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  1. George Eliot Is A Woman

    George Eliot is a Woman. George Eliot is a well-known British author. What some
    may find most interesting about George is that he was actually a woman! ...

  2. Open Arms

    ... eloping with the gipsies or hammering nails into her doll; but she develops; and
    before George Eliot knows what has happened she has a full-grown woman on her ...

  3. Self Identity Influenced By Love

    ... George Eliot in Silas Marner articulates and develops the idea set forth by Plato
    in The ... During a snowstorm one night, a woman and her child struggle on a road ...

  4. Multiple Intelligence Theory

    ... such as Elizabeth Gaskell and George Eliot examined complications ... In the words of
    the novelist George Gissing, it ... The 'fallen woman' was replaced by the 'new ...

  5. Victorian Age

    ... a woman wrote a novel of this content. Unquestionably, the three great masters of
    Victorian novels were Charles Dickens, William Thackerary and George Eliot. ...

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George Eliot Is A Woman

Submitted by ashed05 on December 5, 2006

Category: Biographies
Words: 894 | Pages: 4
Views: 128
Popularity Rank: 78,529
Average Member Grade: N/A (Add a Comment / Grade this Paper)

George Eliot is a well-known British author. What some may find most interesting about George is that he was actually a woman! Back in 1857 women were not able to write and publish novels so she used the alias name George Eliot to fulfill her childhood dream
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Mary Anne Evans was born at South Farm, Arbury, on November 22, 1819. She was the youngest of five children that her parents, Robert and Christiana, had. In 1824, Mary Anne was sent to Miss Latham’s boarding school, where she turned to books as a source of amusement. Back then people found Mary to be a serious and sensitive child. In 1828, Mary Anne was sent to Mrs. Wallington’s Boarding School at Nuneaton. This is where she met the most influential figure of her life, Maria Lewis. Miss Lewis took interest in the shy Mary and took it upon herself to nurture her. At Miss Wallington’s Mary became and accomplished pianist, studied French, and had much skill in writing. Although things were looking swell in Mary’s life, death soon struck her family. Christiana Evans passed away February of 1839, and Mary Anne took it upon herself to leave school and take care of her father (Virginia 1-2).
Mary Anne ended up marrying an unattractive man with an outgoing personality and charming wit. His name was George Henry Lewes and they ended up traveling the continent. In 1856, the couple decided to settle in Tenby on the coast of South Whales. Mary Anne began reminiscing about her childhood dream of writing fiction. Her husband encouraged her to try so the Lewes moved back to London and on September 23, 1856, Mary Anne began to write “The sad Fortunes of the Reverend Amos Barton,” which would later become a part of Scenes of Clerical Life. Her husband sent her story to a publisher and claimed it was a work done by a male friend that wished to be kept anonymous. The story was published on New Year’s Day, 1857. She then adopted the name George Eliot because “George was Mr. Lewes’s...

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