Harriet Eleanor Hamilton-King (Mrs. Hamilton King) (1840–1920) was an
Englishpoet and devotional
writer.
Life
King was born in
Edinburgh and was the daughter of Admiral W. A. Baillie Hamilton and Lady Harriet Hamilton, sister of the
Duke of Abercorn. In 1864, she married banker and publisher Henry Samuel King. She lived at the Manor House,
Chigwell,
Essex, all her married life,[1] but after her husband's death in 1878 she moved with her children to another part of the country.[2] Her strong sympathy for
Mazzini and the cause of
Italian unification inspired a number of her works.[1] She was received into the
Roman Catholic Church in 1890 by
Cardinal Henry Edward Manning.[3]
Works
Aspromonte and Other Poems (1869)
The Disciples (1873)
A Book of Dreams (1883)
The Sermon in the Hospital (from The Disciples) (1885)
Ballads of the North and Other Poems (1889)
The Prophecy of Westminster and Other Poems: in Honour of Henry Edward, Cardinal Manning (1895)
The Hours of the Passion and Other Poems (1902)
Letters and Recollections of Mazzini (1912)
References
^
abCatherine W. Reilly. Mid-Victorian Poetry: An Annotated Biobibliography. Londen: Mansell Publishing Limited, 2000, p. 257.
^E. H. Hickey in Alfred H. Miles (ed.), The Poets and the Poetry of the Nineteenth Century. Volume IX: Christina G. Rossetti to Katharine Tynan. London: Routledge, 1907, p.81.
^F. C. Burnand (ed.), The Catholic Who's Who and Year-Book 1908. London: Burns & Oates, p. 229.