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  1. St Oswald's Church, Grasmere, Cumbria, England. Spouse. Edward Quillinan (1843–1847; her death) Parent (s) William Wordsworth. Mary Hutchinson. Dorothy " Dora " Wordsworth [1] (16 August 1804 – 9 July 1847) was the daughter of poet William Wordsworth (1770–1850) and his wife Mary Hutchinson.

    • Dorothy Wordsworth, 16 August 1804
    • Edward Quillinan (1843–1847; her death)
    • 9 July 1847 (aged 42)
  2. Another important friendship was with the author Maria Jane Jewsbury. In 1841 Dora married family friend Edward Quillinan. As well as being a talented amateur artist she published a book ‘Journal of a Few Months' Residence in Portugal, and Glimpses of the South of Spain’, in 1847. Dora died in 1847 of tuberculosis.

  3. In 1847 Dora died, and four years later (8 July 1851) Quillinan himself died (at Loughrig Holme, Ambleside) of inflammation, occasioned by taking cold upon a fishing excursion; he was buried in Grasmere churchyard.

  4. 29 ott 2019 · But Dora showed herself to be perhaps even bolder than her aunt, when, in 1843, at the age of thirty-nine, she married the Anglophone poet and Portuguese translator Edward Quillinan —very much against her father’s wishes.

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  5. In 1838 Dora Wordsworth's relationship with Edward Quillinan and with her parents reaches a crisis. By the spring of 1838, Dora has let her father know that she wanted to marry Quillinan, although, according to Alan Hill's note, Dora had written to Quillinan that "'My love for you is a spiritual Platonism such as a man might feel for a man or woman for woman …

  6. Wordsworth, Dora (1804-1847). - Letter, from an unstated address, to Edward Quillinan (1791-1851), at No 12 Bryanston Street, Portman Square, London, dated 19 December 1829 (date from postmark). Letter follows transcription of Wordsworth's 'Gold and Silver Fishes' and Hartley Coleridge's 'I mourn not that I cannot give thee gold'.

  7. In 1838 Dora Wordsworth's relationship with Edward Quillinan and with her parents reaches a crisis. By the spring of 1838, Dora has let her father know that she wanted to marry Quillinan, although, according to Alan Hill's note, Dora had written to Quillinan that "'My love for you is a spiritual Platonism such as a man might feel for a man or woman for woman …