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  1. 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.

  2. Jul 29, 2017 · But though this period at Stowey was to produce some of Coleridge’s finest poetry, the dream of domestic bliss soon died, and it was Sara who ended up doing most of the drudgery. As time went on, Coleridge spent more time with Wordsworth and his family than with his own.

  3. Jun 14, 2019 · In 1797, Wordsworth and his adored sister Dorothy lived for a little over a year as Somerset neighbours to Coleridge and his young wife, Sara Fricker. The four — sadly for the long-suffering...

  4. Feb 23, 2012 · The matter is complicated further in Coleridge's case by the fact that shortly after his death in 1834, at Wordsworth's and Southey's suggestion, his wife, Sara, burned ‘sackfuls and sackfuls' of family’ letters (Lefebure, 17).

  5. Oct 18, 2022 · Coleridge married Southey’s sister-in-law, Sara (or Sarah) Fricker (c.1770-1845), the newlyweds being lent a mice-ridden cottage in Nether Stowey in Somerset by another ‘friend of liberty’. Coleridge dubbed it the ‘hovel’.

  6. Dec 16, 2022 · The death of S.T. Coleridge shaped the literary output of Sara’s later years. Together with her husband she took charge of producing new editions of Coleridge’s works, a hugely influential project of recovery, championship, and familial piety motivated partly by the unfair biographical accounts that followed her father’s death.

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  8. Coleridge, Sara (1802–1852) English writer. Born at Greta Hall, near Keswick, England, on December 23, 1802; died on May 3, 1852; fourth child and only daughter of Samuel Taylor Coleridge and Sara Fricker Coleridge (whose sister Edith Fricker married Robert Southey ); married her cousin Henry Nelson Coleridge (1798–1843; a lawyer), in 1829 ...

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