Yearsley continued to write after her patronship with Hannah More. She wrote a series of novels called The Royal Captives. She also wrote several poems sporadically, including A Poem on the Inumanity of the Slave Trade, which is one of her most famous and contovercial poems outside the two published volumes of poetry under Hannah More. None of ther poems would ever be published as a volume again but as Mary Waldron points out: "Her poems were occasionally published in Bristol newspapers"(Waldron). Yearsley died in 1806 but she died having her poetry standing on its own. As Kerri Andrews states near the end of her aritcle on Yearsley: "[...]Yearsley's career would blossom so that she was being paid most hansomely; [...] her work had value beyond that accorded to it by some high-ranking and well-meaning subscribers who paid for Yearsley's poetry only because they were asked to by Hannah More" (Andrews 102). The story of Ann Comartie Yearsley is interesting not only because she is a common working woman who gets her poetry published but because she is a woman who fights the system and everything it stands for. This is what makes Ann Yearsley unique.