She was born at Harlow, Essex, younger daughter of Mr. Benjamin Flower, editor.1 Her longest work is Vivia Perpetua, A Dramatic Poem (1841), having as its subject the life of the early Christians.
In 1834 she married William Bridges Adams, polemicist and railway engineer. They lived at Loughton, Essex, where there is a blue plaque to the couple. She died from tuberculosis at the age of 43 and was buried at Harlow on August 21, 1848.1
References
^ ab John Julian D.D., A Dictionary of Hymnology, Second Edition, John Murray, 1907.