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Rebecca and Rowena (1850)

by William Thackeray (1811 - 1863)

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Hesperus Press March 16th, 2007 08:24 AM PST

Shamelessly parodying Sir Walter Scott's vast popular success, a youthful William Makepeace Thackeray wrote a novel loosely based on Scott's 'Ivanhoe'. Irreverently exploring what happened after Scott's novel ended, 'Rebecca and Rowena' takes as its premise Ivanhoe's mistaken marriage to the wrong woman - 'icy, faultless, prim' Rowena - and ridiculously reunites the hero with his first love, the Jewess Rebecca. From bawdy and blood-thirsty Richard the Lion-heart, to Wamba, Ivanhoe's Shakespearean Fool, Thackeray's characters come into their own as facetious renditions of hackneyed medieval stereotypes. His is a surreal, parallel universe, stuffed with anachronistic props and starring a host of twelfth-century cynics.