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  1. Poet. Born in Athlone. Briefly served as a midshipman in the navy, then moved to Edinburgh in 1828. Suffered from consumption. Contributed to the Edinburgh Literary Journal. Poetry volumes include Eldrid of Erin (1830). Biographical information: ODNB. (SP, AC) Poems associated with this person.

  2. Dorothea Jordan (née Bland; 22 November 1761 – 5 July 1816) was an Anglo-Irish actress, as well as a courtesan. She was the long-time mistress of Prince William, Duke of Clarence (later King William IV), and the mother of 10 illegitimate children by him, all of whom took the surname FitzClarence.

  3. Charles Doyne Sillery (2 March 1807 - 16 May 1837) was an Irish-born Scottish poet. [1] Sillery was born at Athlone, the son of an Irish artillery officer also named Charles Doyne Sillery, a native of Drogheda, who died of wounds received at Talavera. [1] The son entered the navy at an early age...

  4. She died in beauty, like the snow. On flowers dissolved away; She died in beauty, like a star. Lost on the brow of day. She lives in glory, like night’s gems. Set round the silver moon. She lived in Glory, like the Sun. A mid the blue of June. Charles Doyne Sillery (1807-1836), a Scottish (Irish-born) poet and writer.

  5. by Charles Doyne Sillery. She died in beauty,—like a rose. —Blown from its parent stem; She died in beauty,—like a pearl. —Dropped from some diadem. She died in beauty,—like a lay. —Along a moonlit lake; She died in beauty,—like the song. —Of birds amid the brake. She died in beauty,—like the snow. —On flowers dissolved away;

  6. The Royal mariner / by Charles Doyne Sillery. 22.0 x 4.0 cm (book measurement (inventory)) | RCIN 1086275.

  7. SILLERY, CHARLES DOYNE (1807–1837), poet, born at Athlone on 2 March 1807, was the son of an Irish artillery officer, Charles Doyne Sillery, a native of Drogheda, who died of wounds received at Talavera.