Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Hartley Coleridge, possibly David Hartley Coleridge (19 September 1796 – 6 January 1849), was an English poet, biographer, essayist, and teacher. He was the eldest son of the poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge.

  2. Hartley Coleridge (born September 19, 1796, Kingsdown, Bristol, Gloucestershire, England—died January 6, 1849, Grasmere, Cumberland) was an English poet whose wayward talent found expression in his skillful and sensitive sonnets.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Hartley Coleridge was the oldest son of Romantic poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Although he was the subject of two of his father’s poems—“Frost at Midnight” and “The Nightingale”—Coleridge was nonetheless estranged from his parents in his youth and raised by the poet Robert Southey. Coleridge…

  4. Famous poet / 1796-1849. Hartley Coleridge was an English poet and essayist, the eldest son of renowned poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Although his life was marked by personal struggles that hampered his literary output, he nonetheless left behind a body of work admired for its lyrical beauty and emotional depth.

  5. Hartley Coleridge 1796-1849. Hartley Coleridge. Hartley Coleridge was born at Clevedon, near Bristol, the eldest son of Samuel Taylor Coleridge and the brother of the poet Sara Coleridge. His family moved to the Lake District when he was quite young and he spent his early years in the care of Robert Southey at his home Greta Hall in Keswick.

  6. Search more than 3,000 biographies of contemporary and classic poets. Page submenu block. find poems. find poets. poem-a-day. literary seminars. materials for teachers. poetry near you. Hartley Coleridge.

  7. Since the publications of Earl Leslie Griggs’s Hartley Coleridge: His Life and Work (1929) and Herbert Hartman’s Hartley Coleridge: Poet’s Son and Poet (1931), our perception of Romanticism has changed as dramatically as Newton changed how we perceive the universe. I believe a study of the figure, Hartley Coleridge, who was marginal-