Agnes Grey was one of a trio of novels that defined the governess novel in 1847 and 1848. Alongside Jane Eyre and Vanity Fair, Agnes Grey may be the most radical of the three. Agnes Grey is the younger daughter of a clergyman and his wife of modest means, cherished but also infantilized. When her fathers mercantile investment goes disastrously wrong, Agnes decides to contribute to the familys financial rebuilding by working as a governess, despite her mothers and sisters misgivings about her fitness for such work. Her first position is indeed trying, as the parents and children are uncouth and even cruel. Her second position is slightly more congenial, but she is still manipulated and ignored. Yet Agnes perseveres and begins to build relationships outside the family, most importantly with a kind, empathetic young curate. As life brings more trials to Agnes and her family, we watch her persist on her steady path of hope and determination. This Broadview Edition provides extensive historical documents on the novels reception, the role of the governess in Victorian England, and contemporary debates about thetreatment of non-human animals.