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Connections
Connections | Author name Sort descending | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Intertextuality and Influence | Sara Coleridge | Father, no amaranths e'er shall wreathe my brow.— Enough that round thy grave they flourish now:— . . . . Ne'er was it mine t'unlock rich founts of song, As thine it was ere Time... |
Textual Production | Sara Coleridge | Thirty years after its first appearance in print, SC
published a new edition of her father
's Biographia Literaria. |
Textual Production | Sara Coleridge | |
Author summary | Sara Coleridge | Living in the shadow of her father, Samuel Taylor Coleridge
, SC
nevertheless became recognized in her own right as a talented writer during the first half of the nineteenth century. She began with translations... |
Cultural formation | Sara Coleridge | |
Family and Intimate relationships | Sara Coleridge | SC
's father was the famous poet, philosopher, and critic Samuel Taylor Coleridge
. Though he was present for much of Sara's early childhood, their relationship later deteriorated because of his repeated absences, and also... |
Literary responses | Mary Collyer | This was not to the Critical's taste. It had already this year declared its dislike of German poetry, and slammed Mary Scott
's Messiah. Critical Review. W. Simpkin and R. Marshall. 16 (1763): 393-4 |
Friends, Associates | Caroline Frances Cornwallis | CFC
was a very social person who made friends wherever she went. A visit in 1826 to the Frere family at Hampstead allowed her to meet several interesting characters: the poet Samuel Coleridge
, the... |
Occupation | Caroline Frances Cornwallis | CFC
led an active life. She remarked that the political unrest of 1822 affected her because she had ordinarily my father's business to transact. Cornwallis, Caroline Frances. Selections from the Letters of Caroline Frances Cornwallis. Editor Power, M. C., Trübner and Co. 33 |
Friends, Associates | Thomas De Quincey | He was acquainted with Samuel Taylor Coleridge
and William Wordsworth
. His relationship with the latter was often troubled because Wordsworth disapproved of his opium use and his relationship with Margaret Simpson. Corey, Melinda, and George Ochoa, editors. The Encyclopedia of the Victorian World. Henry Holt and Company. De Quincey, Thomas. Confessions of an English Opium-Eater. Editor Lindop, Grevel, Oxford University Press. viii |
Occupation | John Donne | During the later seventeenth and the eighteenth centuries Donne's writings were largely forgotten or disapproved of. In June 1741 the London Magazine printed a regularised (to modern eyes butchered) version of Goe, and catche a... |
Occupation | Gustave Doré | |
Literary responses | Maria Edgeworth | In the year of publication Charles Pictet
translated Practical Education into French for serialisation in the influential periodical Bibliothèque Brittanique, published in Geneva by himself and his brother Marc-Auguste
. This began a campaign... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Buchi Emecheta | During her schooldays literature was her greatest escape. Emecheta, Buchi. Head Above Water. Heinemann. 19 |
Occupation | Ralph Waldo Emerson | RWE
studied theology at Harvard
but eventually left the priesthood when he came to doubt the sacraments. He travelled to Europe and met Carlyle
, Coleridge
, and Wordsworth
. Upon his return to America... |
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