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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.

    • Actress and courtesan
    • Dorothea Phillips, Dora Jordan, Madame James, Mrs 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.