Sara Coleridge (23 December 1802 – 3 May 1852) was an English author and translator. She was the third child and only daughter of the poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge and his wife Sara Fricker.
Her first works were translations from Latin and medieval French. She then married and had several children for whom she wrote instructive verses. These were published as Pretty Lessons in Verse for Good Children in 1834 which included popular poems like The Months: "January brings the snow, makes our feet and fingers glow." In 1837, she published her longest original work – Phantasmion, A Fairy Tale – which also started as a story for her son Herbert.
SaraColeridge (23 December 1802 – 3 May 1852) was an English author and translator. She was the third child and only daughter of the poet Samuel Taylor...
Samuel Taylor Coleridge (/ˈkoʊlərɪdʒ/ KOH-lə-rij; 21 October 1772 – 25 July 1834) was an English poet, literary critic, philosopher, and theologian who...
great-grandniece of Samuel Taylor Coleridge and the great niece of SaraColeridge, the author of Phantasmion. Coleridge was educated at home, mostly by...
of the poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge. His sister SaraColeridge was a poet and translator, and his brother Derwent Coleridge was a scholar and author....
He was a grandson of the poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge. He was the son of Sara and Henry Nelson Coleridge. He earned a double first in Classics and Mathematics...
Edith Coleridge (1832 – 24 January 1911) was a British author. She edited The Memoir and Letters of SaraColeridge (1873), a popular biography of her mother...
immortalised by him in the 1828 poem "The Triad", along with Edith Southey and SaraColeridge, daughters of her father's fellow Lake Poets. In 1843, at the age of...
Pandaemonium (2000), directed by Julien Temple, playing SaraColeridge, the wife of the poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge. She was nominated for a British Independent...
Coleridge (1846–1920) was a British literary scholar and poet. He was the son of Derwent Coleridge and grandson of Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Coleridge...
Derwent Coleridge (14 September 1800 – 28 March 1883), third son of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, was a distinguished English scholar and author. Derwent Coleridge...
Sir John Taylor Coleridge's brothers were James Duke Coleridge and Henry Nelson Coleridge, the latter the husband of SaraColeridge. His brother Francis...
Sylvia Coleridge (10 December 1909 – 31 May 1986) was a British stage, film, radio and television actress. Her credits included Tess (1979), The Avengers...
James Coleridge (3 December 1759 – 10 January 1836) was an older brother of the philosopher-poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge. James was the third son of the...
Wandering Recollections of a Somewhat Busy Life: An Autobiography 1869 SaraColeridge Memoir 1874 Thomas Carlyle Reminiscences 1881 Ambrose Bierce What I...
"The Gibbon"' 'Reflections at Sheffield Place' 'The Man at the Gate' 'SaraColeridge' '"Not One Of Us"' 'Henry James' '1. Within the Rim' '2. The Old Order'...
statesman and marshal, 11th Prime Minister of France (b. 1773) May 3 – SaraColeridge, British author and translator (b. 1802) May 15 – Louisa Adams, First...
15 – János Bolyai, Hungarian mathematician (d. 1860) December 23 – SaraColeridge, British scholar (d. 1852) Friedrich Hohe, German lithographer, painter...
Arthur Duke Coleridge (baptised, 1 February 1830 – 29 October 1913) was a nineteenth-century English lawyer who, as an amateur musician with influential...
the Weather"—a parody of the 1834 poem "January Brings the Snow" by SaraColeridge "There's a Hole in My Budget", a parody of "There's a Hole in My Bucket"...
Coleridge (25 October 1798 – 26 January 1843) was an editor of the works of his uncle Samuel Taylor Coleridge. His father was Colonel James Coleridge...
Stephen William Buchanan Coleridge (31 May 1854 – 10 April 1936) was an English author, barrister, opponent of vivisection, and co-founder of the National...
The Months may refer to an instructive poem by SaraColeridge The Months (fairy tale) – one of the stories in the Pentamerone a set of landscape paintings...
This article lists the complete poetic bibliography of Samuel Taylor Coleridge(1772-1834), which includes fragments not published within his lifetime...