The Legend of the Seventh Virgin

by Victoria Holt

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Despite her grandmother's psychic warnings, Kerensa leaves home with the aspiration of becoming mistress of St. Larnston Abbas, the home of aristocratic St. Larnston family. Soon Kerensa obtains the post of lady to young Mrs. St. Larnston, and becomes heavily involved with the family. Surrounded by romance and suspense, Kerensa pursues her ambition of becoming mistress of the great house

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6 reviews
According to the local Cornish legend, six novices were turned to stone for betraying their vows. They still stand in a circle on the moors, dancing their defiance. The seventh 'virgin' was walled up in the convent as punishment.

When Kerensa Carlee, a cottage girl, trespasses on the local estate to see the grisly discovery, her life begins to mimic the legend. Though her name means 'peace and love' she finds neither as she is constantly striving to fulfill her desire of living at the estate of St. Larnston as mistress.

Despite her sometimes despicable actions in the name of her ambitions, Kerensa remains a sympathetic character. Her relationships with her best friend, her brother, and especially her grandmother show a deep capacity for show more love though her generous ambitions on the behalf of others do not necessarily coincide with their own wishes. I found myself hoping for her happiness and fascinated by the mystery surrounding her.

The story comes an interesting full circle, though the links to the legend do not appear until the final chapter. Though the chapters are too long and it was not the romance I expected, it was nevertheless an excellent read (and an admonishment to listen to Granny, especially if she has a reputation as a wise woman).
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Although not the most exciting of plots throughout, certain scenes were expertly drawn, proving highly engaging. Certain elements were predictable but the unfolding events were well-crafted enough for this to not matter.

One episode near the end of the book, which I won’t describe in detail as it would serve as a spoiler, had potential to be ten times more enthralling than it actually transpired to be, owing to Ms Holt underplaying it. Every so often I read a book like this in which the author creates a fantastic scene yet dampens it down by resolving it too quickly. This happens here, which is a shame, as just as the suspense, tension, horror, etc., are increasingly growing, the situation is sorted out too easily.

The characterisation show more is impressive. The heroine would be better described as an “anti-heroine”. To begin with I felt sympathy for Karensa, wanting her seemingly unattainable ambitions to be realised, yet as more of her dreams become reality, my feelings towards her change. She becomes self-obsessed, though not always regarding her own desires, but about how she thinks the likes of her brother should be living his life the way *she*, not he, thinks is right.

I did start to like her again near the end of the tale, with some feelings of sympathy returning. My favourite character, however, was Karensa’s best friend Mellyora, whom this reader at least couldn’t help but feel sympathy towards.
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This was the second time I read this book. I read it previously when I was considerably younger--decades ago. Though I've always been a fan of Victoria Holt, I didn't find this book as intriguing as some of her other efforts. I suspect this was due to the heroine's character. I found her too self-centered. Nevertheless, the secondary characters, the setting, and the historical details were all well-done.
This is not one of my favorites from this author. The heroine...if that's what you want to call her...acted more as an antagonist ! She was self-absorbing, ambition-driven, proud, and manipulative. I just couldn't stand her. It took me days to finish this book because I couldn't stand reading it until one day I told myself that I'm going to sit down and finish it - took me a day and a half.
Not one of my favorites
I'd not read a Victoria Holt for may years and picked this up for a fun read. It's a captivating story set in late 19th century Cornwall and told at an enormous rush (over 20 years pass in the course of the rather short book). There's something a little hurried about it all. The heroine, Kerensa Carlee is driven by a burning ambition to escape her poor (but loving) home and she doesn't let ethics get between her and what she wants, though it's clear that she chooses to ignore the promptings of her better self, and in the end has to come to terms with the consequences of her decisions and learn that she can't force others into her plans for them. Oddly this edition has a blonde woman on the cover and the heroine is dark (of Spanish show more descent). For me, I would've preferred more time taken to let the story breathe - it would've felt better as either a series of books or a longer book. show less
Apr 8, 2026English (UK)
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Picture of author.
67+ Works 16,181 Members

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Bennett, Harry (Cover artist)
Heinonen, Marja (Translator)

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Belongs to Publisher Series

Fontana (2228)

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
The Legend of the Seventh Virgin
Original title
The Legend of the Seventh Virgin
Original publication date
1964
People/Characters
Kerensa Carlee
Important places
Cornwall, England, UK
First words
Two days after the bones of the walled-up nun were found in St. Larnston Abbas, the five of us were together.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)This is what I am slowly learning and when I have mastered the lesson, who knows, the good life may come.

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Romance, Historical Fiction
DDC/MDS
823.914Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesEnglish fiction1900-1901-19991945-1999
LCC
PR6015 .I3 .L4Language and LiteratureEnglishEnglish Literature1900-1960

Statistics

Members
433
Popularity
70,635
Reviews
6
Rating
½ (3.47)
Languages
8 — Danish, Dutch, English, Finnish, German, Norwegian (Bokmål), Spanish, Swedish
Media
Paper, Audiobook
ISBNs
34
ASINs
11