Zora Cross

Zora Cross
Born Zora Bernice May Cross
(1890-10-18)18 October 1890
Eagle Farm, Queensland, Australia
Died 22 January 1964(1964-01-22) (aged 73)
Glenbrook, New South Wales, Australia
Nationality Australian
Occupation poet and novelist
Known for Songs of Love and Life
Parent(s) Ernest William Cross (accountant) and Mary Louisa Eliza Ann, nee Skyring

Zora Bernice May Cross (18 May 1890 – 22 January 1964) was an Australian poet, novelist and journalist.

Life

Zora Bernice May Cross was born on May 18, 1890 on Eagle Farm, Brisbane to Earnest William Cross and Mary Louisa Eliza Ann. Her father was a Sydney born accountant.[1] Cross inherited her love for literature from both her parents, poetry from her mother and Celtic knowledge from her father, who was also the son of an Irish printer. and was educated at Ipswich Girls' Grammar School and then Sydney Teachers' College from 1909 to 1910. She taught for three years and then worked as a journalist, for the Boomerang and then as a freelance writer.[2] On March 11, 1911, she married Stuart Smith but later refused to live with him. This led to her marriage being dissolved on September 10, 1922. Later on in her life, Cross had a "de facto" husband, David McKee Wright, who she had two daughters with.

She was known not only for her poems, including sonnet sequences, but for a private life scandalous by the standards of her time. She wrote about sex, childbirth and war, in terms also considered too explicit by contemporaries. Cross supported herself and her family though acting in one of Phillip Lytton's companies and teaching elocutions and then some freelance journalisms.

As Bernice May, she wrote a regular column in the 1930s for the Australian Women's Mirror.[2]

Bibliography

Novels

Poetry collections

Notes

References


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