EGB
and Esther Roper
again offered some support to Christabel Pankhurst
and Annie Kenney
after their landmark protest at the Free Trade Hall in Manchester on 13 October 1905. But in 1906, they and other...
politics
Eva Gore-Booth
During a Manchester by-election in Spring 1908, EGB
and Esther Roper
supported barmaids' right to work.
Lewis, Gifford. Eva Gore-Booth and Esther Roper: A Biography. Pandora Press, 1988.
103
Virginia Woolf
writes about the suffrage element of this by-election in The Years, through Rose Pargiter's activities...
Publishing
Eva Gore-Booth
A number of these poems are reprinted in the Prison Letters of Countess Markievicz, edited and published by Esther Roper
in 1934.
Markievicz, Constance, Countess, and Eva Gore-Booth. Prison Letters of Countess Markievicz. Editor Roper, Esther, Kraus, 1970.
title-page
Residence
Eva Gore-Booth
EGB
settled in Manchester, where she lived with her companion Esther Roper
and worked with numerous suffrage and labour organisations.
Haverty, Anne. Constance Markievicz: An Independent Life. Pandora, 1988.
42-3
Textual Features
Eva Gore-Booth
Several of these poems concern people and places that figured significantly in her recent experiences. EGB
dedicated The Travellers to E.G.R.; it recalls her first meeting with Esther Roper
, who was to be...
Textual Production
Constance Countess Markievicz
Seven years after Constance, Countess Markievic
, died, Esther Roper
collected and published the Prison Letters of Countess Markievicz.
Markievicz, Constance, Countess, and Eva Gore-Booth. Prison Letters of Countess Markievicz. Editor Roper, Esther, Kraus, 1970.
title-page
Textual Production
Eva Gore-Booth
Esther Roper
posthumously published Poems of Eva Gore-Booth, a complete edition of her poetry, with the autobiographical fragment The Inner Life of a Child, and several letters.