June – English poets
Samuel Taylor Coleridge and
Robert Southey first meet, in
Oxford while Coleridge is en route for a tour of
Wales. They meet again in
Bristol in August[2] (where they also meet local poet
Robert Lovell and his sisters-in-law, who they will marry; he also introduces them to the publisher
Joseph Cottle). After
Robespierre's execution in July, they collaborate on the "historic drama" The Fall of Robespierre, published in October. Southey's first published poetry appears and he also writes the radical play Wat Tyler this summer.
^A. Gillies (April 1937). "Ludwig Tieck's English Studies at the University of Göttingen, 1792-1794". The Journal of English and Germanic Philology. 36 (2). University of Illinois Press: 206–223.
^Michael H. Fisher, "Mahomed, Deen (1759–1851)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford, UK: OUP), 2004
Retrieved 13 May 2017.
^Chivers, Iab (2009). The Oxford Dictionary of Art and Artists. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 315.
ISBN978-0-19172-763-4.
^de Latour Juillerat-Chasseur, Suzanne Chabaud (1902). Un épisode de l'histoire de la Terreur à Nîmes, extrait des souvenirs personnels de Madame Juillerat-Chasseur née Suzanne Chabaud de Latour (in French). Montbéliard. p. 148.
OCLC23416707.{{
cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (
link)
June – English poets
Samuel Taylor Coleridge and
Robert Southey first meet, in
Oxford while Coleridge is en route for a tour of
Wales. They meet again in
Bristol in August[2] (where they also meet local poet
Robert Lovell and his sisters-in-law, who they will marry; he also introduces them to the publisher
Joseph Cottle). After
Robespierre's execution in July, they collaborate on the "historic drama" The Fall of Robespierre, published in October. Southey's first published poetry appears and he also writes the radical play Wat Tyler this summer.
^A. Gillies (April 1937). "Ludwig Tieck's English Studies at the University of Göttingen, 1792-1794". The Journal of English and Germanic Philology. 36 (2). University of Illinois Press: 206–223.
^Michael H. Fisher, "Mahomed, Deen (1759–1851)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford, UK: OUP), 2004
Retrieved 13 May 2017.
^Chivers, Iab (2009). The Oxford Dictionary of Art and Artists. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 315.
ISBN978-0-19172-763-4.
^de Latour Juillerat-Chasseur, Suzanne Chabaud (1902). Un épisode de l'histoire de la Terreur à Nîmes, extrait des souvenirs personnels de Madame Juillerat-Chasseur née Suzanne Chabaud de Latour (in French). Montbéliard. p. 148.
OCLC23416707.{{
cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (
link)