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Ann Taylor (poet) : ウィキペディア英語版 | Ann Taylor (poet)
Ann Taylor (30 January 1782 - 20 December 1866) was an English poet and literary critic. In her youth she was a writer of verse for children, for which she achieved long-lasting popularity. In the years immediately preceding her marriage, she became an astringent literary critic of growing reputation. She is, however, best remembered as the elder sister and collaborator of Jane Taylor. ==The literary family== The Taylor sisters were part of an extensive literary family, daughters of Isaac Taylor of Ongar. Ann was born in Islington and lived with her family at first in London and later in Lavenham in Suffolk, in Colchester and, briefly, in Ongar. The sisters' father, Isaac Taylor, was, like his father, an engraver, and later became an educational pioneer and Independent minister and wrote a number of instructional books for the young. Their mother, Mrs. (Ann Martin) Taylor (1757–1830) wrote seven works of moral and religious advice - in many respects liberal for their time - two of them fictionalized. Ann and Jane's brothers, Isaac and Jefferys, also wrote, the former being a theologian, but also the inventor of a patent beer tap. The elder brother Charles Taylor edited ''The Literary Panorama'', for which he wrote on topics from art to politics, and produced, anonymously, a massive annotated translation of Augustin Calmet's ''Dictionary of the Bible''. His younger brother Josiah was a publisher, chiefly of works on architecture and design.
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