A coquette written in 1797 by Hannah Webster Foster records the lives of the wealthy women of the 18th century. The whole novel has several themes: correspondence, sexual freedom, and an ideal woman. Elizabeth Whitman has become a symbol of American history since the 19th century. Elizabeth Whitman's tombstone is said to be a popular tourist attraction, "Her tomb is a popular destination for New England tourists who broke the far corner of the Old South Cemetery in the 19th century." Terman Loose base of the cookie
Hannah Webster Foster's cookie Eliza Wharton was guilty. She was also tempted, deceived, loved, and passed away. Coquette Hannah Webster Foster used Eliza as a fable, so there was a problem with the prototype of the woman. For the readers of the 20th century, Eliza's fate seems to be too dramatic, sad, and perhaps ridiculous. Although she loves men, the environment has forced them to build a whirlwind, whirlwind-like rendezvous that destroys their lives, hindering their marriage. Readers in the 20th century may have supported Sanford 's divorce, and she may have backed it, and she may have supported the acceptance of the Eliza Boyer proposal.
Another female novelist, Hannah Forster, wrote the book of The Coquette, or the history of Eliza Wharton, published in 1797. It is also a very popular novel. Secondly from the standpoint of Hannah Forster based on Eliza Whitman's lifetime, another episode novel is tempted and focuses on abandoned women. Elisa is a handsome man with two very different men: a pastor who provides her with comfort and regularity of family life, as well as famous and specific liberals.
Because of her well-known social and moral character, Eliza Wharton is known as coquettish: features of independence, shame, flirting, and serious social discontent. She is addicted to the happiness that unmarried women can enjoy and is known for her social etiquette. But in the early days of the book, she faced a dilemma when confronted with two men with opposite lifestyle and values. Under normal circumstances she prefers to not marry any of them for her glossy character but her society around her breaches her wish and makes her unhappy I will pursue marriage. Obviously, this is not what Eliza wants or what you want, even if her colleagues make other suggestions. Hannah Foster investigated the treatment of women, criticized, pointed out horses!