Background
Symonds was born on 4 September 1860, in Street-Mary-in-the-Marsh parish, Sprowston, near Norwich, England.
Symonds was born on 4 September 1860, in Street-Mary-in-the-Marsh parish, Sprowston, near Norwich, England.
She was the niece of John Addington Symonds, the respected English poet and literary critic. She died in her home, shortly after her seventy-sixth birthday, of apparent heart failure. Origin of pen name Writing during a time period when writing and publishing was a male-dominated industry, it was not uncommon to see a woman such as Symonds adopt either a gender neutral, or even a male pen name.
The Academy noted that Symonds was "one of the many women writers who have succumbed to the mysterious attraction of the name "George"." lieutenant has been speculated that perhaps she assumed the pen name at least partially as a means "to gain an unqualified entrance into the profession." The particular choice of the Christian name "George" has been attributed to a "mysterious attraction" that the name holds, as was George Eliot, the pen name of famed English author, Mary Anne Evans.
Another famous female writer who chose George in her pen name was Amantine/Amandine Aurore Lucile Dupin, also known as George Sand. Despite her adoption of a masculine pen name, it was no secret that she was, in fact female.
The Academy went so far as to question why she even maintained the facade. Ultimately, they simply chalked it up to "a whim.".