The term was coined by poet-critic Rev. James Sterling in a dedicatory verse to Haywood's Secret Histories, Novels, and Poems, and acknowledges the authors' stature as the three most influential women writers of the time.[1] Subsequent feminist literary criticism has helped restore their work–which includes plays, poetry, novels, and essays–to prominence.[2] As the verse appears in the dedication to Haywood's book, it is perhaps unsurprising that Sterling positions her as the most impressive of the three, writing:
Pathetic[a]Behn, or Manley's greater Name;
Forget their Sex, and own when Haywood writ,
She clos'd the Fair triumvirate of Wit.[3]
Notes
^ "Pathetic" here is used in an obsolete sense meaning "affecting the feeling"; see pathos.
^
Haywood, Eliza Fowler; Pettit, Alexander; Croskery, Margaret Case; Patchias, Anna C. (1 April 2004). Fantomina and other works. Broadview Press. p. 20. ISBN978-1-55111-524-5. Retrieved 17 March 2012.
^
Anderson, Paul Bunyan (February 1936). "Mistress Delariviere Manley's Biography". Modern Philology. 33 (3): 261–278. doi:10.1086/388202. ISSN0026-8232.