Greenwell, Dora (1821–1882)
Greenwell, Dora (1821–1882)
British religious writer. Born Dec 6, 1821, in Greenwell Ford, Lanchester, Durham, England; died Mar 29, 1882, in Clifton, England; dau. of William Thomas Greenwell and Dorothy (Smales) Greenwell.
Began publishing poetry out of financial need, and focused, in later poetry, on religious and mystical themes; prose works include essays, published in North British Review and elsewhere on social issues and on rights of women, animals, the insane, and children; writer of hymns, poetry, theological essays, biographies, and dramatic monologues; works include Poems (1848), The Patience of Hope(1860), Two Friends (1862), Carmina Crucis (1869), Songs of Salvation (1873), Camera Obscura (1876), and Selections from the Prose of Dora Greenwell (ed. W.G. Hanson, 1952).