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Topic: Sara Coleridge


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In the News (Sat 26 Dec 09)

  
  Sara Coleridge - LoveToKnow 1911
SARA COLERIDGE (1802-1852), English author, the fourth child and only daughter of Samuel Taylor Coleridge and his wife Sarah Fricker of Bristol, was born on the 23rd of December 1802, at Greta Hall, Keswick.
In 1822 Sara Coleridge published Account of the Abipones, a translation in three large volumes of Dobrizhoffer, undertaken in connexion with Southey's Tale of Paraguay, which had been suggested to him by Dobrizhoffer's volumes; and Southey alludes to his niece, the translator (canto iii.
In September 1829, at Crosthwaite church, Keswick, after an engagement of seven years' duration, Sara Coleridge was married to her cousin, Henry Nelson Coleridge (1798-1843), younger son of Captain James Coleridge (1760-1836).
www.1911encyclopedia.org /Sara_Coleridge   (589 words)

  
 New Sara Coleridge poems uncovered | News | Guardian Unlimited Books
Coleridge grew up in the Lake District poetic community but, while her work shows the influence of Wordsworth, she tackles a broad range of subjects, from humour and romance to nature, religion, and other poets.
Coleridge's third creative period comes after the death of her husband and was inspired by her close friendship with an Irish poet, Aubrey de Vere.
Coleridge died from cancer and it was after stumbling across a poem that she wrote about the tumour that would kill her, Doggrel Charm, that Dr Swaab was was inspired to hunt down more unpublished work by her.
books.guardian.co.uk /news/articles/0,,1998677,00.html   (411 words)

  
 Mary Elizabeth Coleridge at Old Poetry
Mary Elizabeth Coleridge was born in London in 1861 a descendant from an acclaimed literary family, with Samuel Taylor Coleridge as her great-great-uncle and Sara Coleridge as her aunt.
Coleridge at first wanted to be a painter and she remained fascinated by art throughout her life, championing Pre-Raphaelitism and forming close relations with a number of its exponents (Holman Hunt asked her to write his biography which was eventually published after her death).
Coleridge soon found literature to be her vocation, however, and from the age of twenty she began publishing articles and reviews, which she continued to do throughout her life, in journals and newspapers as varied as Charlotte Yonge’s Monthly Packet, the Monthly Review, the Guardian and the Times Literary Supplement.
oldpoetry.com /oauthor/show/Mary_Elizabeth_Coleridge   (1170 words)

  
 First publication of Sara Coleridge poetry
Sara Coleridge’s work unsurprisingly shows the strong influence of Wordsworth, given that she grew up in the house of the poet Robert Southey, who was her uncle, and in the midst of the well-connected Lake District poetic community.
The collection divides Coleridge’s work into three key periods of writing: from the age of thirteen to her marriage (1815–1829); her marriage and the raising of her children (1829–1843); and her widowhood to her death (1843–1852).
Coleridge’s seven-year engagement to her cousin Henry Nelson Coleridge gave rise to the love poetry of her first period, which helped maintain their long-distance relationship while Henry worked to achieve the professional status his family deemed necessary to approve the match.
www.ucl.ac.uk /news/news-articles/0701/07011907   (623 words)

  
 Sara Coleridge - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Here, after 1803, the Coleridges, Robert Southey and his wife (Mrs Coleridge's sister), and Mrs Lovell (another sister), widow of Robert Lovell, the Quaker poet, all lived together; but Coleridge was often away from home; and Uncle Southey was a paterfamilias.
In 1822, Sara Coleridge published Account of the Abipones, a translation in three large volumes of Martin Dobrizhoffer, undertaken in connexion with Southey's Tale of Paraguay, which had been suggested to him by Dobrizhoffer's volumes; and Southey alludes to his niece, the translator (canto,iii.
In September 1829, at Crosthwaite church, Keswick, after an engagement of seven years duration, Sara Coleridge was married to her cousin, Henry Nelson Coleridge (1798-1843), younger son of Captain James Coleridge.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Sara_Coleridge   (805 words)

  
 Samuel Taylor Coleridge - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Samuel Taylor Coleridge was born on October 21, 1772 in the rural town of Ottery St Mary, Devonshire.
Coleridge was critical of the literary taste of his contemporaries, and a literary conservative insofar as he was afraid that the lack of taste in the ever growing masses of literate people would mean a continued desecration of literature itself.
Coleridge was the father of Hartley Coleridge, Sara Coleridge, and Derwent Coleridge and grandfather of Herbert Coleridge, Ernest Hartley Coleridge and Christabel Coleridge.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Samuel_Taylor_Coleridge   (2263 words)

  
 Sara Coleridge
Sara Coleridge (December 23, 1802 - 1852), English author, the fourth child and only daughter of Samuel Taylor Coleridge and his wife Sarah Fricker of Bristol, was born at Greta Hall, Keswick.
Here, after 1803, the Coleridges, Southey and his wife (Mrs Coleridges sister), and Mrs Lovell (another sister), widow of Robert Lovell, the Quaker poet, all lived together; but Coleridge was often away from home; and Uncle Southey was a peter familias.
In 1822 Sara Coleridge published Account of the Abipones, a translation in three large volumes of Dobrizhoffer, undertaken in conifexion with Southeys Tale of Paraguay, which had been suggested to him by Dobrizhoffers volumes; and Southey alludes to his niece, the translator (canto,iii.
www.nebulasearch.com /encyclopedia/article/Sara_Coleridge.html   (793 words)

  
 [No title]
In the hoard, Dr Swaab has discovered barely-disguised love poems written by Sara to an Irish poet and, most poignantly, a three-verse poem written in 1852 about her fight against breast cancer which was apparently dictated to her daughter from her sick bed.
Sara, born in 1802, was a noted beauty – it is said that on one of her first visits to the London theatre the thunderstruck audience broke into applause – with a clever mind.
His discovery, among Sara Coleridge's papers in the Harry Ransom Centre in Texas, almost doubles her known output.
www.telegraph.co.uk /news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/01/26/npoet26.xml   (755 words)

  
 SARA COLERIDGE (1802–1... - Online Information article about SARA COLERIDGE (1802–1...   (Site not responding. Last check: )
These were originally written for the instruction of her own children, and became very popular.
During the last few years of her life Sara Coleridge was a confirmed invalid.
Sara Coleridge died in London on the 3rd of May 1852.
encyclopedia.jrank.org /CLI_COM/COLERIDGE_SARA_18021852_.html   (1094 words)

  
 Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Coleridge was anxious to embody a dream of a friend, and the suggestion of the shooting of the albatross came from Wordsworth, who gained the idea from Shelvocke's Voyage (1726).
Coleridge died in the communion of the Church of England, of whose polity and teaching he had been for many years a loving admirer.
Coleridge was in England the creator of that higher criticism which had already in Germany accomplished so much in the hands of Lessing and Goethe.
www.nndb.com /people/852/000024780   (3650 words)

  
 VI. Coleridge: Bibliography. Vol. 11. The Period of the French Revolution. The Cambridge History of English and ...   (Site not responding. Last check: )
[Coleridge’s contribution, obviously under the influence of Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar, presents the scheming and contriving of the anti-Robespierre faction.
Coleridge’s versification is uneven, but the translation is scholarly; and English idiom is not sacrificed to literal accuracy.]
Coleridge, D. New edn., with Confessions of an Inquiring Spirit and Essays on Faith and the Common Prayer-Book, in Bohn’s Standard Library.
www.bonus.com /contour/bartlettqu/http@@/www.bartleby.com/221/0600.html   (1589 words)

  
 Samuel T. Coleridge
Samuel Taylor Coleridge was born in Ottery St. Mary, Devonshire, as the youngest son of the vicar of Ottery St Mary.
In 1824 Coleridge was elected a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.
Coleridge's daughter Sara (1802-1852) was also a writer and translator.
www.kirjasto.sci.fi /coleridg.htm   (1356 words)

  
 The Lost Coleridge
Sara Coleridge – The Collected Poems, edited by Dr Peter Swaab, of the UCL Department of English Language & Literature, consists largely of previously unpublished works.
Sara Coleridge lived in the shadow of her father and has been little known as a poet ever since.
She needs to be nudged up the list of people we consider to be important in Romantic and Victorian culture.” Of the 180 poems collected here and found among the Sara Coleridge papers in the Harry Ransom Center in Texas, a massive 120 have never been published before.
www.allinfoaboutpoetry.com /sara_coleridge.html   (750 words)

  
 Aesthetic Realism Seminar by Nancy Huntting: "What Does It Mean to Like People?"
Sara Coleridge's introduction is 140 pages long, and it is powerful--I have never read anything by a daughter of a father like it.
Sara Coleridge did the work to find and footnote the origin of these passages in the German; she was learned, and Mr.
Sara Coleridge is seeing something crucial in good will—that there were two distinct things working in her father, and both need to be seen exactly, not one used to obliterate the other, which is ill will, and what most people do.
www.nancyhuntting.net /SColeridge-sem-2.html   (846 words)

  
 Sara Coleridge
Sara Coleridge is one of the topics in focus at Global Oneness.
Samuel Taylor Coleridge (October 21, 1772 – July 25, 1834) was an English poet, critic, and philosopher who was, along with his friend William Wordsworth, one of the founders of the Romantic Movement in England and as one of the Lake Poets.
Samuel Taylor Coleridge was born in Ottery St Mary, the son of a vicar.
www.experiencefestival.com /sara_coleridge   (774 words)

  
 Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Samuel Taylor Coleridge was born in Ottery St. Mary, Devonshire, as the youngest son of the vicar of Ottery St Mary.
Coleridge moved with him to Bristol to establish a community, but the plan failed.
Coleridge's daughter Sara (1802-1852) was also a writer and translator.
www.angelfire.com /band3/rbrignac   (706 words)

  
 Mary Coleridge: A Brief Biography
The Coleridge family was impressively well connected and several evenings a week the door would be opened perhaps to Alfred, Lord Tennyson, Robert Browning, or the artists, Holman Hunt and Sir John Everett Millais.
Coleridge was influenced by the work of Sir Walter Scott and her first three novels are very much in his style of historical adventure stories.
Coleridge's fourth novel, The Shadow on the Wall, was published in 1904, and pastiches Oscar Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Gray (1890).
www.victorianweb.org /authors/coleridge/bio.html   (1336 words)

  
 SARA COLERIDGE   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Sara Coleridge, English author, the fourth child and only daughter of Samuel Taylor Coleridge and his wife Sarah Fricker of Bristol, was born at Greta Hall, Keswick.
Here, after 1803, the Coleridges, Southey and his wife, and Mrs Lovell, widow of Robert Lovell, the Quaker poet, all lived together; but Coleridge was often away from home; and Uncle Southey was a peter familias.
In September 1829, at Crosthwaite church, Keswick, after an engagement of seven years duration, Sara Coleridge was married to her cousin, Henry Nelson Coleridge, younger son of Captain James Coleridge.
www.yotor.org /wiki/en/sa/Sara%20Coleridge.htm   (677 words)

  
 Sara Coleridge Biography and Summary
Sara Coleridge's considerable efforts to rehabilitate and preserve for the Victorian period the literary reputation of her father, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, have tended to overshadow her achievements as a poet in her own right.
Sara Coleridge(December 23, 1802 – May 3, 1852) was an English author and translator.
She was the fourth child and only daughter of Samuel Taylor Coleridge and his wife Sarah Fricker of Bristol.
www.bookrags.com /Sara_Coleridge   (114 words)

  
 poetictouch.com
The more common occurrence is for the son either to become the pious custodian of the father's literary legacy (Hallam Tennyson) or to fail miserably in his literary aspirations and become an alcohol- or opium-soaked wreck (Hartley Coleridge).
Sara Coleridge has hitherto been regarded as a custodian of the legacy.
Coleridge's youngest child and only daughter, she inherited his passion for languages and literature, philosophy and theology.
www.salehbadrah.com /poetictouch/2007/03/her-fathers-voice.html   (428 words)

  
 Sara Coleridge   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Sara Coleridge (de diciembre 23, 1802 - 1852), autor inglés, el cuarto niño y solamente hija del sastre Coleridge y su esposa Sarah Fricker de Samuel de Bristol, nació en Greta Pasillo, Keswick.
En Sara 1822 Coleridge publicó la cuenta del Abipones, una traducción en tres volúmenes grandes de Dobrizhoffer, emprendidos en el conifexion con el cuento de Southeys de Paraguay, que había sido sugerido a él por los volúmenes de Dobrizhoffers; y Southey refiere a su sobrina, el traductor (canto, iii.
Sara Coleridge murió en Londres el 3 de mayo de 1852.
www.yotor.net /wiki/es/sa/Sara%20Coleridge.htm   (839 words)

  
 SARA COLERIDGE   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Sara Coleridge, autore inglese, il quarto bambino e soltanto figlia del sarto Coleridge e la sua moglie Sarah Fricker del Samuel di Bristol, è stato sopportato a Greta Corridoio, Keswick.
In 1837 il Coleridges rimosso al posto de Chester, parco di Regents; e durante lo stesso anno è comparso il lungamente Phantasmion, un racconto fairy, lavoro originale del Sara Coleridges.
In 1843 henry Coleridge è morto, lasciando alla sua vedova l'operazione non finita di pubblicazione lei impianti dei padri.
www.facteri.com /wiki/it/sa/Sara%20Coleridge.htm   (728 words)

  
 LitWeb.net
Although Coleridge's poetic achievement was small in quantity, his metaphysical anxiety, anticipating modern existentialism, has gained him reputation as an authentic visionary.
Samuel T. Coleridge was born in Ottery St. Mary, Devonshire, as the youngest son of the vicar of Ottery St Mary.
Coleridge was elected a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 1824.
www.biblion.com /litweb/biogs/coleridge_samuel_taylor.html   (1064 words)

  
 Internet Obituary Network, Obituary for Samuel Taylor Coleridge   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Coleridge and Southey abandoned the utopian experiment in favor of a conventional family life.
Coleridge wasn't doing well either; he couldn't find escape from his lifelong addiction to opiates or the paranoia and mood swings they caused.
But Coleridge was unable to secure a real financial contribution to his family and a government reorganization nullified the annuity, his only remaining steady income.
obits.com /coleridgesamtay.html   (703 words)

  
 MORE THAN DADDY'S LITTLE EDITOR - New York Times
But as a result of his chronic depression and his wretched marriage, from which he withdrew (he left his wife in 1806), his daughter Sara suffered not only from the repressive Victorian view of women but also from the divisive claims of her unhappy parents, as well as from her father's absence.
Sara was the fourth child - born after Berkeley (who died in 1799), Hartley and Derwent - and the only girl.
Coleridge learned of the birth while he was in Cornwall, where he wrote to Robert Southey that ''I had never thought of a Girl as a possible event - the word [ s ] child & man child were perfect Synonimies in my feelings - however I bore the sex with great Fortitude.''
query.nytimes.com /gst/fullpage.html?res=950DEEDF163BF93BA35753C1A96F948260   (442 words)

  
 Samuel Taylor Coleridge Biography
Samuel Taylor Coleridge was born in Ottery St. Mary on 21 October 1772, youngest of the ten children of John Coleridge, a minister, and Ann Bowden Coleridge.
John Coleridge died in 1781, and Col was sent away to a London charity school for children of the clergy.
Young Sara, of course, knew him least, but she was much like him in intelligence and temperament, unfortunately.
www.incompetech.com /authors/coleridge   (1579 words)

  
 pandaemonium
Pandaemonium opens when Coleridge attends a literary party where Wordsworth believes he will be celebrated as England's poet laureate, and in flashback through Coleridge's eyes we go back to how the two met and what then transpired.
Dorothy abruptly tells Coleridge that he is plain-looking and that his poetry is "narrowly domestic and lacking in ambition." She also points out that New Eden is little more than a cottage with a market garden.
Later she becomes convinced that Coleridge is a genius and explains the symbolism of the albatross to her thick brother, saying the dead bird indicated the poet has broken his bonds with nature and the result is chaos.
www.sover.net /~ozus/pandaemonium.htm   (649 words)

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