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Released in two parts between 1799 and 1800, Charles Brockden Brown's "Arthur Mervyn" holds immense historical significance as a seminal work of early American literature, uniquely capturing the anxieties and challenges of the nascent republic. Published at the turn of the 19th century, it directly confronted the trauma of the yellow fever epidemics that ravaged Philadelphia in the 1790s, particularly the devastating outbreaks of 1793 and 1797-1798. The novel's stark depiction of a city under siege by disease and moral decay provided a potent reflection of contemporary fears, linking the physical contagion to a broader sense of social and ethical corruption in burgeoning American urban centers. Its impact lay in its unflinching portrayal of American life through a distinctly Gothic lens.