Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  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.

  2. Esther Johnson is on Facebook. Join Facebook to connect with Esther Johnson and others you may know. Facebook gives people the power to share and makes the world more open and connected.

  3. This is about a woman named Esther Johnson, known as Stella. Born in England, Stella was the ward of a man named Temple. Swift happened to be Temple’s secretary at the time.

  4. Johnson, Esther (1681–1728) Irish woman immortalized as Jonathan Swift 's "Stella." Name variations: Hetty Johnson. Born in 1681; died in Dublin, Ireland, on January 28, 1728; daughter of William Temple 's steward; probably secretly married to Jonathan Swift (the satirist), in 1716.

  5. 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. Swift, who was employed by Sir William, was Stella’s tutor.

  6. British friend of Swift. Also known as: Stella. Learn about this topic in these articles: association with Swift. In Jonathan Swift: Years at Moor Park. Here, too, he met Esther Johnson (the future Stella), the daughter of Temple’s widowed housekeeper.

  7. It consists of 65 letters to his friend, Esther Johnson, whom he called Stella and whom he may have secretly married. They were written between 1710 and 1713, from various locations in England.

  8. Apr 25, 2015 · Swift says that Esther Johnson was born on March 18, 1681; in the parish register of Richmond, which shows that she was baptized on March 20, 1680–81, her name is given as Hester; but she signed her will “Esther,” the name by which she was always known. Swift says, “Her father was a younger brother of a good family in Nottinghamshire ...

  9. Jul 10, 2024 · 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 two women.

  10. In this account, he states that he met Esther Johnson in the spring of 1689, when she was eight and he was twenty-one, at the time that he entered the household of Sir William Temple. Esther's mother, Bridget Johnson, was in the service of Martha, Lady Giffard, sister of Sir William.