Christabel Rose Coleridge

Christabel Rose Coleridge (25 May 1843 – 14 November 1921) was an English novelist and an editor of girls' magazines, sometimes in collaboration with the novelist Charlotte Mary Yonge. Her views on the role of women in society were conservative.

Christabel Rose Coleridge
Born(1843-05-25)25 May 1843
London, England
Died14 November 1921(1921-11-14) (aged 78)
Torquay, Devon, England
OccupationWriter, editor
NationalityEnglish
Period19th century
GenreChildren's literature

Early life

A grand-daughter of the poet, Samuel Coleridge, Christabel was born at St Mark's College, Chelsea, while her father, Derwent, was headmaster there. Her name pays homage to Samuel Coleridge's poem Christabel. For a time Coleridge helped her brother Ernest run a school, but her ambition was to be a writer.

Writings, friendships

She went on to publish more than 15 novels. The first was a children's historical story called Lady Betty (1869). Minstrel Dick (1896) is set mainly in the 14th-century Berkhamstead court of the dying Edward, the Black Prince. Her fiction expressed her concern with morality, and several of her books were published by the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge.

Christabel was a friend of Charlotte Yonge's, distantly related to her through Mary Elizabeth Coleridge, who like Christabel had been one of Yonge's informal society, the Goslings.[1] They collaborated on several writing projects, such as The Miz Maze or The Winkworth Puzzle: A Story in Letters, by Nine Authors (1883).[2]

In the early 1890s, Christabel and her "Mother Goose" edited The Monthly Packet, which Yonge had founded 40 years earlier as an Anglican magazine for middle-class girls, as The Monthly Packet of Evening Readings for Younger Members of the English Church. Coleridge was the sole editor during its last six years, from 1894 to 1899. She also edited a magazine intended for the working-class members of the church-based Girls' Friendly Society. After Yonge's death she wrote and edited the biographical Charlotte Mary Yonge: Her Life and Letters (1903).

Another friend was Frances Mary Peard (1835–1923), who wrote more than 40 books published from 1867 to 1909, mostly domestic novels and short-story volumes.[3]

Life's work

Christabel Rose Coleridge had at least 89 works of hers published in a total of at least 286 publications.[4]

In 1880, when her father retired in Torquay, Christabel moved there. She had conservative ideas about the role of women in society, and a collection of her essays on the subject was published in 1894, The Daughters Who Have Not Revolted. Her last novel, Miss Lucy: A Character Study, was published in 1908.[5]

Christabel Rose Coleridge's life ended on 14 November 1921 in Torquay, Devon, at the age of 78.

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gollark: The "product" would just be a bit of paper with ancient language words/pronunciation for "expend precisely 50 kcal on heating up the nearby environment" or something.
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References

  1. "The Gosling Society 1859–1877". The Charlotte Mary Yonge Fellowship. Durham University Community. Retrieved 15 July 2012.
  2. Her eight collaborators were Charlotte Mary Yonge, Frances Awdry, Mary Bramston, A. E. Mary Anderson Morshead, Frances Mary Peard, Mary Susanna Lee, Eleanor C. Price, and Florence Wilford. "Robert Temple Bibliographical Archive" (archive 4). Robert Temple Booksellers. 2 March 2008. Retrieved 15 July 2012. Archived 29 April 2013, thus retrieved 7 December 2019.
  3. "Getting Into Print: Frances Mary Peard, 1835–1922". Women in the Literary Marketplace 1800–1900. Cornell University Library (rmc.library.cornell.edu). February 8 – May 31, 2002.
  4. OCLC WorldCat Identities. Retrieved 25 February 2020.
  5. "Miss Lucy. A character study. (...) 1908." Main catalogue, British Library. Retrieved 8 June 2016.
  • Sandra Kemp, Charlotte Mitchell, and David Trotter, Edwardian Fiction: An Oxford Companion (Oxford University Press, 1997)
  • Cherry Durrant, "Derwent Coleridge", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (2004)
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