E. J. Eames


E. J. Eames was an American writer of prose and poetry of the Romantic era She was a regular contributor to Horace Greeley's New Yorker for some years before her marriage ; and thereafter, her writings frequently appeared in Graham's Magazine, the Southern Literary Messenger, and later still, in The Columbian.

Early life

Elizabeth Jessup was born in Schodack, New York on June 26, 1813. Her father, Isaac Jessup. Until age 17, Eames lived in a secluded village on the banks of the Hudson River. She suffered from poor health.

Career

She began publishing in 1831, over the signature of "Stella". In 1834, she removed with her parents to Channahon, Will County, Illinois. For several years, she was a contributor to the New Yorker, and later, frequently wrote for the New-York Tribune. Greeley once made her an offer for the manuscript volume, which was declined. Elizabeth was Greeley's first love, but her father strongly opposed the match, insisting that his daughter should marry Walter S. Eames, a rich man, in preference to a poor printer.
In February 1837, she married Walter S. Eames, an Illinois farmer. They removed to New Hartford, New York near Utica, where he was engaged in mercantile business. Their children were, William L., Albertine, Fannie S., and Charles E.. After her marriage, she signed her writings, "Mrs. E. J. Eames". Greeley retained a warm regard for Eames even after her marriage.
Eames was the friend and contemporary of Margaret Fuller at the time when Fuller had charge of the literary department of the New-York Tribune. Eames' poetry especially attracted the attention of Edgar Allan Poe, who also was struck with her beauty and charm. Eames' more carefully finished poems appeared in Graham's Magazine and the Southern Literary Messenger. Many of her poems were published in a volume issued just before her death.

Later life

Mr. Eames drowned in the Hudson River in September 1851. Mrs. Eames died of consumption in Channahon, Illinois, November 1856. Her papers passed into the possession of her children.

Critical reception

, in his Female Poets of America, said of Eames:— "She writes with feeling, but she regards poetry as an art, and to the cultivation of it she brings her best powers. While thoughtful and earnest, therefore, her pieces are for the most part distinguished for a tasteful elegance." He selected for publication "The Crowning of Petrarch", "The Death of Pan", "Cleopatra", the "Sonnets" to Milton, Dryden, Addison, and Tasso, and a few other of her productions.

Selected works

  • ''The Lost Shell Ballad''

    Attribution

Category:1813 births
Category:1856 deaths
Category:19th-century American poets
Category:19th-century pseudonymous writers
Category:19th-century deaths from tuberculosis
Category:American lyricists
Category:Pseudonymous women writers
Category:Tuberculosis deaths in Illinois
Category:19th-century American women poets