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COUNTESS OF See also: English author, daughter of See also: Sir See also: William Kingsmill of Sidmonton, near Southampton; was
See also: born in See also: April 1661
.
Five months later her See also: father died, and her See also: mother married in 1662 Sir See also: Thomas Ogle
.
Lady Ogle died in 1664, and nothing is heard of her daughter
See also: Anne until 1683, when she is mentioned as one of the maids of honour of Mary of See also: Modena, duchess of See also: York
.
She married in May 1684 Colonel Heneage Finch, who was attached to the duke of York's See also: household
.
To him she addressed poems and versified epistles, in which he figures as See also: Daphnis and she as Ardelia
.
At the Revolution Heneage Finch refused the See also: oath of allegiance to William and Mary, and he and his wife had no fixed home until they were invited in 1690 to Eastwell See also: Park, Kent, by Finch's See also: nephew See also: Charles, 4th
See also: earl of Winchelsea, on whose See also: death in 1712 Heneage Finch succeeded to the earldom
.
The countess of Winchelsea died in See also: London on the 5th cf See also: August 1720, leaving no issue, her See also: husband surviving until 1726
.
Lady Winchelsea's poems contain many copies of verse addressed to her See also: friends and contemporaries
.
She was to some extent a follower of the " matchless Orinda " in the fervour of her friendships
.
During her lifetime she published her poem " The See also: Spleen " in Gildon's See also: Miscellany (1701) and a See also: volume of Poems in 1713 which included a tragedy called See also: Aristomenes
.
With See also: Alexander
See also: Pope she was on friendly terms, and one of the seven commendatory poems printed with the 1717 edition of his See also: works was by her
.
But in the See also: farce Three See also: Hours after See also: Marriage (1717) attributed to Gay, but really the See also: work of Pope, Arbuthnot and Gay, she is ridiculed as the learned lady, See also: Phoebe Clinket, a character assigned to Pope's See also: hand
.
Lady Winchelsea's poems were almost forgotten when See also: Wordsworth in the " Essay, supplementary to the Preface " of his Poems (1815), See also: drew attentionto her nature-See also: poetry, asserting that with the exception of Pope's " Windsor See also: Forest " and her " Nocturnal See also: Reverie," English poetry between See also: Paradise Lost and See also: Thomson's Seasons did not See also: present " a single new image of See also: external nature." Words-worth sent at See also: Christmas 1819 a MS. of extracts from Lady Winchelsea and other writers to Lady Mary Lowther, and his See also: correspondence with Alexander Dyce contains some minute See also: criticism and appreciation of her poetry
.
Mr Edmund Gosse wrote a See also: notice of her poems for T
.
H
.
See also: Ward's English Poets (vol. iii., 1880), and in 1884 came into possession of a MS. volume of her poems
.
A
See also: complete edition of her verse, The Poems of Anne, Countess of Winchelsea, was edited by See also: Myra See also: Reynolds (See also: Chicago, 1903) with an exhaustive essay
.
See also E
.
Gosse, Gossip in a Library (1891), and E
.
See also: Dowden, Essays, See also: Modern and Elizabethan
.
Wordsworth's See also: anthology for Lady Mary Lowther was first printed in 1905 (See also: Oxford)
.
Some of her work remains in MS. in the possession of Professor Dowden
.
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