 1810, she
renewed her faith. She corresponded with and met Maria Edgeworth and Germaine
de Stal, but on the whole she avoided socializing, spending her time instead in
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Inchbald had great popular success and some critical praise for her witty comedies,
several of which remained available to the nineteenth-century public in her own
edited collection of English plays, The British Theatre. A Simple Story soon became
her greatest claim to fame. It was frequently reprinted in the nineteenth century, and
its appeal in an age of realist writing is indicated by Maria Edgeworth's praise:
In the twentieth century, too, Inchbald was mainly remembered as a novelist, and is
now receiving increasing critical attention, especially from those interested in
women's literary history and in the revolutionary novels of the 1790s.
JANE SPENCER
Sources Memoirs of Mrs Inchbald, ed. J. Boaden, 2 vols. (1833) T. Wilkinson, The wandering
patentee, or, A history of the Yorkshire theatres from 1770 to the present time, 4 vols. (1795) S. R.
Littlewood, Elizabeth Inchbald and her circle (1921) R. Manvell, Elizabeth Inchbald: England's
principal woman dramatist and independent woman of letters in 18th century London (1987) P.
Sigl, The Elizabeth Inchbald papers, N&Q, 227 (1982) P. Sigl, The literary achievement of
Elizabeth Inchbald, PhD diss., U. Wales, 1980 Highfill, Burnim & Langhans, BDA Nichols,
Illustrations G. L. Joughin, An Inchbald bibliography (1934) J. Boaden, Memoirs of the life of
John Philip Kemble, 2 vols. (1825) C. Kegan Paul, William Godwin: his friends and
contemporaries, 2 vols. (1876) D. C. Sutton, Location register of English literary MSS and letters, 1
(1995)
Archives BL, diaries, RP2266, 4730 [copies] Folger, diary V&A NAL, corresp. | Bodl. Oxf.,
letters to William Godwin; letters to John Taylor [copies]
Likenesses J. Russell, oils, c.1788, priv. coll. G. Dance, pencil drawing, 1794, NPG T. Lawrence,
oils, c.1796, priv. coll. [see illus.] G. Romney, oils, 1904, Tennant collection; repro. in R. S. Gower,
George Romney (1904) W. Daniels, engraving (after G. Dance) S. De Wilde, oils (as Lady Jane
Grey), Garr. Club S. De Wilde, watercolour drawing, Garr. Club S. Freeman, stipple (after T.
Lawrence, 1796), BM; repro. in Monthly Mirror (1807), pl. G. H. Harlow, pencil and sanguine
drawing, Garr. Club Heath, engraving (after portrait by G. Romney, 1904) J. Opie, oils, priv. coll.
J. Opie, oils, Petworth House, Sussex W. Ridley, engraving (after S. Drummond), repro. in Monthly
Mirror (1797), pl. Woodring, engraving (after J. Russell), repro. in European Magazine (1788), pl.
miniature (after J. T. Barber-Beaumont), Garr. Club prints, BM silhouette, Garr. Club
Wealth at death 50006000: Boaden, Memoirs; DNB
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