ABSTRACT

Discipline, the second novel by the Scottish writer Mary Brunton (1778-1818), was published in 1814. While less well known than its predecessor Self-Control (1811), it is nonetheless equally deserving of a central place in the canon of Romantic-era fiction. A wide-ranging novel, it shares many themes with contemporary fiction such as women’s difficulties in earning money and the horror of being falsely imprisoned in an insane asylum. However, it is Discipline’s innovative attempt at psychological realism that sets it apart from its contemporaries. Through the moral growth of its heroine Ellen Percy, Discipline insists on women’s self-determination, and their ability to become rational agents in a world that treats them as objects merely of desire or contempt. This edition is edited by Olivia Murphy who has added careful editorial notes and an insightful new introduction to the text.

chapter |15 pages

Introduction

chapter |1 pages

Discipline

chapter |2 pages

Preface

part |305 pages

Discipline.

chapter |8 pages

Chap. I

chapter |7 pages

Chap. II

chapter |10 pages

Chap. III

chapter |7 pages

Chap. IV

chapter |8 pages

Chap. V

chapter |8 pages

Chap. VI

chapter |9 pages

Chap. VII

chapter |8 pages

Chap. VIII

chapter |14 pages

Chap. IX

chapter |11 pages

Chap. X

chapter |8 pages

Chap. XI

chapter |15 pages

Chap. XII

chapter |10 pages

Chap. XIII

chapter |7 pages

Chap. XIV

chapter |10 pages

Chap. XV

chapter |11 pages

Chap. XVI

chapter |13 pages

Chap. XVII

chapter |6 pages

Chap. XVIII

chapter |11 pages

Chap. XIX

chapter |10 pages

Chap. XX

chapter |10 pages

Chap. XXI

chapter |8 pages

Chap. XXII

chapter |13 pages

Chap. XXIII

chapter |12 pages

Chap. XXIV

chapter |9 pages

Chap. XXV

chapter |11 pages

Chap. XXVI

chapter |10 pages

Chap. XXVII

chapter |8 pages

Chap. XXVIII

chapter |12 pages

Chap. XXIX

chapter |7 pages

Chap. XXX