Background
Jane was born in 1685 the daughter of Thomas Hughes of Bryn Gruffydd near Mold, Flintshire 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.
Jane was born in 1685 the daughter of Thomas Hughes of Bryn Gruffydd near Mold, Flintshire 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. Her husband soon spent his fortune and went over to Paris. Some time after this, a separation took place and she retired in 1721 to Flintshire, where she led a solitary life, seeing little company but some intimate friends.
About this time Thomas Brereton obtained from Charles Spencer, 3rd Earl of Sunderland a post belonging to the customs at Parkgate, Cheshire, but in February 1722 he was unfortunately drowned in the River Dee at Saltney, when the tide was coming in.
Brereton possessed talents for versification, if not for poetry, which she displayed for some years as a correspondent to The Gentleman"s Magazine, under the signature Melissa. There she had a competitor who signed himself FIDO and is supposed to have been Thomas Beach.
After her death a volume of her Poems on Several Occasions. With letters to her friends.
And an account of her life, was published in London in 1744.
A number of her poems were reprinted in subsequent collections. Katherine Turner, writing in the Oxford Dictionary of National 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 eighteenth century, a moment at which being a published writer while retaining respectability was becoming a real possibility.".