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  1. Esther Johnson (13 March 1681 – 28 January 1728) was an Englishwoman known to have been a close friend of Jonathan Swift, known as "Stella". Whether or not she and Swift were secretly married, and if so why the marriage was never made public, is a subject of debate. Parentage and early life.

    • 28 January 1728 (aged 46)
  2. academia-lab.com › enciclopedia › ester-johnsonEster Johnson _ AcademiaLab

    Esther Johnson (13 de marzo de 1681 – 28 de enero de 1728) fue una inglesa conocida por haber sido amiga íntima de Jonathan Swift, conocido como "Stella". Si ella y Swift se casaron en secreto o no y, de ser así, por qué el matrimonio nunca se hizo público, es un tema de debate.

  3. 19 de abr. de 2022 · En enero de 1728 murió Esther "Stella" Johnson, gran amiga (y posiblemente algo más) de Jonathan Swift, de la que se desconoce si llegó a casarse con él. Swift, profundamente afectado y desmotivado por la pérdida, se aisló para siempre.

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  4. By the time he had completed the Journal to Stella, the set of letter-diaries written between 1710 and 1713 to his two close friends Esther Johnson and Rebecca Dingley, he had been chief propagandist for the Tory ministry, member of the Brothers’ club, and both mocked and respected as a court insider.

  5. A Journal to Stella. A Journal to Stella is a work by Jonathan Swift first partly published posthumously in 1766. It is a collection of letters that Swift wrote for Esther Johnson, his close friend and secret wife.

  6. 3 de sept. de 2021 · The Journal to Stella, Jonathan Swift's letters to Esther Johnson, or 'Stella', and Rebecca Dingley, written between September 1710 and June 1713, offers an extraordinary commentary on Swift's experiences in London during the most politically active and exciting years of his career and evidence of his evolving relationship with the ...

  7. Journal to Stella, series of letters written (1710–13) from Jonathan Swift in London to Esther Johnson and her companion, Rebecca Dingley, in Ireland. Esther (Stella) was the daughter of the widowed companion of Sir William Temple’s sister.