English poet (1775–1835)
Mary Rolls
Born Mary Hillary
(1775-09-13 ) 13 September 1775Died 8 April 1835(1835-04-08) (aged 59) Nationality British Occupation Poet Parents Relatives William Hillary (brother)
Mary Rolls née Hillary (also known as Mrs Henry Rolls ;[ a] 13 September 1775[ b] – 8 April 1835) was an English poet.[ 1] [ 2]
Life
Born on 13 September 1775[ b] to Hannah (née Wynne; 1738–1806) and Richard Hillary (1703–1789) in Westmorland . She was raised as a Quaker along with her older brothers Richard (1768–1803) and William (1771–1847).[ 1] [ 2]
She married Henry Rolls (bapt. 1782–1838) on 16 July 1810, at St Anne's Church , Liverpool. He entered Christ's College, Cambridge in December 1810, was ordained in 1813, served a curacy at Boxworth , Cambridgeshire (1813–1816) before becoming rector first of Barnwell St Andrew (1818), then Barnwell All Saints (1819), and finally All Saints Aldwincle (from 1820), all in Northamptonshire . They had at least four daughters and two sons, though only two survived to adulthood.[ 1] [ c]
She died at Aldwincle rectory on 8 April 1835.[ 1] Her remains lie under the altar of Aldwinckle All Saints .
Poetry
Rolls published a number of books of poetry from 1815 to 1828. From 1817 she contributed to several periodicals, including The Literary Gazette ,[ 2] [ 3] and The Literary Magnet .[ 4] From 1828 until her death she also contributed to annuals,[ 1] such as Forget-Me-Not .[ 5] [ 6]
Bibliography
Sacred Sketches from Scripture History (1815)
Moscow. A Poem (1816)
A Poetical Address to Lord Byron (1816)
The Home of Love, a Poem (1817)
Legends of the North, or, the Feudal Christmas; a Poem (1825)
Choice Selections, and Original Effusions; or, Pen and Ink Well Employed (1828)
Notes
^ Mrs Henry Rolls was the name she published under, and was referred to in the press.
^ a b Rolls' obituary in The Gentleman's Magazine incorrectly gave her age as 54, leading many later sources to state her year of birth as 1781/1782.[ 2]
^ Two of their daughters, Marianna Hillary (1811) and Maria Gulielma (1813), survived less than a year.[ 2]
References