Frances Brooke, whose maiden name was Moore, an elegant and accomplished woman, was the wife of a clergyman. She had, at one time, a share in the management of the Opera House. Her publications are numerous. She wrote a periodical paper entitled The Old Maid,2 and some pieces for the theatre. She translated Lady Catesby’s Letters3 from the French, and several other works. The two novels by which she is best known are Emily Montague, and Lady Julia Mandeville.4 The latter is a simple, well connected story, told with elegance and strong effect. It is a forcible appeal to the feelings against the savage practice of duelling. Emily Montague is less interesting in the story, which serves but as a thread to connect a great deal of beautiful description of the manners and scenery of Canada, which country the author had visited. Mrs. Brooke was perhaps the first female novel-writer who attained a perfect purity and polish of style. The whole is correct and easy, and many passages are highly beautiful.
 What can be more animated than the description of the breaking up of the vast body
            of ice which forms what is called the bridge, from
            Quebec to Point Levi? "The ice before the town being five feet thick, a league in
            length, 
vol. xxvii.a[Page ii]and more than a mile broad, resists for a long time the rapid tide that
            attempts to force it from the banks. At length," she says, "the hour is come. I have
            been with a crowd of both sexes, and all ranks, hailing the propitious moment. Our
            situation on the top of Cape Diamond gave us a prospect some leagues above and below
            the town. Above Cape Diamond the river was open; it was so below Point Levi, the
            rapidity of the current having forced a passage for the water under the transparent
            bridge, which for more than a league continued firm. We stood waiting with all the
            eagerness of expectation; the tide came rushing in with amazing impetuosity; the
            bridge seemed to shake, yet resisted the force of the waters; the tide recoiled, it
            made a pause, it stood still, it returned with a redoubled fury,—the immense mass
            of
            ice gave way. A vast plain appeared in motion; it advanced with solemn and majestic
            pace; the points of land on the banks of the river for a few moments stopped its
            progress; but the immense weight of so prodigious a body, carried along by a rapid
            current, bore down all opposition with a force irresistible."
The manners of the Canadians are equally well described: and this lady’s account both of the climate and the people corresponds to the favourable impression which other travellers give us, both of the country and the inhabitants; the climate healthy and pleasant, though cold, and the inhabitants preserving so near the pole the gaiety and urbanity of their native France. This lady died in 1789.
