Henry Ormond is an orphan boy taken under the guardianship of his late father's friend, Sir Ulick O'Shane, Member of Parliament and a big fish in his native Ireland. Although Sir Ulick is actually fonder of the young Harry than of his own son Marcus, he is careful to bring up Marcus as a gentleman, ensuring that Marcus is given an excellent education, but takes no such care with Harry, leaving him to grow up wild and ignorant. The only thing in Harry's favour, despite his unmannerly habits and ungovernable temper, is his warm and generous nature. This last leads him into many scrapes as he shields Marcus from the consequences of his deeds, the blame for which he takes on himself. In one such event, Harry lands himself into a potentially fatal situation when in a fit of drunken rage, one of the gamekeepers on his uncle's land is shot and nearly killed. Although Edgeworth implies that it is Marcus's hand that did the shooting, it is Harry who blames himself, and Marcus does nothing to declare Harry's innocence. Again the implication is that Marcus is jealous of his father's obvious preference for the wild youth to himself.
At that point, Sir Ulick decides that Harry can no longer count on his charity and expels him from the house, laying all the blame for this decision upon his unpleasant second wife. At this time, staying with Sir Ulick is his late first wife's sister and her daughter, the lady Annaly and Miss Annaly. They are both independently wealthy, and Sir Ulick's real reason in getting rid of Harry is that he wishes for no obstacle in the way of his son Marcus marrying the rich (and, needless to add, beautiful) heiress.
From this point on, the story is really about the rehabilitation of a young man from folly and infatuation into a sober, level headed man about town, at home in Parisian court circles as well as in a humble Irish cottage, and of the changes in his fortunes from an orphan dependent on charity to a wealthy man with landed property, and his growth from a drunken sot to a rational, well-mannered, generous and kind-hearted man who finally gains the love of his life, Miss Annaly. To give an idea of the metamorphosis, the young Harry Ormond comes across Fielding's novel Tom Jones, and on reading it, decides that there is really no point in trying to be good, as however bad he is, the outcome will always be favourable to him. How he battles this is the reformation that is hammered in.
Part of the novel is set in Paris, in the reign of Louis XVI, and there are frequent references to the Revolution that is to engulf France within the next few years.
Published in the closing years of the Regency (1817), the novel presents both English and Irish political views in the attitudes of Sir Ulick, a Member of the English Parliament, and of Corny O'Shane, his cousin and later Harry Ormond's guardian and patron. As in almost all novels of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, the moral and didactic note trumps plot and character, and Ormond is no exception. There is no real plot line. Rather, it is, on the lines of Tom Jones, a series of adventures or escapades. Of the three principal characters, one is polished and slimy, one is rock-like, rough but unshakeable, and the hero is blessed with good looks, good horsemanship, sharpshooting skills, a drinker and a gambler in determined moderation, and one who has the admiration of fair ladies as well as the approbation of all ranks of men. The female characters are beautiful and virtuous or beautiful and flighty or old and ugly and mean. Period.
This was a novel I was required to read many years ago. This time, I listened to it on a Librivox recording, with a fine reading by Bruce Pirie.