Lizzie Twigg (c. 18821933) was an Irish poet and Gaelic revivalist who was famously known for her appearance in Ulysses by James Joyce.
Twigg was a protégé of George William Russell and an ardent nationalist. She wrote poems for the dominican published monthly the Irish Rosary Blazes Boylan, Skin-the-Goat and Frederick Sweny: the real people of ‘Ulysses’ by Vivien Igoe, Culture, The Irish Times, June 11, 2016. and the United Irishman in February 1903. Her volume of poems was called Songs and Poems in 1904. Although quite well known by her penname Éilis Ní Chraoibhín in Arthur Griffith's paper, she was largely forgotten by the time of her death and today it is her appearance in Ulysses for which she is best remembered.
She died after a long illness in Limerick on 3 January 1933.
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