Maria Edgeworth's reliance on literary and artistic allusions makes her one of the most intertextual writers of the Romantic period. Her work consistently confirms the expectation that her readers not only have read the original texts embedded within her work, but that they recognize the aptness of these allusions as well. In effect, Edgeworth transforms the reading of her work into an excursion for source texts. Rather than merely fulfilling the reader's desire for novelty and entertainment, Edgeworth obliges her readers to discern and interpret the numerous literary and iconographic intertexts she embeds in her narratives. The ‘moral’ message of her fiction, to which Edgeworth testifies at great length throughout her writing – indeed she refers to
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, the greatest of her novels, as a ‘moral tale’ – screens a complex and interwoven tapestry of social, cultural, and political elements that frequently belie the simplicity of that message. This complicating allusiveness, then, reveals a writer with a broad, cosmopolitan depth, as well as an intense interest in local mores, mythological lore, and Irish traditions and history.