Nora Chesson

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A portrait of a white woman with dark hair, wearing a printed garment.
Nora Hopper Chesson, from a 1906 publication.
Nora Hopper - Under Quicken Boughs

Nora Chesson (2 January 1871 – 14 April 1906) was an English journalist and poet. She won for herself a distinct celebrity as a contributor to most of the English periodicals and newspapers of her time.[1]

Biography[]

Eleanor Jane Hopper was born in Exeter, 2 January 1871. Her father, Capt. Harman Baillie Hopper, was Irish. She was a participant in the Irish literary movement of the 1890s, having some influence on W. B. Yeats in particular with her Ballads in Prose (1894).

Her career as an authoress in poetry and in prose began in 1887, when she was not quite seventeen years of age, and she went on increasing her literary reputation until her death. Over some of her poems there was an atmosphere of melancholy which might seem as if it cast upon them the shadow of a too early death.[1] She provided the English translation to Thadgh O'Donoghue's libretto for the Irish opera Muirgheis (1903) by Thomas O'Brien Butler (1861–1915).

In 1901, she married the English man of letters (1870–1953). She died 14 April 1906. Five volumes of her selected poems were published that year by Alston Rivers, of London,[1] which included a short biographical note by the editor, her husband, and an introductory appreciation by Ford Madox Hueffer.[2]

References[]

Bibliography[]

  • Public Domain This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Bacon, Leonard; Thompson, Joseph Parrish; Storrs, Richard Salter (1906). The Independent. 61 (Public domain ed.). Independent Publications, incorporated.
  • Public Domain This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: John W. Parker and Son (1906). The Saturday Review of Politics, Literature, Science and Art. 102 (Public domain ed.). John W. Parker and Son.

External links[]

Media related to Nora Chesson at Wikimedia Commons

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