Eileen O'Shaughnessy

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Eileen Maud O'Shaughnessy (September 25, 1905 - March 29, 1945) was the first wife of British writer George Orwell (Eric Arthur Blair).

O'Shaughnessy was born in South Shields, Tyne and Wear, in northeast England, the only daughter of Marie O'Shaughnessy and Lawrence O'Shaughnessy (of apparent Irish origin), who was a customs collector. She had an older brother, Lawrence O'Shaughnessy.

She attended Sunderland Church High School. In the late 1920s she attended university at Oxford where she attained a degree in psychology.

O'Shaughnessy was also an amateur poet. She met Orwell in 1935 and married him the following year. Soon after their marriage she joined Orwell when he went to fight in the Spanish Civil War, returning the following year after he was wounded by a sniper.

In June of 1944 Orwell and O'Shaughnessy adopted a three-week old boy they named Richard Horatio Blair. Tragically, she died in the spring of 1945 in Newcastle upon Tyne whilst undergoing routine surgery.

Influence on Orwell's writing

It is believed by some scholars that Eileen had a large influence on Orwell's writing. Most controversially it is suggested that Orwell's classic novel 1984 may have been influenced by one of O'Shaughnessy's poems (End of the Century, 1984), which she wrote in 1934 [1], although this theory cannot be proven.

The poem was written in 1934, a year before they met, about the Sunderland Church High School, which she had attended, to celebrate its fiftieth anniversary, and to look ahead 50 years to the school's centenary in 1984. [2]

Although the poem was written before she met Orwell, there are striking similarities between the futuristic vision of O'Shaughnessy's poem and that of Orwell's 1984 including mind control, and personal freedom eradicated by a police state.

O'Shaughnessy is also believed to have helped Orwell write Animal Farm.