While at
Covington, Kentucky, Hentz competed for a prize of $500 that had been offered for a play by the directors of the
Arch Street Theatre in
Philadelphia. The prize was awarded to her for her tragedy of
De Lara, or the Moorish Bride. It was produced on stage and published in book-form in 1843.
Lamorah, or the Western Wild, another tragedy, was performed at Cincinnati after having been published in a newspaper at
Columbus, Georgia in 1832.
Constance of Werdenberg, a third tragedy, remained unpublished. Hentz also wrote numerous short poems. She wrote a voluminous number of tales and novelettes that were published in periodicals and newspapers, many of which were collected into volumes. Hentz introduces several villains in her novel, ''The Planter's Northern Bride'' (1854). One is a busybody who tries to free slaves against their will. By doing so, Hentz tries to discredit the abolitionist argument of inhumane treatment of the Southern slaves. She portrays the people wanting to abolish the institution of slavery as being motivated for personal gain, not by a desire to improve mankind. She expanded on this motive to attribute abolitionist sentiment to the industrial revolution that was taking place in the North, which she said would require the massive amounts of cheap labor that only the South could provide by way of slavery.
Primary works •
Lamorah; or, the Western Wild (play, 1832) •
Constance of Werdenberg; or, The Forest League (play, 1832) • ''Lovell's Folly'' (1833) •
De Lara; or, The Moorish Bride (play, 1843) • "Human and Divine Philosophy: A Poem Written for the Erosophic Society of the University of Alabama" (1844) • ''Aunt Patty's Scrap-bag'' (1846) •
Linda; or, The Young Pilot of the Belle Creole (1850) •
Rena; or, The Snow Bird (1851) •
Eoline; or, Magnolia Vale; or, The Heiress of Glenmore (1852) •
Marcus Warland; or, The Long Moss Spring (1852) •
The Banished Son and Other Stories of the Heart (1852) • ''Helen and Arthur; or, Miss Thusa's Spinning Wheel'' (1853) •
The Victim of Excitement, The Bosom Serpent, etc. (1853) •
Wild Jack; or, The Stolen Child, and Other Stories (1853) • "The Hermit of Rockrest" (1853) • ''
The Planter's Northern Bride'' (1854) •
Courtship and Marriage; or, The Joys and Sorrows of American Life (1856) •
Ernest Linwood; or, The Inner Life of the Author (1856) •
Love After Marriage and Other Stories of the Heart (1857) Reprint (possibly a revision) of the previous collection,
The Victim of Excitement •
The Lost Daughter and Other Stories of the Heart (1857) •
Robert Graham (1855) Sequel to
Linda; or, The Young Pilot of the Belle Creole ==Notes==