Emmeline Grangerford, fictional character, a poet and painter in Mark Twain’s Huckleberry Finn (1885). Upon viewing her works, Huck Finn naively echoes his hosts’ reverence for Emmeline’s maudlin elegies of deceased neighbours and her soppy crayon drawings of young ladies in mourning. One such drawing, a mawkish portrait of a woman weeping over a dead bird, is titled “I Shall Never Hear Thy Sweet Chirrup More Alas.”
Emmeline is a parody of Julia A. Moore, “The Sweet Singer of Michigan,” a notoriously bad American poet who was popular in the 1870s. Twain once remarked of Moore that she had “the touch that makes an intentionally humorous episode pathetic and an intentionally pathetic one funny.”