Catherine Gore (original) (raw)

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English novelist and dramatist (1798–1861)

Catherine Grace Frances Gore

Catherine Grace Frances Gore (née Moody; 12 February 1798 – 29 January 1861),[1] was a prolific English novelist and dramatist. The daughter of a wine merchant from Retford, Nottinghamshire, she became among the best known of the silver fork writers, who depicted gentility and etiquette in the high society of the Regency period.[2]

Early life and marriage

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Gore was born in 1798 in London, the youngest child of Mary (née Brinley) and Charles Moody, a wine merchant. Her father died soon afterwards, and her mother remarried in 1801, to the London physician Charles D. Nevinson. She is therefore referred to sometimes as "Miss Nevinson" by contemporary reviewers and in scholarly writings. Gore herself was interested in writing from an early age, gaining the nickname "the Poetess".[1]

She married Lieutenant Charles Arthur Gore of the 1st Regiment of Life Guards on 15 February 1823 at St George's, Hanover Square; Gore retired later that year. They later moved to France. They had ten children, eight of whom died young. Their one surviving son, Captain Augustus Frederick Wentworth Gore, married Hon. Emily Anne Curzon, daughter of MP Robert Curzon and granddaughter of Viscount Curzon, in 1861,[3] and was the father of tennis champion Arthur Wentworth Gore.[4] Their eldest child and sole surviving daughter, Cecilia Anne Mary, married Lord Edward Thynne in 1853.[1]

Gore's first novel, Theresa Marchmont, or The Maid of Honour, was published in 1824. Her first major success was Pin Money, published in 1831, but her most popular and well-known novel was to be Cecil, or Adventures of a Coxcomb, published in 1841. Gore also met with success as a playwright, writing eleven plays that made their way onto the London stage, although her plays never quite matched the fame of her witty novels. Amongst her plays are The School for Coquettes (1831) and Quid Pro Quo (1844).

The Gores resided mainly in Continental Europe, where Catherine supported her family by her voluminous writings. Between 1824 and 1862 she produced about 70 works, the most successful of which were novels of fashionable English life, such as Manners of the Day (1830), Cecil, or the Adventures of a Coxcomb and The Banker's Wife (1843). She wrote articles in Bentley's Miscellany under the pseudonym "Albany Poyntz".[5] She also wrote for the stage, composed music, and published The Book of Roses, or The Rose Fancier's Manual (1838), a guide to the cultivation of roses.[6]

Gore's 1861 obituary in The Times concluded that Gore was "the best novel writer of her class and the wittiest woman of her age."

  1. ^ a b c Hughes, Winifred. "Gore, Catherine Grace Frances (1798–1861)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription, Wikipedia Library access or UK public library membership required.)
  2. ^ Catherine Gore 1799(?) – 1861 Archived 7 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ "Marriages". The Times. 25 September 1861. p. 1.
  4. ^ "Obituary: Mr. A. W. Gore". The Times. December 1928. p. 3.
  5. ^ "Catherine Gore: Biography". www.victorianweb.org. Retrieved 23 October 2017.
  6. ^ "The Book of Roses". www.biodiversitylibrary.org. Retrieved 10 November 2024.
  7. ^ XIX Century Fiction, Part I, A–K (Jarndyce, Bloomsbury, 2019).

Wikisource reference This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Cousin, John William (1910). A Short Biographical Dictionary of English Literature. London: J. M. Dent & Sons – via Wikisource.

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