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  1. It would be belittling to Sara Coleridge, and contrary to my intention to show her as a major religious writer of the period of the Oxford Movement, if I were to use her first name in a book devoted to her theological work. I am aware of the potential for confusion in referring, in the same work, to the Romantic poet and metaphysician Samuel ...

  2. 29 de feb. de 2020 · Definition. Sara Coleridge (1802–1852), the only daughter of Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772–1834), was a literary critic, philosopher, theologian, translator, and a commentator on politics and society. She was also an accomplished poet and a fluent, vigorous letter-writer.

  3. 24 de jun. de 2008 · Coleridge, Sara Coleridge, 1802-1852. Publication date 1874 Publisher Boston, Roberts brothers Collection cdl; americana Contributor University of ...

  4. Desert the lake. Of late I saw thee in a dream ; The day-star pour'd his hottest beam, And thou, a cool refreshing stream, Did'st brightly run : The trees where thou wert pleased to flow, Threw out their flowers, a glorious show, While I, too distant doomed to grow, Pined in the sun. By no life-giving moisture fed, A wasted tree, I bow'd my ...

  5. In Sara Coleridge's life, Woolf saw a mystery that Griggs's biography helped more to intensify than to alleviate. His assurance as to both the status and details of his subject could not keep the questions at bay. On one level, then, the series of dots symbolized a failure to complete, an inability to make or do.

  6. Sara Coleridge was something of a catch in the early part of the 19th Century, an attractive woman who was precociously talented. Her first publication of a serious nature was Account of the Abipones, a translation published in three volumes that appeared in 1822 when she was just 20 years old. A few years later she produced another translation ...

  7. Sara Coleridge’s dependence on opium, in a rather sad imitation of her famous father, has been documented in Earl Leslie Griggs’ Coleridge Fille: A Biography of Sara Coleridge (London, 1940) and Bradford Keyes Mudge’s Sara Coleridge, A Victorian Daughter: Her Life and Essays (New Haven, 1989).