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SARA See also: English author, the See also: fourth See also: child and only daughter of See also: Samuel See also: Taylor
See also: Coleridge and his wife Sarah Fricker of See also: Bristol, was See also: born on the 23rd of See also: December 1802, at Greta See also: Hall,
See also: Keswick
.
Here, after 1803, the Coleridges, See also: Southey and his wife (Mrs Coleridge's See also: sister), and Mrs Lovell (another sister), widow of Robert Lovell, the Quaker poet, all lived together; but Coleridge was often away from home; and " See also: Uncle Southey " was a See also: pater familias
.
The Wordsworths at See also: Grasmere were their neighbours
.
See also: Wordsworth, in his poem, the Triad, has See also: left us a description, or " poetical glorification," as Sara Coleridge calls it, of the three girls—his own daughter Dora, Edith Southey and Sara Coleridge, the " last of the three, though eldest born." Greta Hall was Sara Coleridge's home until her See also: marriage; and the little Lake colony seems to have been her only school
.
Guided by Southey, and with his ample library at her command, she read by herself the chief See also: Greek and Latin See also: classics, and before she was five-and-twenty had learnt French, See also: German, See also: Italian and See also: Spanish
.
In 1822 Sara Coleridge published Account of the See also: Abipones, a See also: translation in three large volumes of See also: Dobrizhoffer, undertaken in connexion with Southey's Tale of See also: Paraguay, which had been suggested to him by Dobrizhoffer's volumes; and Southey alludes to his niece, the translator (See also: canto iii. stanza 16), where he speaks of the pleasure the old missionary would have felt if
. he could in Merlin's See also: glass have seen
By whom his tomes to speak our See also: tongue were taught."
In less grandiloquent terms, See also: Charles Lamb, writing about the Tale of Paraguay to Southey in 1825, says, " How she Dobrizhoffered it all out, puzzles my slender Latinity to conjecture." In 1825 her second
See also: work appeared, a translation from the See also: medieval French of the " Loyal Serviteur," The Right Joyous and Pleasant See also: History of the Feats, Jests, and Prowesses of the Chevalier Bayard; the See also: Good Knight without Fear and without Reproach: By the Loyal Servant
.
In See also: September 18ao, at Crosthwaite See also: church, Keswick, after an engagement of seven years' duration, Sara Coleridge was married to her
See also: cousin, See also: Henry Nelson Coleridge (1798–1843), younger son of Captain
See also: James Coleridge (176o–1836)
.
He was then a
See also: chancery See also: barrister in See also: London
.
The first eight years of her married See also: life were spent in a little cottage in See also: Hampstead
.
There four of her See also: children were born, of whom two survived
.
In 1834 Mrs Coleridge published her See also: Pretty Lessons in Verse for Good Children; with some Lessons in Latin in Easy See also: Rhyme
.
These were originally written for the instruction of her own children, and became very popular
.
In 1837 the Coleridges removed to See also: Chester Place, See also: Regent's See also: Park; and in the same See also: year appeared Phantasmion, a Fairy Tale, Sara Coleridge's longest See also: original work
.
The songs in Phantasmion were much admired at the See also: time by See also: Leigh See also: Hunt and other critics
.
Some of them, such as " Sylvan Stay " and " One Face Alone," are extremely graceful and musical, and the whole fairy tale is noticeable for the beauty of the See also: story and the richness of its language
.
In 1843 Henry Coleridge died, leaving to his widow the unfinished task of editing her See also: father's See also: works
.
To these she added some compositions of her own, among which are the Essay on Rationalism, with a See also: special application to the See also: Doctrine of Baptismal
Regeneration, appended to Coleridge's See also: Aids to Reflection, a Preface to the Essays on his Own Times, by S
.
T
.
Coleridge, and the Introduction to the BiographiaLiteraria
.
During the last few years of her life Sara Coleridge was a confirmed invalid
.
Shortly before she died she amused herself by writing a little autobiography for her daughter
.
This, which reaches only to her ninth year, was completed by her daughter, and published in 1873, together with some of her letters, under the title See also: Memoirs and Letters of Sara Coleridge
.
The letters show a cultured and highly speculative mind
.
They contain many See also: apt criticisms of known See also: people and books, and are specially interesting for their allusions to Words-worth and the Lake Poets
.
Sara Coleridge died in London on the 3rd of May 1852 . Her son, See also: Herbert Coleridge (183o-1861), won a See also: double first class in classics and See also: mathematics at See also: Oxford in 1852
.
He was secretary to a committee appointed by the Philological Society to consider the project of a See also: standard English See also: dictionary, a scheme of which the New English Dictionary, published by the See also: Clarendon See also: Press, was the ultimate outcome
.
His See also: personal researches into the subject were contained in his Glossarial See also: Index to the Printed English Literature of the Thirteenth Century (1859)
.
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