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  1. The intense lifelong friendship between William Wordsworth and his sister Dorothy probably began when they, along with Mary Hutchinson, attended school at Penrith. Wordsworth’s early childhood beside the Derwent and his schooling at Cockermouth are vividly recalled in various passages of The Prelude and in shorter poems such as the sonnet “Address from the Spirit of Cockermouth Castle.”

  2. Mary Hutchinson, née Barnes (1889–1977), a half-cousin of Lytton Strachey, married St John (‘Jack’ or ‘Hutchie’) Hutchinson – eminent criminal lawyer, connoisseur and collector – in 1910. A prominent Bloomsbury hostess, she was for several years the acknowledged mistress of the art critic Clive Bell, and became a close friend of T. S. and Vivien Eliot.

  3. From "Newtown Forever" & "Cuba People (1)' & other street photography - Mary Hutchinson. Te Aro Park 2013. Courtenay Place 2014. Newtown Festival 2013. Taranaki St 2012. Riddiford St 2013. Queens Wharf 2013. Newtown Festival 2013. Mt Cook 2012.

  4. 22 de dic. de 2021 · December 22, 2021 ·. I had a nice visit with Mary Hutchinson and learned so much about her. Something super exciting about Mary is that she is going to be a grandma! Her daughter is welcoming a sweet little boy into the world so soon. Mary is a proud mother of three children and has been married for 32 years.

  5. 6 de ene. de 2019 · On Monday October 4 th, two hundred and fifteen years ago, this emotional drama was played out at a farm called Gallow (s) Hill, Brompton-by-Sawdon in North Yorkshire. The words appear in the journal of Dorothy Wordsworth who couldn’t bear to attend the early morning wedding of her brother William to Mary Hutchinson at nearby All Saints ...

  6. Liked by Mary C. Hutchinson Here you can celebrate 🎉 NBCUniversal crossed 1,000,000 followers on LinkedIn! 💜 To our colleagues, thank you for sharing your NBCU…

  7. 1 de nov. de 2017 · She was the younger sister of Mary Hutchinson, who married Wordsworth in 1802; Sara lived with her sister and new brother-in-law for many years. By most accounts she was an attractive woman, lively, diminutive and curvaceous; although some disliked her (some members of the Wordsworth circle, having failed to fall under her spell, called her large-chinned and -nosed, dumpy and tiresome.