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The seventh daughter of Baron Auckland, Emily
accompanied her brother, Lord Auckland to India during the period
he was Governor General from 1835-42. Her letters to her sister,
published in 1866 as 'Up the Country', reflect her acid wit and
keen observation of her surroundings. She was a skilled water colourist
and throughout her stay in India made a large number of paintings
which are now in the Victoria Memorial Hall, Calcutta. Emily had
a unique opportunity to draw the people of India when she and her
sister, Fanny, accompanied their brother on his long tour upcountry
from Calcutta to meet Ranjit Singh, ruler of Punjab. Infact, Ranjit
Singh gave her a personal sitting for making his portrait.
She moved in prominent Whig circles and was a close friend of Melbourne.
When Melbourne appointed her brother governor-general of India in
1835, she accompanied him, travelled with him, and acted as his
hostess, which she continued to do after his return until his death
in 1849. She published Portraits of the People and Princes of India
(1844) and Up the Country (1866); Letters from India appeared in
1872, and a collection of her letters edited by her great-niece
Violet Dickinson in 1919. Her two novels The Semi-detached House
(1859, anon.) and The Semi-attached Couple (1860, by E.E.),
written some 30 years earlier, both deal with fashionable society,
and combine shrewd perception, wit, and good nature; their plots
and characterization owe much to J. Austen, whom she greatly admired
and frequently mentions. They are a valuable record of social life,
shedding a revealing light on attitudes to marriage, politics, and
manners, and have been several times reprinted, most recently in
1979.
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