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Elizabeth Helme (née Horrobin; 08 August 1743 - 01 January 1814) was a prolific English novelist, educational writer, and translator active in the late 18th and early nineteenth centuries.

Title page of Elizabeth Helme's St. Clair of the Isles: or, The outlaws of Barra, a Scottish tradition Vol I (London: T.N. Longman and O. Rees, 1803) (Internet Archive)
Title page of Elizabeth Helme's St. Clair of the Isles: or, The outlaws of Barra, a Scottish tradition Vol I (London: T.N. Longman and O. Rees, 1803) (Internet Archive)


Life


Elizabeth Helme was likely born in County Durham to a family tentatively identified by the name of Horrobin.[1] Her family moved to London, where she met William Helme (c.1747-1822), who became her husband in 1772. They had five children. One of their daughters, Elizabeth Somerville (1774–1840), herself became a novelist. Elizabeth Helme is also known to have worked as a teacher, and her translations included two children's plays by Joachim Heinrich Campe: Cortez (1799) and Pizarro (1800), and much of her writing was aimed for younger readers.


Writing


Helme published her first, anonymous novel, Louisa; or, The Cottage on the Moor in 1787, and it remained one of her most successful publications[1] Her work first appeared under her own name with The Farmer of Inglewood Forest, published by the popular Minerva Press in 1796.

Despite both she and her husband working as headmistress and schoolmaster, respectively, at Brentford, and her considerable literary output, the family suffered continual financial difficulties and the Royal Literary Society retain records of various applications for assistance, including one from novelist Lucy Peacock to help with Helme's burial in 1814.[2]

In 1838, Elizabeth Polack based her play St. Clair on Helme's novel St Clair of the Isles.[3]

She is one of the "lost" women writers listed by Dale Spender in Mothers of the Novel: 100 Good Women Writers Before Jane Austen.


Works



Novels



Non-fiction works



Translations



Notes


  1. "Helme, Elizabeth." Orlando: Women’s Writing in the British Isles from the Beginnings to the Present. Accessed 2022-07-09. (Orlando)
  2. "Helme, Elizabeth." British Travel Writing (University of Wolverhampton)
  3. Conway, David. Jewry in Music. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012, p. 104. ISBN 9781107015388
  4. Chawton House has a PDF.



Resources





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