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Birth date
1802
Death date
1852
Country
England
Poems by this Poet
Displaying 131 - 140 of 186
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How high yon lark is heavenward borne!
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Methought I wandered dimly on
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Tho' I be young—ah well-a-day!
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Ne'er ask where knaves are mining
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He came unlooked for, undesired
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I tremble when with look benign
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False Love, too long thou hast delayed
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How gladsome is a child, and how perfect is his mirth
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Winds were whispering the waters glistering
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Life and light, Anthemna bright
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Sara was the fourth child and only daughter of the poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge. She grew up in the Lake district with an extended family that included her uncle, Robert Southey, and her aunt Lovell, widow of the poet Robert Lovell. The Wordsworths were her neighbors.

She was educated at home by various relatives, especially Southey. Her first published work was a translation she did for him while he was writing the Tale of Paraguay. Her next work was translating from medieval French.

Sara married her cousin, Henry Nelson Coleridge, in 1829. Verses she wrote for her own children were published and very popular, as was the fairy story. After Henry's death in 1843, Sara was left with the task of editing her father's works.