After she completes her vows, Isabella realizes she made the wrong decision when she meets a young man name Henault and falls in love ultimately braking her vows and leaving with the young gentleman. As the story continues Isabella and Henault face challenges that possibly many young “couples” of the time face, the misfortunes of losing inheritances, war and death. As the story progresses when Henault agrees and goes to war he meets a young man named Villenoys. What Henault does not know is that Villenoys had fallen in love with Isabella, a long time ago, but she chose the convent over him. When Henault is presumed dead from battle, Villenoys decides to be the one to give “her an Account of the Death of her Husband, and how Gloriously he fell fighting for the Holy Cross” (Behn 104). Upon hearing the news of her husband untimely death she beings the mourning process for five years. When the grieving period comes to an end, Isabella decides to marry Villnoys (Behn …show more content…
Going back the basic definition of a novel it deals imaginatively with human experience, usually through a connected sequence of events involving a group of persons in a specific setting. From studying this book for multiple weeks, it can be said that in 1689 a novel became a genre. History of the Nun give concrete examples of how this piece is classified as a novel, from the human experiences of choosing duty over love, to choosing love over faith, with the grief of losing one’s spouse, fear of public humiliation and eventually