She wrote numerous tales for children, chiefly historical, along with books of instruction and some descriptive natural history.
[3] When she moved with her father to nearby New Buckenham, she started a school for some 30 children, which laid emphasis on singing, partly because Taylor had become friendly with Sarah Ann Glover, a musical theorist who had developed the Norwich sol-fa system.
Las Casas' vision ends with his being granted a prophetic glimpse of the abolitionist movement in Taylor's own time, with specific mentions of Thomas Clarkson and William Wilberforce.
[7] Originally a Unitarian, she joined the Church of England under the influence of English theologian Frederick Denison Maurice.
[2] Taylor also wrote many hymns that remained popular through the 19th century, including 14 contributed anonymously to a Unitarian hymnal published in 1818.