Eliza S. Craven Green
Eliza S. Craven Green (1803-1866), née Craven, was an English poet.
Eliza was born in Kirkgate, Leeds on 10 December 1803. In her youth she spent some time in Douglas, Isle of Man, at the New Theatre on Athol Street as an actor. Subsequently, she lived at Manchester, but she returned to Leeds, where she resided many years. She was married in 1830, at which point she began to publish her poetry not as "Eliza Craven", but as "Eliza Craven Green."
Her first book was 'A Legend of Mona, a Tale, in two Cantos,' Douglas 1825, 8vo, and her second and last, 'Sea Weeds and Heath Flowers, or Memories of Mona,' Douglas, 1858, 8vo. she was a frequent contributor of poetry and prose sketches to the periodical press. She wrote for the 'Phœnix,' 1828, and the 'Falcon,' 1831, both Manchester magazines; for the 'Oddfellows' Magazine, 1841 and later; for the 'Leeds Intelligencer', 'Le Follet', 'Hogg's Instructor', and 'Chambers's Journal', and contributed to a volume of poems entitled 'The Festive Wreath,' published at Manchester in 1842.
Today she is perhaps best known for having written the poem, Ellan Vannin, in 1854, which was to form the "alternative national anthem" for the Isle of Man. A few years before her death she received a gift from the queen's privy purse.
She died in Leeds on 11 March 1866.
References
- "Green, Eliza S. Craven". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
- "Eliza Craven Green" on manxliterature.com (accessed 4 February 2015)
External links
- The music and text for the poem 'Ellan Vannin'
- Sea Weeds and Heath Flowers, or, Memories of Mona available on manxliterature.com