She spent several years teaching in the schools of Maryland and
Pennsylvania. In 1858, she removed to
Iowa, teaching several years in
Johnson,
Iowa, and
Benton counties. The family removing to
Cleveland,
Ohio, in 1863, she remained eight or nine years there, after which she spent some time again in Iowa with her sister. As "I. McC. Wilson", she published in 1891 a volume in
blank verse entitled
The Fate of the Leaf, an
allegory of human life. The plaintive note that echoes through many parts of the work suggests the common lot of poets "who learn in suffering what they teach in song". Wilson's verse displays at times vigor as well as ease and grace in the process of fusing words into effective and striking combinations such as readily lend themselves to the purposes of quotation. Her vocabulary is marked by unusual discrimination and some of the similies are conceived with felicity of judgment. In 1892, Wilson went to Europe where she spent about a year visiting the principal cities and points of historical interest in Great Britain and on the continent. Returning to the U.S., a couple of years were spent in New York City engaged in the same work as she had been in Baltimore, after which she returned to Baltimore. ==Death and legacy==