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  1. Derwent Coleridge (14 September 1800 – 28 March 1883), third son of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, was a distinguished English scholar and author.

  2. Looking at issues of exile, idleness, addiction, family, home (lessness), and religious redemption, this essay explores the ways in which Derwent Moultrie's exile proved to be both a literary liberation and a dead end, trapping him between times and spaces, real and imaginary.

  3. Writer, linguist and educationalist Derwent Coleridge, third child of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, was a distinguished scholar and author. He was master of Helston School, Cornwall (1825-41), first principal of St. Mark's College, Chelsea (1841-64) and rector of Hanwell (1864-80).

  4. 27 de ago. de 2017 · essay. Although some of this material was published by Derwent Coleridge as Notes on the English Divines,2 and much more, ex clusively concerning the seventeenth century, by Roberta Brinkley,3 close assessment of the value of this material for the study of the accepted canon of Coleridge's works was rare until quite recently.

  5. The work of Derwent Coleridge, principal of St. Mark’s College, London, who admitted that he took his models not from the pedagogical seminaries of Germany but from the universities of Oxford and Cambridge, exemplified the attempt to introduce a larger element of general education into teacher preparation.

  6. anglicanhistory.org › england › dcoleridgeDerwent Coleridge

    Derwent Coleridge. 1800-1883. The Circumstances of the Present Times Considered, with a View to Religious Improvement: An Advent Sermon, Preached in the Church of the Borough of Helleston, Nov. 27, MDCCCXXXI. Helleston: J. Roberts, 1831.

  7. In 1851, upon publication of Derwent Coleridge’s posthumous edition of Hartley’s poems, The Examiner judged that Hartley’s verse would ‘largely and lastingly contribute to the rare stories of true poetry’ (Review of Memoir, 1851e, p. 237).