Eliza Lynn Linton Explained

Eliza Lynn Linton
Birth Name:Eliza Lynn
Birth Date:10 February 1822
Birth Place:Keswick, Cumbria, England
Death Place:Westminster, London
Occupation:Novelist
Period:Victorian
Spouse:William James Linton
Relatives:James Lynn (father), Charlotte Alicia Lynn (mother)

Eliza Lynn Linton (10 February 1822 – 14 July 1898) was the first female salaried journalist in Britain and the author of over 20 novels. Despite her path-breaking role as an independent woman, many of her essays took a strong anti-feminist slant.[1]

Life

Linton was born in Keswick, Cumbria, England, the youngest of the twelve children of the Rev. James Lynn, vicar of Crosthwaite, and his wife Charlotte, who was the daughter of a bishop of Carlisle.[2] The death of her mother when Eliza was five months old meant a chaotic upbringing, in which she was largely self-educated, but in 1845 she left home to earn her living as a writer in London.

After moving to Paris, she married W. J. Linton in 1858,[3] an eminent wood-engraver, who was also a poet of note, a writer on his craft, and a Chartist agitator. She moved into his ramshackle house, Brantwood, in the Lake District, with his seven children from an earlier marriage, and wrote there a novel set locally: Lizzie Lorton of Greyrigg.[4] The couple also lived at Gang Moor on the edge of Hampstead Heath for several years.[5] In 1867 they separated amicably, her husband going to America and Eliza going back to life as a London writer.

Linton returned briefly to her childhood home in Cumbria in 1889, to feel "half in a dream here. It is Keswick and yet not Keswick, as I am Eliza Lynn and yet not Eliza Lynn."[6] She usually lived in London until about three years before her death, when she retired to Brougham House, Malvern. She died at Queen Anne's Mansions, London, on 14 July 1898. Her ashes were scattered in Crosthwaite churchyard.[6]

Career

Linton arrived in London in 1845 as a protégée of the novelist William Harrison Ainsworth and the poet Walter Savage Landor.[2] At one time she was promoted by Theodosia Monson, who was a champion of women's rights.[7] In 1846 she produced her first novel, Azeth, the Egyptian, which was followed by Amymone (1848) and Realities (1851). Neither had great success. Meanwhile she began working as a journalist and became acquainted with George Eliot. Linton joined the staff of the Morning Chronicle in 1849,[2] a position said to have made her the first woman to be paid a salary as a journalist.[8] She left the paper in 1851 over a disagreement.[2]

During her time in Paris, Linton was a correspondent for The Leader, which her husband had helped found. She was a regular contributor to Charles Dickens's Household Words and to St James's Gazette, the Daily News, Ainsworth's Magazine, The Cornhill Magazine and other leading newspapers.[9] The prolific Linton became one of the best-known women periodical contributors of her time.[2] Her 1864 guide to The Lake Country still bears reading for tart comments on the tourist rituals of the Victorians.[10]

In 1881 and 1883 she travelled to Palermo, where she met Tina Whitaker and encouraged her to write.[11]

After separating from her husband, Linton returned to writing novels, in which she finally attained wide popularity. Her most successful works were The True History of Joshua Davidson (1872), Patricia Kemball (1874), and The Autobiography of Christopher Kirkland (1885),[1] the latter being in fact a thinly disguised autobiography.[6] In 1896, she became one of the first women to be elected to the Society of Authors and was the first woman to serve on the society's committee.[2]

Views

Linton was a severe critic of early feminism. Her prominent essay on the subject, "The Girl of the Period,"[12] appeared in the Saturday Review in 1868 as a vehement attack. In 1891, she wrote "Wild Women as Politicians", explaining her view that politics were naturally the sphere of men, as was fame of any sort. "Amongst our most renowned women," she wrote, "are some who say with their whole heart, I would rather have been the wife of a great man, or the mother of a hero, than what I am, famous in my own person." Linton exemplifies how the fight against votes for women was not organised only by men (see Anti-suffragism).

Her obituary in The Times noted her "animosity towards all, or rather, some of those facets which may be conveniently called the 'New Woman'," but added that "it would perhaps be difficult to reduce Mrs. Lynn Linton's views on what was and what was not desirable for her own sex to a logical and connected form." Revisionist critics have noted an unconscious sympathy for the dashing "modern women" in her fiction,[13] and to her support for the right of married women to own property and so gain greater independence.[14] (See Married Women's Property Act 1870 and Married Women's Property Act 1882.)

Linton's contribution to a symposium on English fiction in 1890 took a less aggressive stance towards Grundyism than her fellow-contributor Thomas Hardy.[15]

Works

Selected articles

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. I. Ousby, ed., The Cambridge Guide to Literature in English (1995) p. 560.
  2. Book: Onslow, Barbara . Women of the Press in Nineteenth-Century Britain . Macmillan Press . 2000 . 0333683781.
  3. Web site: Index entry . 22 January 2009 . FreeBMD . ONS.
  4. G. Lindop, A Literary Guide to the Lake District (1993) pp. 371–372.
  5. Web site: A History of the County of Middlesex: Vol. 9, Hampstead, Paddington. British History Online . . 1989 . 26 June 2020.
  6. G. Lindop, A Literary Guide to the Lake District (1993) p. 180.
  7. Monson, Theodosia, Lady Monson (1803–1891), dilettante and promoter of women's rights . 2020-12-29 . 2004 . en . 10.1093/ref:odnb/59337. Waddington . Patrick.
  8. Linton, Elizabeth [Eliza] Lynn (1822–1898), writer ]. 2020-12-29 . 2004 . en. 10.1093/ref:odnb/16742. Anderson . Nancy Fix.
  9. "Linton, Eliza Lynn," The Encyclopædia Britannica, 11th Edition, 1911.
  10. G. Lindop, A Literary Guide to the Lake District (1993) pp. 202 and 408.
  11. Book: Edwards . Andrew . Sicily : a literary guide for travellers . 2014 . London . 978-1780767949 .
  12. https://archive.org/stream/modernwomenandw02lintgoog#page/n25/mode/2up Modern Women and What Is Said of Them: A Reprint of a Series of Articles in The Saturday Review,
  13. Constance Harsh, "Eliza Lynn Linton as a New Woman Novelist" in Deborah Meem, ed., "The Rebel of the Family" (Broadview, 2002) p. 473.
  14. M. L. Sharley, Feminism, Marriage and the Law in Victorian England (1993) p. 61–62.
  15. M. Seymour Smith, Hardy (1994) pp. 389–390.
  16. The Fate of Madame Cabanel, The New York Times, 19 January 1873