Anne Penny

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Anne Penny
BornAnne Hughes
(1729-01-06)6 January 1729
Bangor, Wales
Died17 March 1784(1784-03-17) (aged 55)
Bagshot, England
OccupationPoet, translator
Language
  • English
  • Welsh
NationalityBritish
Notable worksAn Invocation to the Genius of Britain
Spouse
  • Thomas Christian (1746–51)
  • Peter Penny (1750s–1779)
ChildrenHugh Cloberry Christian

Anne Penny (née Hughes; 6 January 1729 – 17 March 1784) was a British poet and translator, born in Wales to a vicar and his wife. She married a

the Anglo-French War
. She also published a number of translations of Welsh poems.

Penny was an adherent of Welsh nationalism, and wrote a number of nationalistic poems. Though her work was criticised for its poor grammar, it attracted prominent subscribers, such as Samuel Johnson and Horace Walpole.

Biography

Penny was born Anne Hughes in Bangor and baptised on 6 January 1729. Her father was Bulkeley Hughes, the vicar of Edern and previously the vicar of Bangor, and her mother was Mary Hughes.[1] She married Thomas Christian in 1746, a privateer captain with a letter of marque. Christian had captured several Spanish galleons,[2][3] allowing him to purchase an estate at Hook Norton in Oxfordshire. In 1747 the couple had a son, Hugh Cloberry Christian, who went on to follow his father's maritime traditions and became a rear admiral in the Royal Navy.[1]

Thomas Christian died in 1751, leaving Penny widowed at the age of twenty-two.[2] She turned to writing and published her first work, Cambridge: a poem in 1756, which she published under the name Ann Christian.[4] She married Peter Penny (or Penné), a French customs officer who had lost his leg whilst in the navy. The couple moved into a house in Bloomsbury Square, where Penny carried on her writing and translating poetry.[1] She learned Welsh as child and it may have been her first language.[5] Peter Penny died around 1779, so Penny published her works to raise money.[1] Anne Penny died in London on 17 March 1784.[6]

Poetry

Penny's most important poem was An Invocation to the Genius of Britain (1778), written in

the Anglo-French War, it defends imperialism and glorifies the Royal Navy.[8]

Penny also maintained an interest in Thomas Gray's Celtic work. Her collection Poems, with a Dramatic Entertainment (1771) includes a number of nationalistic poems about Wales, as well as translations of Taliesin's Poem to Prince Elphin and An Elegy on Neest by Evan Evans.[9]

Although Penny's work was criticized for poor grammar, often linked by commentators to her social standing,

Marine Society.[1]

External links

References

  1. ^ required.)
  2. ^ a b The 1887 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography mentions that Thomas Christian's great granddaughter wrote an inaccurate account of him, where she claims he was a Captain in the Navy, and that he died in a bar fight in 1753, but he was more likely a privateer. Laughton, J. K. (1887). Christian, SIR Hugh Cloberry (1747–1798),). Oxford University Press.
  3. ^ The Peerage: Captain Thomas Christian
  4. ISBN 9781405156691. Archived from the original on 1 June 2016. Retrieved 25 March 2016.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link
    )
  5. .
  6. ^ "Deaths". St. James's Chronicle or the British Evening Post. No. 3598. London, England. 27 March 1784. p. 4.
  7. . Retrieved 17 April 2016.
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