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Connections
Connections | Author name Sort ascending | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Textual Production | Julia Wedgwood | For the next thirty-five years she published steadily on religious, scientific, and moral concerns. She also produced profiles of other authors such as George Eliot
and Samuel Taylor Coleridge
. A collection of this work... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Mary Webb | The title recalls Coleridge
's ancient mariner, and the moment at which, unaware, he blesses the water snakes and finds himself once more able to pray: as if the transcendental, natural world has forgiven him... |
Education | Harriet Shaw Weaver | HSW
's family encouraged her in the regular pursuits of a young, middle-class Victorian woman. From her father she inherited an enthusiasm for poetry—she especially liked Shakespeare
, Coleridge
, and Whitman
—and she read... |
Textual Production | Helen Waddell | HW
provided an introduction for William Forbes Marshall
's Ballads and Verses from Tyrone, published by the Talbot Press
of Dublin in 1929, and an Appreciation for George Saintsbury
's Shakespeare, 1934. |
Publishing | Anna Jane Vardill | The European Magazine printed AJV
's Christobell, A Gothic Tale, a sequel to Coleridge
's Christabel. Vardill's poem was for years an unsolved conundrum for scholars, since it appeared in print before Coleridge's. Axon, William E. A., and Ernest Hartley Coleridge. “Anna Jane Vardill Niven, the Authoress of ’Christobell,’ the Sequel to Coleridge’s ’Christabel.’ With a Bibliography. With an Additional Note on ’Christabel’”. Transactions of the Royal Society of Literature, Vol. 2nd series 28 , pp. 57-88. 57 |
Textual Production | Anna Jane Vardill | John Abraham Heraud
published in Fraser's Magazine his Reminiscences of Coleridge; in a detailed discussion of Christobell, A Gothic Tale, he inclined to the view that it was the work of Coleridge
, not AJV
. Haven, Richard. “Anna Vardill Niven’s ’Christobell’: An Addendum”. The Wordsworth Circle, Vol. 7 , No. 2, pp. 117-18. 117 |
Textual Production | Anna Jane Vardill | William E. A. Axon
read to a meeting of the Royal Society of Literature
a paper about AJV
, offering previously unknown information about her and her poem Christobell, A Gothic Tale, and debunking... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Anna Jane Vardill | AJV
is remarkably successful in catching Coleridge
's diction and manner, as several commentators noted. Lord Leoline sat in the chair of pride, / The white-armed stranger by his side. She also captures the sinister... |
Family and Intimate relationships | Una Troubridge | Sir Henry Taylor
, UT
's paternal grandfather, was a poet and playwright whose verses were admired by Wordsworth
and whose plays (Victorian melodrama) were performed by the famous actor William Charles Macready
. Taylor's... |
Friends, Associates | Anna Swanwick | On a visit to the Lake District in the early 1830s AS
met Wordsworth
and Coleridge
. Bruce, Mary Louisa. Anna Swanwick, A Memoir and Recollections 1813-1899. T. F. Unwin. 24 |
Intertextuality and Influence | Elizabeth Strutt | Women, says ES
, must be essentially equal with men since both are made in God's image. But women's existing social position Strutt, Elizabeth. The Feminine Soul. J. S. Hodson. 1 |
Friends, Associates | Germaine de Staël | In Regency England GS
met Coleridge
, Southey
, and Byron
. Jane Austen
, however, made a point of avoiding her. Winegarten, Renee. Mme de Staël. Berg. 74, 76 |
Author summary | Robert Southey | Robert Southey was a Romantic poet, one of the Lake Poets with Wordsworth
and Coleridge
. In addition to epics, ballads, and other verse, he penned several plays and contributed regularly to the ToryQuarterly... |
politics | Robert Southey | Early in life he embraced the egalitarian principles of the French Revolution and sought with his friend Samuel Taylor Coleridge
to raise money for political ventures through writing. He later rejected his youthful idealism and... |
Family and Intimate relationships | Robert Southey | He married Edith Fricker
in 1795; Coleridge
married her elder sister. |
Timeline
July 1817: Coleridge published Biographia Literaria,...
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July 1817
Coleridge
published Biographia Literaria, his philosophical autobiography, a landmark in Romantic literary criticism. He had finished writing it in September 1815.
Early 1818: William Hazlitt opened On the Living Poets,...
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Early 1818
William Hazlitt
opened On the Living Poets, the last of his Lectures on the English Poets, with a statement on gender issues.
21 February 1825: Samuel Taylor Coleridge composed a short...
Writing climate item
21 February 1825
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
composed a short poem which is sadly characteristic of his later state of mind. He entitled it Work Without Hope.
Borne Back Daily. http://borneback.com/ .
21 February 2011
1828: Samuel Taylor Coleridge published The Wanderings...
Writing climate item
1828
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
published The Wanderings of Cain, a poem originally written in 1798.
8 September 1836: The Transcendental Club (also known as the...
Writing climate item
8 September 1836
The Transcendental Club
(also known as the Hedge Club
and the Symposium
) was formed in Cambridge, Massachusetts; it brought together various thinkers who were at the forefront of Transcendentalism.
1875: An edition of The Ancient Mariner by Samuel...
Writing climate item
1875
An edition of The Ancient Mariner by Samuel Taylor Coleridge
was published with illustrations by Gustave Doré
.
10 September 2003: Guardian Unlimited Books named as Site of...
Writing climate item
10 September 2003
Guardian Unlimited Books named as Site of the Week a website entitled Poetry Landmarks of Britain: a map of poetic assocations plotted on an interactive map of Britain, searchable by region or category.
May 2008: News broke of a grant of four million pounds...
Building item
May 2008
News broke of a grant of four million pounds from the Heritage Lottery Fund
for a museum of Black British history, to be established in Raleigh Hall in Brixton, South London.
Texts
No bibliographical results available.