In the literature of Restoration and eighteenth-century England, the older woman appears for the most part in a distinctly negative light. Sometimes villain, more often comic butt, she is rarely an admirable or sympathetic figure. While a general antipathy to older women may be attributed to ageism and misogyny, economic trends and the cultural climate of the period provide fertile ground for the prejudice. The Enlightenment\u27s faith in the primacy of Nature as a governing principle figures prominently in the contemporary definition of woman and her proper role in society, but few of the older women characters in the drama and novels of the period fill the prescribed role. In various ways, they subvert or defy the conventional model of ...