The History of Little Goody Two-Shoes


The History of Little Goody Two-Shoes is a children's story published by John Newbery in London in 1765. The story popularized the phrase "" as a descriptor for an excessively virtuous person or do-gooder.

Plot

Goody Two-Shoes is a variation of the Cinderella story. The fable tells of Goody Two-Shoes, the nickname of a poor orphan girl named Margery Meanwell, who goes through life with only one shoe. When a rich gentleman gives her a complete pair, she is so happy that she tells everyone that she has "two shoes". Later, Margery becomes a teacher and marries a rich widower. This earning of wealth serves as proof that her virtue has been rewarded, a popular theme in children's literature of the era.

Publication

The anonymous story was published in London by the John Newbery company, a publisher of popular children's literature. In his introduction to an 1881 edition of the book, Charles Welsh wrote:

The anonymous author

The story was later attributed to the Irish author Oliver Goldsmith, though this is disputed. Because Goldsmith frequently wrote for pay, and because of his copious fiction in essays, the attribution to Goldsmith is plausible. Washington Irving was one supporter of Goldsmith's authoring the book; he said: "Several quaint little tales introduced in Goldsmith's Essays show that he had a turn for this species of mock history; and the advertisement and title-page bear the stamp of his sly and playful humor." However, the book has also been attributed to Newbery himself and to Giles Jones, a friend of Newbery's. "Booksellers" such as Newbery would frequently pay authors for anonymous work, and no certain evidence of attribution has emerged.

Origin of the phrase "goody two-shoes"

Although The History of Little Goody Two-Shoes is credited with popularizing the term "goody two-shoes", the actual origin of the phrase is unknown. For example, it appears a century earlier in Charles Cotton's Voyage to Ireland in Burlesque :

Mistress mayoress complained that the pottage was cold;

'And all long of your fiddle-faddle,' quoth she.

'Why, then, Goody Two-shoes, what if it be?

Hold you, if you can, your tittle-tattle,' quoth he.

The name is used herein to point out the mayoress' comparative privilege; "Goody",
being the equivalent of "Mrs." and "Two-shoes", implicitly comparing her to people who have no shoes.