Further Reading
- Additional coverage of Hartley Coleridge's life and career is contained in the following source published by the Gale Group: Dictionary of Literary Biography, Vol. 96.
- Griggs, Grace Evelyn and Earl Leslie Griggs, eds., Letters of Hartley Coleridge, London: Oxford University Press, 1936, 328 p. (A collection of Hartley Coleridge's letters to his family and friends. The editors claim to have selected letters “which best reveal Hartley Coleridge's mind and personality.”)
- Poston, Lawrence, "‘Worlds Not Realized’: Wordsworthian Poetry in the 1830s," Texas Studies in Literature and Language 28, No. 1 (Spring, 1986): 51-80. (This essay examines Wordsworth's influence on younger poets of his time and includes a section that discusses Hartley Coleridge's sonnets.)
- Reeves, James, "Hartley Coleridge (1796-1849)," in Five Late Romantic Poets, edited by James Reeves, London: Heinemann, 1974, pp. 17-25 and 140-46. (A collection of biographical and critical essays on late romantic poets. Included is a biographical essay on Hartley that also presents a brief overview of his sonnets. Several of his poems are reprinted in the volume.)
- Stephens, Fran Carlock, "Hartley Coleridge and the Brontës," Times Literary Supplement (May 14, 1970): 544. (An overview of the correspondence between Hartley Coleridge and the Brontës. Stephens contends that a letter critiquing a Charlotte Brontë work that was previously attributed to William Wordsworth may actually have been composed by Hartley.)
- Stephens, Fran Carlock, The Hartley Coleridge Letters: A Calendar and Index, Austin: Humanities Research Center, University of Texas at Austin, 1978, 218 p. (Compiled as a reference work to assist researchers with the Hartley Coleridge collection at the Humanities Research Center, this book catalogs letters composed and received by the author. Also contains a biographical introduction.)
- Yarnall, Ellis, Wordsworth and the Coleridges: With Other Memories Literary and Political, London: Macmillan, 1909, 331 p. (A biographical and critical memoir of Sara, Derwent, and Hartley Coleridge by a contemporary author and critic.)
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