Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. Mary Coleridge (23 September 1861 – 25 August 1907) was a British novelist and poet who also wrote essays and reviews. [1] She wrote poetry under the pseudonym Anodos (a name taken from George MacDonald ).

  3. Mary Elizabeth Coleridge was born in London, England on 23 September 1861. Her great-great uncle was the Romantic poet, Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834), and her great aunt was Sara Coleridge (1802-1852), author of Phantasmion (1837). Mary's father, Arthur Duke Coleridge was one of the prime movers behind the formation of the London Bach ...

  4. British writer Mary Coleridge was well known in her day as a novelist and essayist; now, she is better known for her poetry. The great-grandniece of Romantic poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge and the daughter of musically talented parents, Coleridge grew up in a literary and artistic environment.

  5. Mary Elizabeth Coleridge was a British author of the late Victorian era who wrote novels, poetry, and essays. Though she achieved some recognition during her lifetime for her prose, Coleridge’s poetry , often published under the pseudonym Anodos, has gained increased attention and acclaim in recent decades.

  6. Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834) was one of the leading English Romantic poets, whose Lyrical Ballads, the 1798 collection Coleridge co-authored with Wordsworth, became a founding-text for English Romanticism. In this post, we’ve picked six of Coleridge’s best poems, and endeavoured to explain why these might be viewed as his finest poems.

  7. Biography. Intellectually gifted Mary Coleridge was the great-grand-niece of Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Her parents were impressively well connected to writers and musicians in the London of the last half of the nineteenth century. Mary met weekly with friends in the late 1880s to discuss literature and to read their own creative work.

  8. ‘The Witch’ by Mary Elizabeth Coleridge is a three-stanza poem that tells a short narrative about the journey, and arrival, of a woman, widely considered to be the witch in the poem, at the house of a man whose life is changed forever when he lets her in.

  1. People also search for