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  1. Henry Nelson Coleridge (25 October 1798 – 26 January 1843) was an editor of the works of his uncle Samuel Taylor Coleridge . Life. His father was Colonel James Coleridge, of Ottery St. Mary. He was born on 25 October 1798. He was educated at Eton and at King's College, Cambridge, of which he became a fellow. [1]

  2. In September 1829, at Crosthwaite Parish 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. He was then a chancery barrister in London.

  3. Samuel Taylor Coleridge (21 de octubre de 1772-25 de julio de 1834) fue un poeta, crítico y filósofo inglés, uno de los fundadores, junto con su amigo William Wordsworth, del Romanticismo en Inglaterra y uno de los lakistas.

  4. When it was discovered Coleridge's vault had become derelict, the coffins – Coleridge's and those of his wife Sarah, daughter Sara Coleridge, son-in-law Henry Nelson Coleridge, and grandson Herbert Coleridge, were moved to St. Michael's Highgate after an international fundraising appeal in 1961.

  5. En septiembre de 1829, y tras siete años de discordia, Sara Coleridge se casa con su primo Henry Nelson Coleridge (1798–1843), hijo del capitán James Coleridge. 5 en la iglesia Crosthwaite Parish Church, Keswick. Los primeros ocho años vivieron en una pequeña casa ubicada en Hampstead.

  6. In 1820, Sara Coleridge visited London, where she was celebrated both for her beauty and brains. There she fell in love with her cousin Henry Nelson Coleridge; a long 7-year engagement ensued before his family approved their marriage in 1829. They had two children, Herbert and Edith (the twins Berkeley and Florence did not survive infancy).

  7. Nor is it a matter of mystery that two of his young disciples, John Sterling and Henry Nelson Coleridge, appear to have been, before his death in 1834, the only critics who approached his poetry with the same sympathetic effort at understanding that Coleridge himself employed when he criticised the work of others. Type.