Emily Lawless (1845–1913)
Author of The Story of Ireland
About the Author
Works by Emily Lawless
With Essex in Ireland 2 copies
A colonel of the empire 1 copy
Atlantic rhymes and rhythms 1 copy
A Garden Diary: September 1899-September 1900 (Cambridge Library Collection - British and Irish History, 19th Century) (2010) 1 copy
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Lawless, Emily
- Legal name
- Lawless, The Honourable Emily
- Other names
- Lytton, Edith
- Birthdate
- 1845-06-17
- Date of death
- 1913-10-19
- Gender
- female
- Nationality
- Ireland
UK - Birthplace
- Lyons House, Lyons Hill, County Kildare, Ireland
- Places of residence
- Castle Lyons, Celbridge, County Kildare, Ireland
Gomshall, Surrey, England, UK
County Galway, Ireland - Education
- governesses
- Occupations
- poet
novelist - Relationships
- Oliphant, Margaret (mentor)
- Short biography
- Emily Lawless was born into a Protestant Irish landowning family in County Kildare, a daughter of Edward Lawless, 3rd Baron Cloncurry. She was educated at home by a governess. Emily Lawless remained unmarried. She drew on Irish themes for many of her works, and published 19 books in a wide range of forms, including novels, history, biography, nature studies, short stories, poetry, and autobiography. Her work has gained increasing critical attention today for its feminist and environmental concerns.
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Reviews
Awards
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 14
- Also by
- 3
- Members
- 110
- Popularity
- #176,729
- Rating
- 4.1
- Reviews
- 1
- ISBNs
- 28
A review of the day, from _The Catholic World: Monthly Magazine of General Literature And Science_ VOL. XLIII. APRIL, 1886, TO SEPTEMBER, 1886.: "A CHAT ABOUT NEW BOOKS", by the Paulist Fathers, New York.
"Hurrish: A Study, by the Hon. Emily Lawless (Harper & Bros.), is an exceedingly disagreeable book. It pretends to be a study of life in North Clare. It is written with some cleverness and it is not without signs of talent, which facts make all the more unpardonable the deliberate attempt of the author to give the impression that the Irish peasant, on his native heath, is a bloodthirsty pagan in principle and a Thug in practice. It is true that Gerald Griffin painted Danny Mann hideously, but he did not create for us a colony of Danny Manns and ask us to believe that they were natural products of Irish soil. If Miss Lawless' view of the rural population of Ireland is largely shared by ladies of her class, it is not strange that the landlord is regarded by his tenants as without sympathy or even common humanity. Hurrish is a libel on Irish life—the more necessary to be denounced that it has an appearance of truth."… (more)