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"To Sheridan" or "To Richard Brinsley Sheridan" was written by Samuel Taylor Coleridge and published in the 29 January 1795 Morning Chronicle. As the last poem running as part of the Sonnets on Eminent Characters series, it describes Coleridge's appreciation of Richard Brinsley Sheridan and his theatre talents. Coleridge, unlike most, preferred ...
June 27 – Mary Robinson writes the poem January, 1795. This year she also writes London's Summer Morning (published 1800). August 21–September 26 – English poet William Wordsworth and his sister Dorothy stay at 7 Great George Street, Bristol , during which time they meet Samuel Taylor Coleridge , Robert Southey and the latter poets ...
The poem was printed for the 14 January 1795 Morning Chronicle, which ran it as the tenth poem of Coleridge's series under the name "To Robert Southey, of Baliol College, Oxford, Author of the 'Retrospect,' and Other Poems". It was the only time the poem was published. [4]
Coleridge's "To William Godwin, Author of Political Justice" became the ninth sonnet in the series Sonnets on Eminent Characters in the 10 January 1795 Morning Chronicle. Coleridge sent 6 lines of the poem to Robert Southey in a letter that read: [ 1 ] "I have written one to Godwin—but the mediocrity of the eight first Lines is most miserably ...
Sonnets on Eminent Characters or Sonnets on Eminent Contemporaries is an 11-part sonnet series created by Samuel Taylor Coleridge and printed in the Morning Chronicle between 1 December 1794 and 31 January 1795. Although Coleridge promised to have at least 16 poems within the series, only one addition poem, "To Lord Stanhope", was published.
"A Man's a Man for A' That" is a song by Scottish poet Robert Burns, famous for its expression of egalitarianism. The song made its first appearance in a letter Burns wrote to George Thomson in January 1795.
1795 1795, January 14 XI. To Richard Brinsley Sheridan, [Note 8] Esq. "It was some Spirit, Sheridan! that breath'd" 1795 1795, January 29 XII. To Lord Stanhope on reading his Late Protest in the House of Lords. "Stanhope! I hail, with ardent Hymn, thy name!" 1795 1795, January 31 To Earl Stanhope "Not, Stanhope! with the Patriot's doubtful name ...
1795 Left upon a Seat in a Yew-tree, which stands near the Lake of Esthwaite, on a desolate part of the shore, commanding a beautiful prospect. "Nay, Traveller! rest. This lonely Yew-tree stands" Poems of Sentiment and Reflection.(1815–43); Poems written in Youth(1845) 1798 The Reverie of Poor Susan 1797