Evaleen Stein
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Evaleen Stein (October 12, 1863 – December 11, 1923) was an American writer and poet as well as a limner. She was the author of eleven volumes of stories and three books of verse. In addition, she translated two volumes of poetry, one from the Japanese (''When Fairies Were Friendly'') and another from Italian. An ardent lover of nature, Stein reflected this tendency in most of her poems and stories. Among her children's literature works, all written between 1903 and 1925, are ''Troubadour Tales'', ''Gabriel and the Hour Book'', ''A Little Shepherd of Provence'', ''The Little Count of Normandy; Or, The Story of Raoul'', ''The Christmas Porringer'', ''Our little Norman cousin of long ago, being a story of Normandy in the time of William the Conqueror'', ''Our Little Frankish Cousin of Long Ago'', ''Child songs of cheer'', ''Our Little Celtic Cousin of Long Ago'', ''Pepin: A Tale of Twelfth Night'', and ''Little Poems from Japanese Anthologies''. She lived all her life with her mother in Lafayette, Indiana, where Stein was the center of a large circle of cultured persons.


Early life and education

Evaleen Stein was born in Lafayette, Indiana, October 12, 1863, and passed her whole life in that city. The family of her father, John A. Stein, was originally from Pennsylvania, and that of her mother, Virginia Stein, came from Virginia. A brother, Orth Stein, had been widely known as a newspaper writer, fiction writer and poet, as well as a wanted criminal. She received a liberal education and at an early age showed her poetic talents. Her father was a lawyer and a writer of verse and prose, and he directed her studies and reading so as to develop the talents which he discovered in her. Her education included the public schools of Lafayette. Her training included art, including an art course in the
Art Institute of Chicago The Art Institute of Chicago in Chicago's Grant Park, founded in 1879, is one of the oldest and largest art museums in the world. Recognized for its curatorial efforts and popularity among visitors, the museum hosts approximately 1.5 mill ...
, and she won a reputation as an artist of exceptional merit.


Career


Writer

Her first poem was written in 1886 and sent to the ''Indianapolis Journal'', where it was published. For a number of years afterward, she continued to contribute poems to various newspapers, but more especially to the ''Indianapolis Journal''. She began to publish poems in local papers about 1887, and her work at once attracted attention by its finish and mastery of form, as well as by its spirit and sentiment. She contributed prose sketches to the local press, and was a contributor to ''St. Nicholas'', the Boston ''Transcript'', the Indianapolis ''Journal'' and other periodicals. Some of her poems appeared in various collections. In 1897, Copeland and Day, of Boston, brought out her first book, a small collection of poems, called ''One Way to the Woods'', the first edition being exhausted in a few weeks. In 1898, she wrote her first short story; this with another story written the next year, appeared in ''St. Nicholas''. These two short stories together with two longer ones, not before published, were brought out in book form in 1903 by the Bobbs-Merrill Co., of
Indianapolis Indianapolis (), colloquially known as Indy, is the state capital and most populous city of the U.S. state of Indiana and the seat of Marion County. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the consolidated population of Indianapolis and Marion ...
; the volume being called ''Troubadour Tales''. The year before, the same company had brought out her second book of verse, called ''Among the Trees Again''. Another book, a story for children, entitled, ''Gabriel and the Hour-Book'', was published in 1906 by L. C. Page and Co., of Boston. Some of her poems were included in Stedman's ''American Anthology'', and also in various other collections. She also wrote several children's books


Decorative arts

She did much decorative work for Chicago and New York City societies as an illuminator. Her most outstanding work in this line was probably an illumination of the Psalm 23, for which she received a certificate of honorable mention from the Panama–Pacific International Exposition ( San Francisco, 1915). Her work in this line was exhibited by the John Herron Art Institute at Indiana University and in metropolitan exhibits. According to White (1910), Stein's poetic art was characterized as being the most exquisite, delicately limned and evanescently outlined as a Japanese print, with an ariel-like trick of fancy. As an artist with brush and pencil, Stein was as perfect a technician as she was with her writing, her illuminated texts having a mediæval suggestion and her decorative manuscripts being pre-Raphaelitish in sentiment. Her
bookplate An ''Ex Libris'' (from ''ex-librīs'', ), also known as a bookplate (or book-plate, as it was commonly styled until the early 20th century), is a printed or decorative label pasted into a book, often on the front endpaper, to indicate ownership. ...
s -she designed four: Nathan Stein, Anne Benbridge O'Ferrall, Paul Faude, Edward Ayres- all included a flower motif, conventionalized, indicative of her ever haunting love for those expressions of natural beauty which she had woven into her verse.


Death

Stein lived all her life with her mother in various homes in Lafayette, Indiana. The last of these -"the little house of dreams"- was located at 708 Hitt Street and she died there, December 11, 1923. She was interred in Lafayette's Greenbush Cemetery.


Selected works


Poetry collections

* ''One Way to the Woods'', 1897 * ''Among the Trees Again'', 1902


Children's literature

* ''Troubadour Tales'', 1903 * ''Gabriel and the Hour Book'', 1906 * ''A Little Shepherd of Provence'', 1910 * ''The Little Count of Normandy; Or, The Story of Raoul'', 1911 * ''The Christmas Porringer'', 1914 * ''Our little Norman cousin of long ago, being a story of Normandy in the time of William the Conqueror'', 1915 * ''Our Little Frankish Cousin of Long Ago'', 1917 * ''Child songs of cheer'', 1918 * ''Our Little Celtic Cousin of Long Ago'', 1918 * ''Pepin: A Tale of Twelfth Night'', 1924 * ''Little Poems from Japanese Anthologies'', 1925


Gallery

Among the trees again (IA amongtreesagain00stei).pdf, ''Among the trees again'' Child songs of cheer (IA childsongsofchee00stei).pdf, ''Child songs of cheer'' The Christmas porringer (IA christmasporring00stei 0).pdf, ''The Christmas porringer'' Gabriel and the hour book (IA gabrielhourbook00steiiala).pdf, ''Gabriel and the hour book'' The little Count of Normandy; or, The story of Raoul (IA littlecountofnor00stei).pdf, ''The little Count of Normandy; or, The story of Raoul'' One way to the woods (IA onewaytowoods00stei).pdf, ''One way to the woods'' Our little Celtic cousin of long ago; being the story of Ferdiad, a boy of Ireland, in the time of Brian Boru (IA ourlittlecelticc00stei 0).pdf, ''Our little Celtic cousin of long ago'' Our little crusader cousin of long ago; being the story of Hugh, page to King Richard of England, in the third crusade (IA ourlittlecrusade00stei 0).pdf, ''Our little crusader cousin of long ago'' Our little Frankish cousin of long ago; being the story of Rainolf, a boy at the court of Charlemagne (IA ourlittlefrankis00stei).pdf, ''Our little Frankish cousin of long ago'' Our little Norman cousin of long ago, being a story of Normandy in the time of William the Conqueror (IA ourlittlenormanc00stei 0).pdf, ''Our little Norman cousin of long ago'' Rosechen and the wicked magpie (IA rosechenwickedma00stei).pdf, ''Rosechen and the wicked magpie'' Troubadour tales (IA troubadourtales00steiiala).pdf, ''Troubadour tales'' When fairies were friendly (IA whenfairiesweref00stei).pdf, ''When fairies were friendly''


References


Attribution

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External links

* * * {{DEFAULTSORT:Stein, Evaleen 1863 births 1923 deaths 19th-century American poets 19th-century American women writers American women poets 19th-century American artists Wikipedia articles incorporating text from A Woman of the Century 19th-century American women artists People from Lafayette, Indiana American children's writers American women children's writers Poets from Indiana Artists from Indiana School of the Art Institute of Chicago alumni American translators