Emily Shore
(Margaret) Emily Shore (1819–1839) was a young English diarist.
Life
Margaret Emily Shore was born in 1819 to Thomas Shore and his wife, Juliana. She kept a journal from the age of eleven until her death from consumption at the age of nineteen. This was not just a diary but it recorded her thoughts on a wide range of subjects.[1] Margaret who went by the name of Emily was creditted with educating her two younger sisters, Arabella and Louisa Catherine Shore.[2]
Emily Shore moved to Funchal, Madeira, with her family at the end of her life in search of a healthier climate. She died there in 1839. Her final journal is a descriptive account of life in Funchal.
Extracts of her journal were published by her sisters Louisa and Arabella in 1891, more than fifty years after her death. A second edition was published in 1898. Today only some parts of her journal are extant, but in 1991 it was discovered that Arabella had left two of her sisters journals to the British Museum. These journals are now in America as they were not delivered at the time. These journals reveal that Emily's autobiography was, to a degree, converted into a biography by her then elderly sisters.[3]
Legacy
The University of Virginia Press have digitized Emily Shore's diaries to show how her sisters censored her original thoughts, what Emily Shore herself censored in her diary, and what was actually cut out of the original diary.[3]
Alternative country band The Handsome Family recorded a song based on the diaries, "Emily Shore 1819-1839", on their 1996 album Milk and Scissors.
References
- ↑ L. H. Cust, ‘Shore, Louisa Catherine (1824–1895)’, rev. Megan A. Stephan, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, May 2008 accessed 15 Nov 2014
- ↑ Barbara T. Gates, ‘Shore, (Margaret) Emily (1819–1839)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 15 Nov 2014
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Introduction, Self-writing as Legacy: The Journal of Emily Shore, Barabara Timms Gates, University of Virginia, retrieved November 2014
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