Scott's first novel,
A Marriage in High Life (1828, 2 vols), was edited by the author of
Flirtation: her relative, Lady
Charlotte Susan Maria Bury. The plot was based on fact. The style is diffuse, but the interest well sustained. A French translation appeared in 1830. Another English edition appeared in 1857. Two other novels followed, likewise anonymously:
Trevelyan, 1833, reprinted 1837 (Bentley's Standard Novels, No. 58) and 1860 (the Railway Library), and
The Old Grey Church in 1856.
Trevelyan appeared in a German translation in 1835. Lady Scott's succeeding, non-fiction works name her as author. They are
Exposition of the Types and Antitypes of the Old and New Testament, 1856,
Incentives to Bible Study; Scripture Acrostics; a Sabbath Pastime for Young People, 1860, and
Acrostics, Historical, Geographical, and Biographical, 1863. ==References==