]
The Statesman's Manual; or the Bible the best guide to political skill and
foresight.
The Statesman's Manual; or the Bible the best guide to political skill and
foresight.
Cambridge History of English Literature - 1908 - v11
Ed.
Brooke, S.
A.
1895.
Rptd 1906
(Everyman's Library).
The Poetry of Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Ed. Garnett, R. 1898.
Coleridge's Poems. A facsimile reproduction of the proofs and MSS of some
of the poems. Ed. Campbell, J. D. With preface and notes by
White, W. H. Westminster, 1899.
Poems. Selected and arranged with an introduction and notes by Symons, A.
(1905. )
Poems. Selected with an introduction by Dowden, E. Edinburgh (1907).
The Ancient Mariner und Christabel, mit literarhistorischer Einleitung und
Kommentar. Hrsg. von Eichler, A. (Wiener Beiträge zur engl. Phi-
lologie. ) Vienna, 1907.
Poems of Nature and Romance, 1794–1807. Ed. Keeling, M. A. Oxford,
1910.
## p. 413 (#435) ############################################
VI]
Coleridge
413
C. Poems published separately
Poems on various subjects. 1796. 2nd edn. To which are now added Poems
by Charles Lamb and Charles Lloyd. Bristol, London, 1797. 3rd edn.
1803. [Omitting the contributions of Charles Lamb and Charles
Lloyd. ]
Ode on the Departing Year. Bristol, 1796.
The Vision of the Maid of Orleans. Contributed to Southey's Joan of Aro
(1796). Republished in Sibylline Leaves (1817) and later collections as
The Destiny of Nations.
[Selected Sonnets from Bowles, Lamb, and others with four Sonnets
by S. T. C. and a prefatory essay on the Sonnet. Privately ptd,
1796. ]
Fears in Solitude. Written in 1798 during the alarm of an invasion.
To which are added France, an Ode; and Frost at Midnight. 1798.
[Rptd in The Poetical Register in 1812, and also privately in the same
year. ]
Lyrical Ballads, with a few other poems. [By Wordsworth and Coleridge.
The Rime of the Ancient Mariner appeared here for the first time. ]
Bristol, 1798. Re-issued in London, 1798. Rptd, ed. Dowden, E. , 1890;
2nd edn, 1891; ed. Hutchinson, T. , 1898; 2nd edn, 1907; ed. Littledale, H. ,
1911.
Lyrical Ballads, with other poems, in two volumes. 1800, 1802, 1805.
Christabel; Kubla Khan, a vision; The Pains of Sleep. 1816. 2nd edn.
1816. 3rd edn. 1816.
Sibylline Leaves. A collection of poems. [The Rime of the Ancient Mariner
was here acknowledged for the first time. ] 1817.
A Hebrew Dirge chaunted in the Great Synagogue, St James's Place,
Aldgate, on the day of the funeral of the Princess Charlotte. By
Hurwitz, Hyman. With a translation in English verse by Coleridge,
S. T. 1817.
The Tears of a Grateful People. A Hebrew Dirge and Hymn chaunted in
the Great Synagogue, St James's Place, Aldgate, on the day of the
funeral of King George III. By Hurwitz, Hyman. Translated into
English verse by a friend [S. T. C. ]. (1820. )
The Devil's Walk. A Poem by Coleridge, S. T. and Southey, R. 1830.
[Originally published anonymously and attributed to Porson. ]
Christabel. Illustrated by facsimile of the MS and by textual and other
notes by Coleridge, E. H. 1907.
A. T. B.
D. Plays published separately
The Fall of Robespierre. An historic drama. Cambridge, 1794. (Act i by
Coleridge, Acts 11, 111 by Southey. )
[Coleridge's contribution, obviously under the influence of Shake-
speare's Julius Caesar, presents the scheming and contriving of the
anti-Robespierre faction. Acts II and in by Southey depict the fall of
Robespierre at the Convention. The whole play suggests that Robespierre
had become a tyrant, but, with its pretentious rhetoric and lack of
characterisation, it reads more like a second Reflections on the French
Revolution than a drama. The poets, between them, have succeeded in
suggesting no unworthy idea of the spirit of freedom finding outlet in
action. ]
Wallenstein. A Drama in Two Parts. 1799–1800 (i. e. The Piccolomini,
5 acts; The Death of Wallenstein, 5 acts. The one-act prelude,
## p. 414 (#436) ############################################
414
[CH.
Bibliography
Wallenstein's Lager, making up Schiller's original trilogy, was not
transl. ). Rptd 1866, 1889 (Bohn).
[This translation is Coleridge's most substantial contribution to the
English stage. At a time when Ireland had pearly persuaded the public
to accept arid rhetoric for Shakespeare, and “Monk' Lewis had quite
persuaded them to take spectacular melodrama for tragedy, Coleridge
introduced them to Schiller's virile German drama (despite its rococo
love scenes), with its lesson of destiny, ambition and heroism. The
rapidly moving plot, with its fine speeches and characters outlined
clearly by action, must have been a revelation after Kotzebue (the only
German dramatist familiar at that time to the general public), and may
have helped indirectly to inspire the dramatic efforts of Shelley and
Byron. Coleridge's versification is uneven, but the translation is scholarly;
and English idiom is not sacrificed to literal accuracy. ]
Remorse. A Tragedy in five Acts. 1813. 2nd edn. 1813. 3rd edn. 1813.
(The revised version of Osorio, which Coleridge had sent to Sheridan
as early as 1797 and which was ptd ‘from a copy recently discovered,'
ed. Shepherd, R. H. , 1873. )
[The theme, familiar to xviii century readers (cf. Cumberland's The
Brothers and Schiller's Die Räuber), is that of the elder brother return-
ing to his betrothed and his home from which his scheming cadet has
ousted him. The play has some fine passages, e. g. the monologue (act v,
sc. 1), where Alvar, in the dungeon of the Inquisition, gives expression,
like Condorcet, to his dreams of the perfectibility of mankind; but
Remorse is neither true tragedy nor true drama. The age still tended
towards a drawing-room ideal of self-restraint and sentimentality, and
Coleridge, falling, like all his contemporaries, under this influence, has
not portrayed the complex yet primitive nature of the great passions,
but only their rhetoric. ]
Zapolya. A Christmas Tale in two parts. 1817.
[Described by the author as a dramatic poem''in humble imitation
of the Winter's Tale. The play has more movement than Remorse
and works up to an unmistakable climax, but the personages are still
hardly more than declamatory rhetoricians. The character of Laska,
Casimir's steward, shows some knowledge of stage requirements, but is
not convincing. As in Remorse, there is a romantic background of
gorgeous palaces and labyrinthine caverns, and some fine poetry (e. g.
pt I, act 1, sc. 1, Kiuprili's tirade on the fallacy of popular opinion). ]
H. V. Routh.
6
II. PROSE WORKS
This list does not include the various prospectuses of Courses of Lectures
issued by Coleridge. For these, reference should be made to Mr Wise's
Bibliography,
A Moral and Political Lecture delivered at Bristol. Bristol (1795).
Conciones ad populum or Addresses to the People. (Bristol] 1795.
The Plot discovered, or an address to the People against Ministerial treason.
Bristol, 1795.
An answer to 'A Letter to Edward Long Fox, M. D. (1795. ]
The Watchman. 10 numbers. Bristol, 1796.
The Friend. A literary, moral, and political weekly paper, excluding personal
and party politics and events of the day. 28 numbers. Penrith, 1809–10.
## p. 415 (#437) ############################################
vi]
Coleridge
415
Re-issued, with supplementary matter, 1812. New edn. 3 vols. 1818.
3rd edn. 3 vols. 1837. New edn by Coleridge, H. N. 2 vols. 1863.
Rptd, in Bohn's Standard Library, 1865; and frequently since that date.
Omniana, or Horae otiosiores. 2 vols. 1812. (Ed. Southey, R. , with numerous
articles by Coleridge.
]
The Statesman's Manual; or the Bible the best guide to political skill and
foresight. A lay sermon addressed to the higher classes of society.
1816.
Blessed are ye that sow beside all waters. A lay sermon addressed to the
higher and middle classes on the existing discontents. 1817. (This and
the preceding Sermon rptd in 1839 and 1852 with On the constitution
of the Church and State. ]
Biographia Literaria, or biographical sketches of my literary life and opinions.
2 vols. 1817. 2nd edn. Ed. Coleridge, H. N. and Coleridge, Sara.
1847. Rptd with Two Lay Sermons in Bohn's Standard Library.
1865, etc. Ed. Symons, A. (Everyman's Library. ) (1906. ) Ed. with
his aesthetical essays by Shawcross, J. 2 vols. Oxford, 1907.
Remarks on the objections which have been urged against the principle
of Sir Robert Peels Bill. (1818. ]
The Grounds of Sir Robert Peel's Bill vindicated. (1818. ] [This and the
preceding rptd privately 1913. ]
On Method. A preliminary treatise forming the General Introduction to
the Encyclopaedia Metropolitana, 1818. 5th edn. 1852. Rptd with
Whately's Logic and Rhetoric. 1855.
Aids to Reflection in the formation of a manly character, on the several
grounds of prudence, morality, and religion; illustrated by select passages
from our elder divines, especially from Archbishop Leighton. 1825.
5th edn enlarged, ed. Coleridge, H. N. 2 vols. 1843. 7th edn. Ed.
Coleridge, D. 1854. New edn, with Confessions of an Inquiring Spirit
and Essays on Faith and the Common Prayer-Book, in Bohn's Standard
Library. 1884. Bptd 1904, etc.
On the constitution of the Church and State, according to the idea of each;
with aids toward a right judgment on the late Catholic Bill. 1830.
2nd edn. 1830. 3rd edn. 1839. 4th edn. 1852. [With the 3rd and
4th edns were rptd the two Lay Sermons. ]
Specimens of the Table-Talk of S. T. Coleridge. (Ed. Coleridge, H. N. )
2 vols. 1835. Republished as Table-Talk and Omniana of S. T. Coleridge.
With additional Table-Talk from Allsop's Recollections and manuscript
matter not before printed. Ed. Ashe, T. (Bohn's Standard Library. )
1884, etc. á
Literary Remains. Ed. Coleridge, H. N. 4 vols. 1836-9.
Confessions of an Inquiring Spirit. Ed. from the author's MS by Coleridge,
H. N. 1840. 3rd edn. 1853.
Hints towards the formation of a more comprehensive theory of life. Ed.
Watson, Seth B. 1848.
Notes and Lectures upon Shakespeare and some of the old Poets and
Dramatists, with other literary remains of S. T. Coleridge. Ed.
Coleridge, Mrs H. N. 2 vols. 1849.
Essays on his own times; forming a second series of The Friend. Ed. by his
daughter. 3 vols. 1850.
Notes on English Divines. Ed. Coleridge, Derwent. 2 vols. 1853.
Notes theological, political, and miscellaneous. Ed. Coleridge, Derwent.
1853.
Seven Lectures on Shakespeare and Milton, by the late S. T. Coleridge.
Ed. Collier, J. P. 1856.
Anotificom,
gxford, 19. 90
## p. 416 (#438) ############################################
416
[CH.
Bibliography
Notes on Stillingfleet. Privately ptd, 1875.
Lectures and Notes on Shakespeare and other English Poets. Ed. Ashe, T.
(Bohn's Standard Library. ) 1883, etc.
Miscellanies, aesthetic and literary; to which is added the Theory of Life.
Collected and arranged by Ashe, T. (Bohn's Standard Library. ) ' 1885,
etc.
Critical Annotations. Being marginal notes inscribed in volumes formerly
in his possession. Ed. Taylor, W. F. 1889.
Anima Poetae. From the unpublished note-books of S. T. Coleridge. Ed.
Coleridge, E. H. 1895.
Essays and Lectures on Shakspeare and other old poets and dramatists.
(Everyman's Library. ) (1907. )
Coleridge's Literary Criticism. With introduction by Mackail, J. W.
Oxford, 1908.
III. CORRESPONDENCE
Unpublished Letters to the Rev. John Prior Estlin. Communicated to the
Philobiblon Society by Bright, H. A. Vol. xv. 1877–1884.
Memorials of Coleorton: being Letters from Coleridge, Wordsworth and
his sister, Southey, and Sir Walter Scott to Sir George and Lady
Beaumont of Coleorton, 1803-1834. Ed. Knight, W. 2 vols. Edin-
burgh, 1887.
Letters, 1785–1834. Ed. Coleridge, E. H. 2 vols. 1895.
Letters from the Lake Poets to Daniel Stuart. Ed. Stuart, M. 1889.
Biographia Epistolaris: being the biographical supplement of Coleridge's
Biographia Literaria, with additional letters. Ed. Turnbull, A. 2 vols.
1911.
Letters hitherto uncollected. Ed. Prideaux, W. F. Privately ptd. 1913.
IV. BIOGRAPHY AND CRITICISM
See, also, the various introductions to editions of Coleridge's works
mentioned under sections I, II, and in, and bibliography to chapter (v) on
Wordsworth, ante, sect. iv.
Ainger, A. Nether Stowey. - Coleridge's Ode to Wordsworth. Lectures and
Essays. Vol. 11. 1905.
(Everyman's Library).
The Poetry of Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Ed. Garnett, R. 1898.
Coleridge's Poems. A facsimile reproduction of the proofs and MSS of some
of the poems. Ed. Campbell, J. D. With preface and notes by
White, W. H. Westminster, 1899.
Poems. Selected and arranged with an introduction and notes by Symons, A.
(1905. )
Poems. Selected with an introduction by Dowden, E. Edinburgh (1907).
The Ancient Mariner und Christabel, mit literarhistorischer Einleitung und
Kommentar. Hrsg. von Eichler, A. (Wiener Beiträge zur engl. Phi-
lologie. ) Vienna, 1907.
Poems of Nature and Romance, 1794–1807. Ed. Keeling, M. A. Oxford,
1910.
## p. 413 (#435) ############################################
VI]
Coleridge
413
C. Poems published separately
Poems on various subjects. 1796. 2nd edn. To which are now added Poems
by Charles Lamb and Charles Lloyd. Bristol, London, 1797. 3rd edn.
1803. [Omitting the contributions of Charles Lamb and Charles
Lloyd. ]
Ode on the Departing Year. Bristol, 1796.
The Vision of the Maid of Orleans. Contributed to Southey's Joan of Aro
(1796). Republished in Sibylline Leaves (1817) and later collections as
The Destiny of Nations.
[Selected Sonnets from Bowles, Lamb, and others with four Sonnets
by S. T. C. and a prefatory essay on the Sonnet. Privately ptd,
1796. ]
Fears in Solitude. Written in 1798 during the alarm of an invasion.
To which are added France, an Ode; and Frost at Midnight. 1798.
[Rptd in The Poetical Register in 1812, and also privately in the same
year. ]
Lyrical Ballads, with a few other poems. [By Wordsworth and Coleridge.
The Rime of the Ancient Mariner appeared here for the first time. ]
Bristol, 1798. Re-issued in London, 1798. Rptd, ed. Dowden, E. , 1890;
2nd edn, 1891; ed. Hutchinson, T. , 1898; 2nd edn, 1907; ed. Littledale, H. ,
1911.
Lyrical Ballads, with other poems, in two volumes. 1800, 1802, 1805.
Christabel; Kubla Khan, a vision; The Pains of Sleep. 1816. 2nd edn.
1816. 3rd edn. 1816.
Sibylline Leaves. A collection of poems. [The Rime of the Ancient Mariner
was here acknowledged for the first time. ] 1817.
A Hebrew Dirge chaunted in the Great Synagogue, St James's Place,
Aldgate, on the day of the funeral of the Princess Charlotte. By
Hurwitz, Hyman. With a translation in English verse by Coleridge,
S. T. 1817.
The Tears of a Grateful People. A Hebrew Dirge and Hymn chaunted in
the Great Synagogue, St James's Place, Aldgate, on the day of the
funeral of King George III. By Hurwitz, Hyman. Translated into
English verse by a friend [S. T. C. ]. (1820. )
The Devil's Walk. A Poem by Coleridge, S. T. and Southey, R. 1830.
[Originally published anonymously and attributed to Porson. ]
Christabel. Illustrated by facsimile of the MS and by textual and other
notes by Coleridge, E. H. 1907.
A. T. B.
D. Plays published separately
The Fall of Robespierre. An historic drama. Cambridge, 1794. (Act i by
Coleridge, Acts 11, 111 by Southey. )
[Coleridge's contribution, obviously under the influence of Shake-
speare's Julius Caesar, presents the scheming and contriving of the
anti-Robespierre faction. Acts II and in by Southey depict the fall of
Robespierre at the Convention. The whole play suggests that Robespierre
had become a tyrant, but, with its pretentious rhetoric and lack of
characterisation, it reads more like a second Reflections on the French
Revolution than a drama. The poets, between them, have succeeded in
suggesting no unworthy idea of the spirit of freedom finding outlet in
action. ]
Wallenstein. A Drama in Two Parts. 1799–1800 (i. e. The Piccolomini,
5 acts; The Death of Wallenstein, 5 acts. The one-act prelude,
## p. 414 (#436) ############################################
414
[CH.
Bibliography
Wallenstein's Lager, making up Schiller's original trilogy, was not
transl. ). Rptd 1866, 1889 (Bohn).
[This translation is Coleridge's most substantial contribution to the
English stage. At a time when Ireland had pearly persuaded the public
to accept arid rhetoric for Shakespeare, and “Monk' Lewis had quite
persuaded them to take spectacular melodrama for tragedy, Coleridge
introduced them to Schiller's virile German drama (despite its rococo
love scenes), with its lesson of destiny, ambition and heroism. The
rapidly moving plot, with its fine speeches and characters outlined
clearly by action, must have been a revelation after Kotzebue (the only
German dramatist familiar at that time to the general public), and may
have helped indirectly to inspire the dramatic efforts of Shelley and
Byron. Coleridge's versification is uneven, but the translation is scholarly;
and English idiom is not sacrificed to literal accuracy. ]
Remorse. A Tragedy in five Acts. 1813. 2nd edn. 1813. 3rd edn. 1813.
(The revised version of Osorio, which Coleridge had sent to Sheridan
as early as 1797 and which was ptd ‘from a copy recently discovered,'
ed. Shepherd, R. H. , 1873. )
[The theme, familiar to xviii century readers (cf. Cumberland's The
Brothers and Schiller's Die Räuber), is that of the elder brother return-
ing to his betrothed and his home from which his scheming cadet has
ousted him. The play has some fine passages, e. g. the monologue (act v,
sc. 1), where Alvar, in the dungeon of the Inquisition, gives expression,
like Condorcet, to his dreams of the perfectibility of mankind; but
Remorse is neither true tragedy nor true drama. The age still tended
towards a drawing-room ideal of self-restraint and sentimentality, and
Coleridge, falling, like all his contemporaries, under this influence, has
not portrayed the complex yet primitive nature of the great passions,
but only their rhetoric. ]
Zapolya. A Christmas Tale in two parts. 1817.
[Described by the author as a dramatic poem''in humble imitation
of the Winter's Tale. The play has more movement than Remorse
and works up to an unmistakable climax, but the personages are still
hardly more than declamatory rhetoricians. The character of Laska,
Casimir's steward, shows some knowledge of stage requirements, but is
not convincing. As in Remorse, there is a romantic background of
gorgeous palaces and labyrinthine caverns, and some fine poetry (e. g.
pt I, act 1, sc. 1, Kiuprili's tirade on the fallacy of popular opinion). ]
H. V. Routh.
6
II. PROSE WORKS
This list does not include the various prospectuses of Courses of Lectures
issued by Coleridge. For these, reference should be made to Mr Wise's
Bibliography,
A Moral and Political Lecture delivered at Bristol. Bristol (1795).
Conciones ad populum or Addresses to the People. (Bristol] 1795.
The Plot discovered, or an address to the People against Ministerial treason.
Bristol, 1795.
An answer to 'A Letter to Edward Long Fox, M. D. (1795. ]
The Watchman. 10 numbers. Bristol, 1796.
The Friend. A literary, moral, and political weekly paper, excluding personal
and party politics and events of the day. 28 numbers. Penrith, 1809–10.
## p. 415 (#437) ############################################
vi]
Coleridge
415
Re-issued, with supplementary matter, 1812. New edn. 3 vols. 1818.
3rd edn. 3 vols. 1837. New edn by Coleridge, H. N. 2 vols. 1863.
Rptd, in Bohn's Standard Library, 1865; and frequently since that date.
Omniana, or Horae otiosiores. 2 vols. 1812. (Ed. Southey, R. , with numerous
articles by Coleridge.
]
The Statesman's Manual; or the Bible the best guide to political skill and
foresight. A lay sermon addressed to the higher classes of society.
1816.
Blessed are ye that sow beside all waters. A lay sermon addressed to the
higher and middle classes on the existing discontents. 1817. (This and
the preceding Sermon rptd in 1839 and 1852 with On the constitution
of the Church and State. ]
Biographia Literaria, or biographical sketches of my literary life and opinions.
2 vols. 1817. 2nd edn. Ed. Coleridge, H. N. and Coleridge, Sara.
1847. Rptd with Two Lay Sermons in Bohn's Standard Library.
1865, etc. Ed. Symons, A. (Everyman's Library. ) (1906. ) Ed. with
his aesthetical essays by Shawcross, J. 2 vols. Oxford, 1907.
Remarks on the objections which have been urged against the principle
of Sir Robert Peels Bill. (1818. ]
The Grounds of Sir Robert Peel's Bill vindicated. (1818. ] [This and the
preceding rptd privately 1913. ]
On Method. A preliminary treatise forming the General Introduction to
the Encyclopaedia Metropolitana, 1818. 5th edn. 1852. Rptd with
Whately's Logic and Rhetoric. 1855.
Aids to Reflection in the formation of a manly character, on the several
grounds of prudence, morality, and religion; illustrated by select passages
from our elder divines, especially from Archbishop Leighton. 1825.
5th edn enlarged, ed. Coleridge, H. N. 2 vols. 1843. 7th edn. Ed.
Coleridge, D. 1854. New edn, with Confessions of an Inquiring Spirit
and Essays on Faith and the Common Prayer-Book, in Bohn's Standard
Library. 1884. Bptd 1904, etc.
On the constitution of the Church and State, according to the idea of each;
with aids toward a right judgment on the late Catholic Bill. 1830.
2nd edn. 1830. 3rd edn. 1839. 4th edn. 1852. [With the 3rd and
4th edns were rptd the two Lay Sermons. ]
Specimens of the Table-Talk of S. T. Coleridge. (Ed. Coleridge, H. N. )
2 vols. 1835. Republished as Table-Talk and Omniana of S. T. Coleridge.
With additional Table-Talk from Allsop's Recollections and manuscript
matter not before printed. Ed. Ashe, T. (Bohn's Standard Library. )
1884, etc. á
Literary Remains. Ed. Coleridge, H. N. 4 vols. 1836-9.
Confessions of an Inquiring Spirit. Ed. from the author's MS by Coleridge,
H. N. 1840. 3rd edn. 1853.
Hints towards the formation of a more comprehensive theory of life. Ed.
Watson, Seth B. 1848.
Notes and Lectures upon Shakespeare and some of the old Poets and
Dramatists, with other literary remains of S. T. Coleridge. Ed.
Coleridge, Mrs H. N. 2 vols. 1849.
Essays on his own times; forming a second series of The Friend. Ed. by his
daughter. 3 vols. 1850.
Notes on English Divines. Ed. Coleridge, Derwent. 2 vols. 1853.
Notes theological, political, and miscellaneous. Ed. Coleridge, Derwent.
1853.
Seven Lectures on Shakespeare and Milton, by the late S. T. Coleridge.
Ed. Collier, J. P. 1856.
Anotificom,
gxford, 19. 90
## p. 416 (#438) ############################################
416
[CH.
Bibliography
Notes on Stillingfleet. Privately ptd, 1875.
Lectures and Notes on Shakespeare and other English Poets. Ed. Ashe, T.
(Bohn's Standard Library. ) 1883, etc.
Miscellanies, aesthetic and literary; to which is added the Theory of Life.
Collected and arranged by Ashe, T. (Bohn's Standard Library. ) ' 1885,
etc.
Critical Annotations. Being marginal notes inscribed in volumes formerly
in his possession. Ed. Taylor, W. F. 1889.
Anima Poetae. From the unpublished note-books of S. T. Coleridge. Ed.
Coleridge, E. H. 1895.
Essays and Lectures on Shakspeare and other old poets and dramatists.
(Everyman's Library. ) (1907. )
Coleridge's Literary Criticism. With introduction by Mackail, J. W.
Oxford, 1908.
III. CORRESPONDENCE
Unpublished Letters to the Rev. John Prior Estlin. Communicated to the
Philobiblon Society by Bright, H. A. Vol. xv. 1877–1884.
Memorials of Coleorton: being Letters from Coleridge, Wordsworth and
his sister, Southey, and Sir Walter Scott to Sir George and Lady
Beaumont of Coleorton, 1803-1834. Ed. Knight, W. 2 vols. Edin-
burgh, 1887.
Letters, 1785–1834. Ed. Coleridge, E. H. 2 vols. 1895.
Letters from the Lake Poets to Daniel Stuart. Ed. Stuart, M. 1889.
Biographia Epistolaris: being the biographical supplement of Coleridge's
Biographia Literaria, with additional letters. Ed. Turnbull, A. 2 vols.
1911.
Letters hitherto uncollected. Ed. Prideaux, W. F. Privately ptd. 1913.
IV. BIOGRAPHY AND CRITICISM
See, also, the various introductions to editions of Coleridge's works
mentioned under sections I, II, and in, and bibliography to chapter (v) on
Wordsworth, ante, sect. iv.
Ainger, A. Nether Stowey. - Coleridge's Ode to Wordsworth. Lectures and
Essays. Vol. 11. 1905.
