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| | SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE - LoveToKnow Article on SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE |
 | | But after his stay at Malta, Coleridge announced to his friends that he had given up his Socinianism (of which ever afterwards he spoke with asperity), professing a return to Christian faith, though still putting on it a mystical construction, as when he told Crabb Robinson that Jesus Christ was a Platonic philosopher. |  | | As Carlyle has told in his Life of Sterling, the poets distinction, in the eyes of the younger churchmen with philosophic interests, lay in his having recovered and preserved his Christian faith after having passed through periods of rationalism and Unitarianism, and faced the full results of German criticism and philosophy. |  | | The book contained much invective against Pitt, and in after life Coleridge declared that, with this exception, and a few pages involving philosophical tenets which he afterwards rejected, there was little or nothing he desired to retract. |
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http://11.1911encyclopedia.org/C/CO/COLERIDGE_SAMUEL_TAYLOR.htm
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| | Literary Encyclopedia: Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
 | | Coleridge would often tell the story of his army experiences as a comic tale of incompetence and recalcitrant horses, but he spent time in the sickhouse nursing victims of smallpox, so it was really much more than a lark. |  | | The Coleridges finally decided to separate, and, apparently buoyed, Coleridge and Hartley joined the Wordsworths, who were living at Coleorton, on the Leicestershire estate of Wordsworth& patron Sir George Beaumont: here, in early 1807, Coleridge heard Wordsworth recite The Prelude (the Poem to Coleridge), and wrote his answering poem (145;To William Wordsworth&;). |  | | He was as much in love with Mary Evans as ever, and candidly protested to Southey that he did not really love Sara; but Mary was to marry someone else, and Southey was unshifting, so he returned to Bristol early in 1795, gloomily determined to do his Duty. |
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http://www.literaryencyclopedia.com/php/speople.php?rec=true&UID=949
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| | Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
 | | The name of Coleridge was spoken with profound reverence, his books were studied industriously, and the terminology of transcendentalism was as familiar as commonplace in the circles of divines and men of letters. |  | | Amos Bronson Alcott found the antidote to Lockean psychology in his readings of Coleridge--that what was in the mind was God. |  | | The "Philosophy of Nature" was published in 1797, the year before Coleridge's visit. |
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http://www.alcott.net/alcott/home/champions/Coleridge.html
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| | Samuel Taylor Coleridge - Biography and Works |
 | | Although the work is not written from Coleridge's poetic mind, it is still written with the qualities and rhythm of the poetic. |  | | Thus while Coleridge argued that the poet relied on both Fancy and Imagination when inventing a poem, and that the poet should seek a balance of these two faculties, (Coleridge, Biographia Literari, vol 1, p. |  | | I only wish that Coleridge had been able to finish the poem, but that which was written was excellent. |
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http://www.online-literature.com/coleridge
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| | Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
 | | By the end of 1794 Coleridge was in London pondering his future; when Southey went in search of him he finally discovered him together with his friend Charles Lamb in a Unitarian chapel, seeking divine guidance. |  | | Hartley had promoted the view of God as 'All in all', but Coleridge was also indebted to the earlier Cambridge Platonists, in whose writings he had immersed himself. |  | | He gave himself over to drunkenness, debt and debauchery, the consequences of which caused him to flee from the university in the fall of 1793. |
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http://www.uua.org/uuhs/duub/articles/samueltaylorcoleridge.html
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| | A Biographical Sketch by blupete: Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834): "Wrecked in a Mist of Opium." |
 | | Coleridge was in love with Mary Evans but thought she was unresponsive. |  | | What possessed Coleridge to become a cavalry soldier, is hard to say; he likely lied about his knowledge of horses; in any event his officers were soon to know about Coleridge's inexperience in equestrian matters. |  | | A pantisocracy, as was dreamt up by Coleridge and Southey, is a societal setup based on the doctrine of aspheterism, viz., that there ought to be no private property. |
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http://www.blupete.com/Literature/Biographies/Literary/Coleridge.htm
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| | Victoria University Library--Coleridge Collection |
 | | It includes numerous citations to works written by and about S.T. Coleridge and his contemporaries, including monographs and articles published from the late 18th to the early 20th centuries, and Coleridge's work in different editions published under the editorship of various individuals. |  | | The Collected Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge - Corrections and Additions to the Poetical Works. |  | | Included in this collection are numerous works by S.T. Coleridge, miscellanies with contributions by Coleridge, translations by Coleridge, and works by Coleridge's contemporaries. |
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http://library.vicu.utoronto.ca/special/colepic.htm
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| | Coleridge, Samuel Taylor - Columbia Encyclopedia article about Coleridge, Samuel Taylor |
 | | Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, 1772–1834, English poet and man of letters, b. |  | | He continued his studies and writings on philosophy, religion, contemporary affairs, and literature. |  | | All three make use of exotic images and supernatural themes. |
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http://columbia.thefreedictionary.com/Coleridge,+Samuel+Taylor
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| | The Academy of American Poets - Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
 | | Coleridge wed in 1795, in spite of the fact that he still loved Mary Evans, who was engaged to another man. Coleridge's marriage was unhappy and he spent much of it apart from his wife. |  | | The Literary Remains in Prose and Verse of Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1839) |  | | The 1798 text, prepared by Richard Bear for Renascence Editions. |
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http://www.poets.org/poet.php/prmPID/292
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| | Rare Device: Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
 | | Sir Edmund Chambers said of him: 'So Coleridge passed, leaving a handful of golden poems, an emptiness in the heart of a few friends, and a will-o'-the-wisp light for bemused thinkers' [quoted in 152]. |  | | As well as his care and experimentation with the structure of the words themselves (as he explains about Christobel, he used a variable number of syllables but always four accents per line) he strove for accuracy in his descriptions and fine detail in his images. |  | | Less well known but of great interest to us is Christobel, unfinished but published in 1816, a purely Gothic story of the seduction of Christobel away from her father's wishes by one Geraldine. |
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http://www.tabula-rasa.info/DarkAges/RareDevice.html
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| | Samuel Taylor Coleridge -- Encyclopædia Britannica |
 | | In The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, probably the most famous poem by English poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge, the title character detains a young man on his way to a wedding feast and mesmerizes him with the story of his youthful experience at sea. |  | | English translator and author of children's verse, known primarily as the editor of the works of her father, Samuel Taylor Coleridge. |  | | Nevertheless these reveries inspired the exotic imagery that made his poetry so haunting. |
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http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9024735
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| | SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE |
 | | A review of "The Norton Critical Edition of Coleridge's Poetry and Prose," a new edition aimed at students, intended to be a reliably edited, inexpensive, and thoroughly annotated selection of his poetry and prose. |  | | Review of Mary Anne Perkins, Coleridge's Philosophy: The Logos as Unifying Principle. |  | | The Besetting Sins of Coleridge's Prose, by Catherine M. Wallace, from Coleridge's 'Biographia Literaria,' Text and Meaning, 1989 |
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http://www.literaryhistory.com/19thC/COLERIDGE.htm
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| | The Literary Gothic Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
 | | This section of STC's major non-poetic work has some bearing on his "Gothic" poems and his theory of supernaturalist literature. |  | | "Eclipsed by the Pleasure Dome: Poetic Failure in Coleridge's 'Kubla Khan'" |  | | A powerful poetic glimpse into a troubled mind, Gothic in its imagery and intensity. |
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http://www.litgothic.com/Authors/stc.html
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| | MSN Encarta - Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
 | | Coleridge studied German and translated into English the dramatic trilogy Wallenstein by the romantic poet Friedrich von Schiller. |  | | In the fall of 1798 Coleridge and Wordsworth left for a trip on the European continent. |  | | Coleridge was born in Ottery Saint Mary in the English county of Devonshire on October 21, 1772. |
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http://encarta.msn.com/encnet/refpages/RefArticle.aspx?refid=761563578
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| | Samuel Taylor Coleridge Quotes - The Quotations Page |
 | | Works of imagination should be written in very plain language; the more purely imaginative they are the more necessary it is to be plain. |  | | A poet ought not to pick nature's pocket. |  | | - Read the works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge online at The Literature Page |
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http://www.quotationspage.com/quotes/Samuel_Taylor_Coleridge
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| | Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
 | | Boyd's Dante, Coleridge's 'Ancient Mariner,' and the pattern of infernal influence.(Reverend Henry Boyd; Samuel Taylor Coleridge) |  | | Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, 1772–1834, English poet and man of letters, b. |  | | The marriage of Samuel Coleridge-Taylor and Jessie Walmisley. |
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http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/people/A0812851.html
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| | Samuel Coleridge-Taylor |
 | | His most famous work is perhaps the trilogy based upon the poems of the Cambridge, Massachusetts native, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. |  | | William Tortolano in his book Samuel Coleridge-Taylor; Anglo-Black Composer, 1875-1912 (Metuchen, NJ, Scarecrow, 1977) states: |  | | In the foreword to the 1969 edition of Sayers', Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, Musician, His Life and Letters, Blydon Jackson writes: |
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http://cambridgechorus.org/docs/comps/SC-Taylor.html
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| | Gale - Free Resources - Poet's Corner - Biographies - Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
 | | Inspired by the initial events of the French Revolution, Coleridge and Southey collaborated on The Fall of Robespierre: An Historic Drama (1794). |  | | Lamb, William Hazlitt, and other writers visted him there, making up an informal literary community. |  | | In the last years of his life Coleridge wrote political and philosophical works, and his Biographia Literaria, considered his greatest critical writing, in which he developed artistic theories that were intended to be the introduction to a great philosophical work. |
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http://www.galegroup.com/free_resources/poets/bio/coleridge_s.htm
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| | Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
 | | In his later years Coleridge wrote several important books on literature including |  | | The Morning Chronicle also published Coleridge's anti-war poem, |  | | Samuel Taylor Coleridge, the youngest son of the vicar of Ottery St Mary, Devon, was born in 1772. |
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http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/Jcoleridge.htm
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| | Samuel Coleridge-Taylor - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | This page is about the twentieth century composer; for the nineteenth century poet, see Samuel Taylor Coleridge. |  | | Samuel Coleridge-Taylor (August 15, 1875 – September 1, 1912), was an English composer, born in Croydon to a Sierra Leonean father and English mother. |  | | Coleridge-Taylor was greatly admired by African-Americans; in 1901, a 200-voice African-American chorus was founded in Washington, D.C. called the Samuel Coleridge-Taylor Society. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samuel_Coleridge-Taylor
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| | Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
 | | The marriage was doomed to not work, and Coleridge finally separated from his wife in 1806. |  | | Coleridge was a source for great poetry of the Romantic age of literature. |  | | Coleridge's other great failure in life was his opium addiction. |
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http://www.etsu.edu/english/3134/zwsg1/coleridge/coleridge/col.htm
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| | Chesil's Favourite Poetry -Coleridge |
 | | The relationship with Wordsworth became strained in the early nineteenth century and Coleridge really never again reached the early heights in his poetics. |  | | Unquestionably, his association with Wordsworth was a source of inspiration and his finest works, in my view, The Ancient Mariner, Kubla Khan, Christabel and his Conversation Poems, were written during this period. |  | | Went to Jesus College, Cambridge with the intention of studying to enter the Church, he interrupted his education to enlist in the 15th Dragoons in 1793 but it wasn't to his taste and his family rescued him and returned to Cambridge. |
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http://www.photoaspects.com/chesil/coleridge
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| | Coleridge-Taylor |
 | | His best known work, which was immensely popular during his lifetime, is "Hiawatha", a trilogy based upon poems by Longfellow. |  | | Samuel Coleridge-Taylor was born in London in 1875, the son of a Sierra Leonean doctor and and English mother. |  | | Apparently feeling that his career as a surgeon was blocked because he was black, his father returned to Africa, abandoning Samuel and his mother in England. |
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http://www.yso.org.uk/biographies/coleridgetaylor.html
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| | The Friends of Coleridge |
 | | Shakespeare appeared to him a mere stripling in the art; he was as tall and as strong, with infinitely more activity than Milton, but he never appeared to have come to man's estate; or if he had, he would not have been a man, but a monster. |  | | at Cannington, close to the Quantock Hills, which inspired some of Coleridge's greatest poetry. |  | | , founded in 1986 by David Miall and Rosemary Cawthray, aims to foster interest in the life and works of the poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge and his circle, and to support |
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http://www.friendsofcoleridge.com
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| | Samuel Taylor Coleridge: Kubla Khan |
 | | Samuel Taylor Coleridge: Kubla Khan or, a Vision In a Dream: A Fragment (1816) |  | | Coleridge was responsible for attempting to present the supernatural as real whereas his friend William Wordsworth would try to render ordinary reality as remarkable, strange. |  | | He suffered great physical and emotional pain during his life and became addicted to opium. |
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http://www.wsu.edu:8080/~wldciv/world_civ_reader/world_civ_reader_2/coleridge.html
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| | Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
 | | Coleridge's poem "Kubla Khan" is available on-line at. |  | | Coleridge's poem "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner" is available in several pages, including |  | | A good site to start at is the |
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http://users.lycaeum.org/~sputnik/People/coleridg.html
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| | Samuel Taylor Coleridge @Web English Teacher |
 | | The original source of these questions is Richard Matlak's Approaches to Teaching Coleridge's Poetry and Prose. |  | | Screening Coleridge's Fantasies: Using Popular Music as a Bridge to Literary Intepretation and Criticism |  | | Scroll to lesson 69 from the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. |
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http://www.webenglishteacher.com/coleridge.html
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| | Poetry: Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
 | | The Literature Network presents a lengthy biography of Coleridge and links to the text of a selection of his poems. |  | | Coleridge by this time was addicted to opium, and his writing became chaotically uneven. |  | | Despite his indolence, he could also be sporadically brilliant, and at nineteen he entered Cambridge University, where his lack of discipline overwhelmed him, and he was unable to complete his degree. |
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http://www.bedfordstmartins.com/litlinks/poetry/coleridge.htm
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| | Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, Afro-British Composer & Conductor |
 | | Young Samuel was raised by his English mother and stepfather, but his musical education was overseen by Col. Herbert A. Walters, who belonged to the church choir in which the boy sang. |  | | African Romances: The Life and Music of Samuel Coleridge-Taylor (1875-1912). |  | | Includes observations of racial progress in the early 1900s. |
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http://chevalierdesaintgeorges.homestead.com/Song.html
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| | Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
 | | The publication of Christabel in this year assured his reputation as a poet but the end of his life was taken up with religious and philosophical prose works. |  | | He also fell hopelessly in love with Wordsworth's future sister-in-law, Sara Hutchinson, the inspiration for his love poems of this period, and separated from his wife in 1807. |  | | In the summer of 1794 Coleridge became friends with the future Poet Laureate Southey, with whom he wrote a verse drama. |
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http://www.netpoets.com/classic/biographies/016000.htm
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| | Samuel Taylor Coleridge Biography |
 | | He was found early the next morning by a neighbor, but the events of his night outdoors frequently showed up in imagery in his poems (and his nightmares) as well as the notebooks he kept for most of his adult life. |  | | He often signed his works S.T.C. or Estese. |  | | As near as I can tell, no one but his wife ever called him Samuel; he was usually Coleridge or Col, and definitely NEVER Sam. |
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http://www.incompetech.com/authors/coleridge
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| | The Samuel Taylor Coleridge Archive |
 | | He often published as S.T.C. and referred to himself in his notebooks as S.T.C, Essteesee, or Essteesi (as well as other variations). |  | | According to Coleridge, "Punic" Greek for "He hath stood!" (and pronounced essteesee, of course). |
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http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/stc/Coleridge/stc.html
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| | Poetry Archives @ eMule.com |
 | | Home » Classic Poets » Samuel Taylor Coleridge |  | | A Soliloquy Of The Full Moon, She Being In A Mad Passion |
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http://www.emule.com/poetry?page=overview&author=36
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| | Samuel Taylor Coleridge Quotes |
 | | The dwarf sees farther than the giant, when he has the giant's shoulders to mount on. |  | | :: Author » Letter "S" » Samuel Taylor Coleridge Quotes |  | | 99 Quotes for 'Samuel Taylor Coleridge' in the Database. |
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http://www.worldofquotes.com/author/Samuel-Taylor-Coleridge/1
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| | Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
 | | Read Coleridge's comments on the sonnet in the introductory essay to Sheet of Sonnets (1796). |  | | The bees are stirring--birds are on the wing-- |
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http://www.sonnets.org/coleridg.htm
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