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Mary Barnes Hutchinson (29 March 1889 – 17 April 1977) was a British short-story writer, socialite, model and a member of the Bloomsbury Group . Early life [ edit] Hutchinson was born in Simla, Bengal, British India, to Sir Hugh Barnes and Winifred (Strachey) Barnes. [1] .
- 17 April 1977 (aged 88), London, England
- British
- Short-story writer
Mary Hutchinson, née Barnes, a half-cousin of Lytton Strachey, married St John (‘Jack’) Hutchinson, an eminent barrister, in 1910. A prominent Bloomsbury hostess, she was for several years the acknowledged mistress of the art critic, Clive Bell.
Hutchinson, Mary (1770-1859) Mary Wordsworth, born Hutchinson, was the wife of the poet William Wordsworth . William and Mary had known each other since childhood and married on 4 October 1802 at Brompton in Yorkshire.
"What an unusual power you have, you are no ordinary person", painter Henry Tonks said about his muse and friend Mary Hutchinson (1889-1977). Hutchinson, bor...
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Mary Hutchinson was the wife of William Wordsworth, the famous English poet, from 1802 to 1803. She was a key figure in his life and work, as she helped him with his poetry, his children, and his guests. She also observed the landscape and people around them at Dove Cottage, where they lived in Grasmere.
A poem about the love of a wife for a poet, written by William Wordsworth in 1804. The poem praises Mary Hutchinson as a phantom of delight, a perfect woman, and a being with angelic light. The poem is a classic example of uxorious poetry and Romanticism.
It was published in the 4 October 1802 Morning Post (see 1802 in poetry ). This date corresponding to Wordsworth's wedding to Mary Hutchinson and Coleridge's own wedding anniversary. [5] The poem was grouped with the Asra poems, a series of poems discussing love that were dedicated to Hutchinson.