Wright did not publish her poems personally, but they were circulated among her family and others during and after her lifetime. Others were published in different collections, as well as in the
Poetical Register, the
Christian Magazine, and the
Arminian Magazine. Wright's
Address to her Dying Infant, composed during her confinement, is noted for its tenderness and highly polished phrasing, while tinged with the gloom which accompanied her marriage. The regard that Wright was given can be judged by a letter written by the celebrity novelist
Samuel Richardson in 1750 (or 1754). Here, he attempted to list women of his time who were "moral examples of their sex". This was not an exhaustive list and although Richardson included Wright, he did not include every gifted woman he knew.
John Duncombe circulated some of her poems in the 1750s, and included her approvingly in
The Feminead; or, Female Genius (1754). In 1903, the prolific novelist Sir
Arthur Quiller-Couch published a historical novel titled "Hetty Wesley" which was based on the life of Wright. ==References==