Conclusion.
Phillis Wheatley started writing poetry after learning to speak, read, and write English with surprising ease. The poem that gained her fame was an elegy for George Whitefield, a Methodist minister that Phillis Wheatley had seen preach in Boston just before he passed away in 1770. She became well-known around the world thanks to her elegy, which was printed again in London and the colonies. She attracted a lot of attention as a female African American poet. Her sole book of poetry, Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral, was published in 1773 and featured a foreword attesting to her talent signed by eighteen notable Boston men as well as a portrait of the author at her writing desk with a pen in hand..
The family split up after Mrs. Wheatley passed away in 1774, and Phillis Wheatley married free black John Peters before settling in Delaware. She was then left behind by her spouse and worked in hotels until her health deteriorated and she was completely destitute. On the outskirts of Boston, she passed away by herself as a result of issues with the birth of her third child. The first American woman and African American to publish, Phillis Wheatley also tried to make a living as a writer. She stated in a letter from 1774 that "God has implanted a Principle, which we name Love of Freedom; it is impatient of Oppression, and pants for Deliverance, in every human breast" in reference to slavery. She communicated with George Washington and supported the American Revolution while admiring other political leaders.
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