Gabriela Cunninghame Graham | |
---|---|
Born | Caroline Horsfall January 22, 1858 |
Died | September 8, 1906 | (aged 48)
Other names | Gabriela Marie de la Balmondière |
Occupation(s) | Writer, translator, lecturer, and socialist |
Notable work | Santa Teresa (1894) |
Spouse | Cunninghame Graham (married 1878) |
Gabriela Cunninghame Graham (also known as Gabriela Marie de la Balmondière, née Caroline Horsfall; 22 January 1858 – 8 September 1906) [1] was an English writer, translator, lecturer, and socialist, who was known for most of her life as Chilean-born and of French-Spanish origin, [2] which was later discovered to be a fabrication. [1] [3]
Gabriela Cunninghame Graham was born Caroline (or Carrie) Horsfall in Masham, North Yorkshire in January 1858, [3] the second of thirteen children born to Elizabeth Stanfield and Henry Horsfall, a surgeon. [1] She was known as a dynamic and imaginative child, who delighted her siblings with stories. [1] As a teenager, in 1875, she ran away to London to pursue a theatrical career. [1]
Three years later, she met Scottish writer and politician R.B. Cunninghame Graham in Paris. [1] They married on 24 October 1878 at a London register office, her name recorded as Gabrielle Marie de la Balmondière. [1] [3] Always known by Gabriela, she claimed to be the Chilean-born daughter of a French father and a Spanish mother, who had been sent to a convent by an aunt, and spoke with an assumed accent. [1] Biographers of her husband described his meeting Gabriela while she was a schoolgirl in her late teens, although her real age at their marriage was 20. [1] [4]
A 2004 biography of R.B. Cunninghame Graham by a descendant, Jean Cunninghame Graham, described the couple meeting in a park in Paris, and Gabriela revealing her true name and origins within the course of their first conversation. [1] Nonetheless, her identity as Gabriela Marie de la Balmondière was maintained throughout her life, and after her death. [1]
Shortly after their marriage, the Cunningham Graham's travelled to America, where she began to write. [1] Her first story was titled "The Wagon-Train", and told the tale of a journey on horseback from Texas to Mexico City. [1] After America, the couple lived in Spain until the death of R.B. Cunninghame Graham's father in 1883. [1] They then strove to pay off inherited debts, ultimately selling Gartmore House, the family seat, to ensure financial security. [1] Gabriela maintained contact with her mother, but asked that her new identity be respected and not revealed. [1]
Gabriela Cunninghame Graham wrote essays, poetic translations, and a substantial biography of Teresa of Avila, Santa Teresa: Her Life and Times, published in 1894. [3] [1] This was described by Herbert Faulkner West as "monumental and scholarly". [4] In 1897, she contributed a story to The Yellow Book. [1]
Like her husband, Gabriela was an active socialist, addressing meets in England and Europe on subjects including the need for an eight-hour working day, and the ideals of socialism. [1] Fascinated by mysticism, she also wrote and lectured on this. [1]
Gabriela Cunninghame Graham died from dysentery on 8 September 1906 in Hendaye, France. [1] Her funeral took place on 19 September 1906 in the chancel of the ruined church of Inchmahome Priory, Scotland. [1] [5] After her death, Cunningham Graham collected his wife's poetry in a volume titled Rhymes from a World Unknown. [1] Each year, on the anniversary of her death, he rowed to the island to smoke a cigarette over her grave. [1] Gabriela having been a lifelong and heavy smoker, this had been a promise made to her. [1] He was later buried beside her. [3]
Gabriela's death certificate recorded her as Gabrielle Marie de la Balmondière, aged 44, born in Chile to Joseph de la Balmondière and Carmen Suarez de Arecco. [1] It was not until decades after her death that biographers learned Gabriela Cunninghame Graham's real lineage. [3] [6]