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Eliza Jane Nicholson : ウィキペディア英語版
Pearl Rivers

Eliza Jane Poitevent Holbrook Nicholson (1843–1896), who wrote under the ''nom de plume'' Pearl Rivers, was a United States journalist and poet. She took the name from the Pearl River near her home in Mississippi.〔
==Early life==
Eliza Jane Poitevent was born in Gainesville, Mississippi, on March 11, 1843 (some sources say 1849). She was the third child of a prosperous family of five, with a busy father and a sickly mother. She is listed on the 1850 U.S. Census as living in Beat 2 of Hancock County, Mississippi, with an age of seven and younger siblings in the household.
When she was nine years old, she moved to her aunt Jane's house in the vicinity of today's Picayune (so named by Eliza), in Pearl River County, Mississippi. Her uncle Leonard managed a plantation, a store, and a toll bridge there. She was sent to the Amite Female Seminary in Liberty, Mississippi, graduating in 1859, where she earned (or gave herself) the title of the "wildest girl in school".〔
Eliza's first romance was with a young man she had met while at the seminary, but this was suppressed by the headmaster and her uncle. During the American Civil War (1861–1865) she may have fallen in love with a soldier, since such a romance was described in a group of poems she wrote in 1866 for the ''New Orleans Times''.〔
After the war she began submitting her work to newspapers and magazines under the pseudonym "Pearl Rivers", and her poems were published in the New Orleans literary sheet, ''The South'', and in the ''New York Home Journal'' and the ''New York Ledger''.〔 On 17 October 1866 the New Orleans daily ''The Picayune'' published her poem "A Little Bunch of Roses", the first of her work known to have been published in that paper, and after 1867 all her work was published in this paper.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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