Abstract

The tales 'Kitty Bell' and 'Giulio and Eleanor' appeared as interpolations in the serial 'Mary Lawson by M. Eugene Sue', published in The London Journal , a penny weekly, during 1850/51. Handwriting and other clues identify G. W. M. Reynolds as the compiler of this novel from three manuscript sources, and as the pseudonymous correspondent 'K.T.' whose letter to Charlotte, claiming 'Kitty Bell' as a 'paraphrase' of Jane Eyre, has prompted the theory that 'Kitty Bell' was a plagiarism of the novel. The name Kitty Bell and associated topics appear among the works by Alfred de Vigny and Eugène Sue that contributed to Charlotte's literary formation. In that context, this article develops the view, first advanced by Mrs Ellis H. Chadwick, that Charlotte wrote 'Kitty Bell' as a first attempt at the subject of Jane Eyre. 'Giulio and Eleanor' emerges as her matching sketch for The Professor.

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