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  1. 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.

  2. Dec 8, 2016 · Mary Hutchinson was an original, and one of those women who had an instinctive and unerring appreciation for the very best and most significant works of both visual and literary art. And, when her eye was caught, she became a fierce and tireless advocate for the artists.

    • Marissa Kessenich
  3. Mar 6, 2023 · William Wordsworth was famously married to his childhood sweetheart, Mary Hutchinson. The pair were together for over 40 years, until Wordsworth’s death in 1850. Hutchinson was not only Wordsworth’s wife, but also his muse; it was she who inspired some of his most famous poems, including “She Was a Phantom of Delight.”.

  4. Sep 22, 2011 · The last letter in the collection is dated September 30, 1964, just three months before his death. Hutchinson outlived him by twelve years, dying in 1977 at the age of 88. Eliot's remarkable and complex relationship with this intriguing and truly extraordinary woman endured nearly fifty years.

  5. English Romantic poet William Wordsworth wrote "She was a Phantom of Delight" in 1803 about his wife, Mary Hutchinson. The poem's speaker describes his first encounter with a "lovely Apparition," or a beautiful spirit, who turns out to be quite human after all once he gets to know her. Rather than temper the speaker's admiration, however ...

  6. Mary Hutchinson. Mary Barnes, the daughter of Sir Hugh Barnes and Winifred Strachey Barnes, was born in 1889. She spent her early childhood in India before being sent to boarding school in England. In 1910 she married a lawyer, St John Hutchinson. In 1911 her cousin, Lytton Strachey, introduced her to the Bloomsbury Group, a group of friends ...

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  8. Apr 1, 2001 · What emerges most strikingly and effectively from the narrow focus of this biography, however, is the collective creative process engendered by the Coleridge-Wordsworth-Hutchinson relationship ...

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