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Eva Gore-Booth

Eva Selina Laura Gore-Booth was an Irish poet, theologian, and dramatist, and a committed suffragist, social worker and labour activist. She was born at Lissadell House, County Sligo, the younger sister of Constance Gore-Booth, later known as the Countess Markievicz.

Family background and early life
Eva Selina Laura Gore-Booth was born in County Sligo, Ireland, to Sir Henry and Lady Georgina Gore-Booth of Lissadell. She was the third of five children born to the 5th Baronet and his wife and the first of her siblings to be born at Lissadell House. She and her siblings, Josslyn Gore-Booth (1869–1944), Constance Georgine Gore-Booth (1868–1927), Mabel Gore-Booth (1874–1955), and Mordaunt Gore-Booth (1878–1958), were the third generation of Gore-Booths at Lissadell. The house was built for her paternal grandfather, Sir Robert Gore-Booth, 4th Baronet, between 1830 and 1835 and three generations of Gore-Booths resided there during Eva's childhood, including her paternal grandfather and her maternal grandmother Lady Frances Hill. Both Eva and Constance were educated at home and had several governesses throughout their childhood, most notably Miss Noel who recorded most of what is known about Gore-Booth's early life. She learned French, German, Latin and Greek and developed a love of poetry that was instilled by her maternal grandmother. Gore-Booth was troubled by the stark contrast between her family's privileged life and the poverty outside Lissadell, particularly during the winter of the Irish Famine (1879) when starving tenants would come to the house begging for food and clothing. Esther Roper later remarked that Gore-Booth was "haunted by the suffering of the world and had a curious feeling of responsibility for its inequalities and injustices." Gore-Booth's father was a notable Arctic explorer and, during a period of absence from the estate in the 1870s, her mother, Lady Georgina, established a school of needlework for women at Lissadell. The women were trained in crochet, embroidery and darn-thread work and the sale of their wares allowed them to earn a wage of 18 shillings per week. This enterprise had a great influence on Gore-Booth and her later women's suffrage and trade union work. In 1894, Gore-Booth joined her father on his travels around North America and the West Indies. She kept diaries and documented their travels in "Jamaica, Barbados, Cuba, Florida, New Orleans, St Louis, San Francisco, Vancouver, Toronto, Niagara, Montreal and Quebec." On returning to Ireland she met the poet W. B. Yeats for the first time. The following year she traveled around Europe with her mother, sister Constance, and friend Rachel Mansfield and, while in Venice, fell ill with a respiratory condition. In 1896, while recuperating at the villa of writer George MacDonald and his wife in Bordighera, Italy, she met Esther Roper, the English woman who would become her lifelong companion. Believing that she was dying of tuberculosis, Gore-Booth and Roper settled in Manchester to serve working women throughout the remainder of her life. ==Political work==
Political work
The work of Eva Gore-Booth, alongside that of Esther Roper was responsible for the close link between the struggle for women's rights in industry and the struggle for women's right to vote. As a middle class suffragist representing Manchester, the work of Gore-Booth was mainly recognized in the Lancashire cotton towns from 1899 to 1913. Her struggle began when Gore-Booth became a member of the executive committee of the National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies. Carrying out work at the Ancoats settlement, Gore-Booth became co-secretary of the Manchester and Salford Women's Trade Union Council. and on 17 November of the same year she was a member of the deputation representing the working women of the north of England. This deputation called upon Lloyd George not to drop the Conciliation Bill. 1911 was also the year that Eva put herself in the shoes of the working women when she worked for a short time as a pit-brow lass to sample the working conditions for herself. However, as war broke out, Gore-Booth and Roper took up welfare work among German women and children in England. In December 1913, Gore-Booth signed the "Open Christmas Letter" to women of Germany and Austria. 1915 then saw Eva Gore-Booth become a member of the Women's Peace Crusade and in 1916 the No-Conscription Fellowship. Gore-Booth continued to work for peace, writing poetry and for a privately circulated journal, Urania, for the rest of her life. ==Poetry==
Poetry
When Gore-Booth was embarking on her writing career she was visited by W. B. Yeats who was very much taken with her work. In his own letters he states that he sent her a book to inspire her. Yeats was hoping that she would take up his cause of writing Irish tales to enchant and amuse. Instead Gore-Booth takes Irish folklore and put emphasis on the females in the story. Her widely discussed sexuality in later years is never declared but her poetry reflects it quite overtly. In her Triumph of Maeve she makes a minor scene between Maeve and a wise woman almost erotic. While in her legend of Deirdre she subverts the masculine nationalist identity of Ireland's heroic tales. In her early work she uses the same poetic devices that her male counterparts do such as writing a love poem to the goddess of Nature. In these she does not take a male voice though. She is writing love verse from one woman to another. Even the title of the magazine Urania can refer to heavenly or Uranian another term for homosexual. Gore-Booth and Roper allowed their names to be used in connection with the periodical and Gore-Booth was considered to be an inspiration for Urania. ==Later life and death==
Later life and death
Meeting political activist Roper in Italy in 1896, where Gore-Booth was sent to recover from respiratory ailments, was a deciding factor in Gore-Booth's active involvement in women's rights of the suffrage movement. How intimate her relations were with Roper is controversially discussed; however, letters and poems Gore-Booth dedicated to Roper suggest a romantic love between the two women. One of those poems appears in a collection of her poetic work "The Travellers, To E.G.R" which was published by Roper in 1929 and in which she uses analogies of music and song to express how deeply she was struck by her partner's personality and charisma. After years of playing a lead role in the Women's Suffrage Movement and fighting for equality of women's rights in the UK as well as staying true to her literary roots, Gore-Booth and Roper relocated to London from Manchester in 1913 due to Gore-Booth's deteriorating respiratory health. She also became a Theosophist and animal rights activist. Gore-Booth died in her home in Hampstead, London she shared with Roper until her death. She was buried alongside Roper in St John's churchyard, Hampstead. ==Sexuality==
Sexuality
Gore-Booth's sexuality has been a topic for debate among academics, and it is increasingly considered that she and Esther Roper were in a same-sex relationship, while some believe that the two women merely cohabited. After being told that she was close to death in 1896 Gore-Booth took a trip to the home of George MacDonald in Bordighera, Italy, to recuperate. It was there where she met Esther Roper who was also recovering from illness. They formed a strong mutual bond and were partners in life and work from then on. Although Gore-Booth and Roper lived together till Eva's death they slept in different rooms and there is no way of proving or disproving a sexual relationship or any sort of sexual encounters between them. However, it was also commonplace in this era for married couples (particularly among the upper class) to have separate bedrooms so this detail is superfluous. After knowing each other for four years Gore-Booth made Roper the sole beneficiary of her estate. Both Gore-Booth and Roper worked with a team of professionals to establish and edit Urania, a sexual politics journal that was circulated between 1916 and 1940. The formation was due to the editors being connected through a feminist revolutionary group known as the Aëthnic Union which was formed in 1911. Its aim was to promote the elimination of the glorification of heterosexual marriage and sex and gender distinctions altogether. It also became a point of reference for those worldwide who shared the editors' radical, Uranian Philosophy. 'Sex is an Accident' a term coined by Gore-Booth regarding biological gender distinction was used to sum up the Uranian philosophy. The journal for most of its publication was privately circulated worldwide but was sent free to anyone who requested it to establish a network and register of supporters. She has also been acknowledged by the Irish Congress of Trade Unions as LGBT and Worker's Rights role model. Along with revolutionary lesbians Kathleen Lynn and Madeleine ffrench-Mullen, Margaret Skinnider and Nora O'Keeffe, and Elizabeth O'Farrell and Julia Grenan, Gore-Booth was featured in a 2023 TG4 documentary about "the radical queer women at the very heart of the Irish Revolution": (Radical Hearts). ==Posthumous recognition==
Posthumous recognition
Her name and picture (and those of 58 other women's suffrage supporters) are on the plinth of the statue of Millicent Fawcett in Parliament Square, London, unveiled in 2018. ==Selected publications==
Selected publications
Poems (1898) • Unseen Kings (1904) • The One and the Many (1904) • The Three Resurrections and The Triumph of Maeve (1905) • The Egyptian Pillar (1907) • The Sorrowful Princess (1907) • The Agate Lamp (1912) • Whence Come Wars? (1914) • Religious Aspects of Non-Resistance (1915) • The Perilous Light (1915) • The Death of Fionavar from The Triumph of Maeve (1916) • Rhythms of Art (1917) • The Tribunal (1917) • Broken Glory (1918) • The Sword of Justice: A Play (1918) • A Psychological and Poetic Approach to the Study of Christ in the Fourth Gospel (1923) • The Shepherd of Eternity and other Poems (1925) • The House of Three Windows (1926) • The Inner Kingdom (1926) • ''The World's Pilgrim'' (1927) • The Buried Life of Deirdre (1930) ==References==
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