| |
| | 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) |
|