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notes that "Brereton's body of poetry displays a flair for tactful occasional writing, and represents a transitional moment in women's writing in the 18th century, a moment at which being a published writer while retaining respectability was becoming a real possibility."
51:. Some time after that, a separation took place and she retired in 1721 to Flintshire, where she led a solitary life, seeing little company other than some intimate friends. About that time Thomas Brereton obtained from
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40:, and his wife Anne Jones. Unusually for a girl at the time, Jane was educated at least up to the age of 16, when her father died. She showed an early interest in poetry.
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Prescott, Sarah. "The
Cambrian Muse: Welsh Identity and Hanoverian Loyalty in the Poems of Jane Brereton (1685-1740)" 38.4 (Summer 2005)
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for the benefit of her children's education, where she died 7 August 1740, aged 55, leaving two daughters, Lucy and
Charlotte.
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Brereton possessed talents for versification, if not for poetry, which she displayed for some years as a correspondent to
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English Verse 1701â1750: A Catalogue of
Separately Printed Poems with Notes on Contemporary Collected Editions.
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was published in London in 1744. A number of her poems were reprinted in subsequent collections.
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22:(1685â1740) was a Welsh poet who wrote in English. She was notable as a correspondent for
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Tradition in
Transition: Women Writers, Marginal Texts, and the Eighteenth-Century Canon
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Poems on
Several Occasions; with letters to her friends; and an account of her life,
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and the
Marketing of Women Poets, 1731â1754." PhD Diss. Georgetown University, 1988
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Eighteenth-Century Women Poets and Their Poetry: Inventing Agency, Inventing Genre.
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The Fifth Ode of the Fourth Book of Horace
Imitated: And Apply'd to the King
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Jane was born in 1685, the daughter of Thomas Hughes of Bryn
Gruffydd, near
188:, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online. Retrieved 17 July 2008.
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In
January 1711, she married Thomas Brereton, at the time a commoner of
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215:, eds. Alvaro Ribiero and James Basker. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1996
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Barker, Anthony D. "Poetry from the
Provinces: Amateur Poets in the
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47:. Her husband soon spent his fortune and went over to
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Brereton [nÊe Hughes], Jane (1685â1740), poet
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Eighteenth Century Women Poets: An Oxford Anthology
113:. London: William Hinchcliffe, 1716 (Foxon B408)
126:. London: William Hinchliffe, 1720 (Foxon B408)
204:Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP, 2005. pp. 175â232
200:Backscheider, Paula R. "Friendship Poems". In
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248:The Eighteenth-Century British Verse Epistle
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135:. London: Edward Cave, 1735 (Foxon B409)
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97:Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
53:Charles Spencer, 3rd Earl of Sunderland
250:, Hampshire: Palgrave MacMillan, 2007
224:2 vols. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1975
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170:The General Biographical Dictionary
55:a post belonging to the customs at
87:. After her death a volume of her
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94:Katherine Turner, writing in the
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117:An Expostulary Epistle to Sir
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211:in the 1730s and 1740s" In:
255:Eighteenth Century Studies.
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164:Alexander Chalmers (Ed.),
139:Poems on Several Occasions
243:, Oxford: Oxford UP, 1989
172:- A New Edition volume VI
45:Brasenose College, Oxford
291:18th-century Welsh poets
227:Kizer, Kathleen S. "The
81:The Gentleman's Magazine
25:The Gentleman's Magazine
296:Anglo-Welsh women poets
16:Welsh writer in English
229:Gentleman's Magazine
209:Gentleman's Magazine
184:Turner, Katherine,
121:upon the Death of
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61:River Dee
32:Biography
133:: A Poem
69:Wrexham
65:Saltney
175:(1812)
131:Merlin
75:Verses
49:Paris
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