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Anne Penny
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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 privateer who owned an estate in Oxford, but was left widowed at the age of 22 with a son, Hugh Cloberry Christian. She then started writing poetry. She married a French customs officer, again with a maritime history, and the couple moved to London. There she published a number of works, including her most significant poem An Invocation to the Genius of Britain, a patriotic piece written at the start of the Anglo-French War. She also published a number of translations of Welsh poems.

Key Information

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

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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

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Penny's most important poem was An Invocation to the Genius of Britain (1778), written in rhyming couplets and dedicated to the Duchess of Devonshire.[7] Composed at the start of 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,[10] it was subscribed to by Samuel Johnson, the Duchess of Bedford, the Duke and Duchess of Marlborough, and Horace Walpole. She was also commissioned to write poems by the Marine Society.[1]

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References

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