Emily, Lady Tennyson
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Emily Sarah Tennyson, Baroness Tennyson (Template:Nee Sellwood; 9 July 1813 – 10 August 1896), known as Emily, Lady Tennyson, was the wife of the poet Alfred, Lord Tennyson, and an author and composer in her own right. Emily was the oldest of three daughters, raised by a single father, after her mother Sarah died when she was three years old. Her father, a successful lawyer, was devoted to her and her sisters and ensured that they had a good education. She met Alfred when she was a girl, but they did not develop a romantic relationship until his brother Charles married her sister Louisa. It was thirteen years before they would marry, due to her father's concerns about the degree to which Tennyson could provide for her on a poet's salary. When his career became more successful, Emily and Alfred married.
Emily played a number of significant roles in Alfred's life. Aside from being a wife and mother of two sons, she ran large households and conducted business tasks for her husband. She performed the role of a business manager, secretary, promoter, entertainer, and protector. Her health suffered after the birth of her second child, and stress and overwork caused her health to weaken to the point that she became an invalid. She enjoyed music and wrote settings for some of Tennyson's poetry, and wrote a couple of hymns. After her husband died in 1892, she worked with her son to write a biography of his life.
Early life
Emily Sarah Sellwood was born on 9 July 1813, most likely at Market Place, Horncastle, Lincolnshire,<ref name = ChurchTour /><ref name="Oxford" />Template:Efn the eldest of three daughters born to Sarah (née Franklin, 1788–1816) and Henry Sellwood (1782–1867).
Her father was a prosperous solicitor, secretary, and manager who acted for the Tennyson family many times over the years; her mother was a younger sister of Arctic explorer Sir John Franklin.<ref name = ChurchTour>Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Oxford">Template:Cite ODNB</ref><ref name="Viney" /><ref name="Hills" /><ref name="Lodge">Template:Cite book</ref> Her mother died when Emily was three years of age, after which her devoted father provided a good education for the girls.<ref name="Hills" />
Marriage

Emily first met Alfred, Lord Tennyson when she was either nine<ref name="Viney" /> or sixteen.<ref name="TCC">Template:Cite web</ref> Alfred fell in love with Emily at the marriage of his brother, Charles, to her sister, Louisa, in May 1836.<ref name="HT">Template:Cite web</ref> He later wrote a sonnet about how he felt at the wedding of their siblings, where Emily was the bridesmaid:Template:Blockquote

In 1837, they were engaged. It was called off in 1840, because of financial issues<ref name="TCC" /> and her father's wariness of Tennyson's ability to support a family on a poet's income.<ref name="Hills" /><ref name="Viney" /> Tennyson's career was more successful in the 1840s and they were married on 13 June 1850.<ref name="TCC" /> She was married at 37 years of age.<ref name="Viney" /> That year, Alfred was very popular due to the success of In Memoriam A.H.H. (1850), and the attention was overwhelming for Alfred and Emily.<ref name="TCC" />
First living in Twickenham in London,<ref name="Hills" /> they established households in large houses with live-in servants, likely affordable due to a dowry from her father.<ref name="Viney" /> To avoid the publicity, the Tennysons moved to Freshwater, Isle of Wight to Farringford House. Emily found the house to be the "dearest place on earth", but they had so many visitors that it felt more like a hotel.<ref name="TCC" /> Their guests often stayed for weeks, which provoked Alfred due to the commotion of servants and guests.<ref name="Viney" />
She was his secretary, business partner, proofreader, and financial manager.<ref name="TCC" /> Philip Larkin described Emily as the woman behind the man — she managed his business, ran his household, took care of and educated his children, entertained visitors, and was protective of him—while he wrote poetry.<ref name="Viney">Template:Cite news</ref>Template:Efn Her correspondence provides insight into her managerial abilities and love for her husband. In modern times, her work for her husband would be considered that of a business woman.<ref name="Viney" />

They had two sons, Hallam, born at Twickenham on 11 August 1852, and Lionel, born at Farringford House on 16 March 1854.<ref name="Hills" /><ref name="Lodge" /> After the birth of her second son, she developed an incurable illness.<ref name="Globe - obit" />
When Alfred was away, Julia Margaret Cameron visited Emily at Farringford. Julia thought of Emily as a "living stream of love whose fount is never dry."<ref name="TCC" /> She was described by Coventry Patmore as cultivated, charming 'but her mind seems always deeper than her cultivation, and her heart always deeper than her mind, - or rather constituting the main element of her mind."<ref name="RA" />
Music and writing
A musician, Emily employed her own talents in setting some of his poems to music.<ref name="Viney" /> She wrote the hymns Great God, who knowest each man's need <ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and O yet we trust that somehow good.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Emily and her son Hallam wrote a memoir of Tennyson.<ref name="RA" /><ref name="Toms" />
Later years and death
Over time, the degree of responsibility was so stressful that it weakened her health.<ref name="Viney" /> She longed for periods "for reading and thinking, to restore the elasticity of one's mind, now too like a bow spoilt by long bending".<ref name="Viney" /> She became an invalid<ref name="Globe - obit" /> and was no longer able to entertain or perform managerial and secretarial duties, as she had in the past. This was in some ways a blessing to Alfred, with both of them going into retirement. She was able, though, to offer him comfort when he was upset.<ref name="Viney" />
Alfred died in 1892.<ref name="RA" /> He was buried at Westminster Abbey in Poets' Corner.<ref name="Toms">Template:Cite book</ref> Emily Tennyson died on 10 August 1896 at Aldworth.<ref name="Globe - obit">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="RA">Template:Cite web</ref> She is buried in All Saints' Church, Freshwater, Isle of Wight.<ref name="Toms" />