- Siegfried Sassoon and T.S. Eliot are buried in Somerset.
- Samuel Taylor Coleridge and William Wordsworth both lived in the county for a few years.
- Alfred Tennyson and William Makepeace Thackeray both visited Clevedon
Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1722-1834) was one of the great Romantic poets. He was born in Ottery St Mary in Devon on 21st October 1772. Samuel and his wife Sara (nee Fricker) spent the first few months of their married life in a cottage on Old Church Road in Clevedon in 1795. In 1797 they moved to a cottage in Lime Street, Nether Stowey, where they lived for three years. Samuel went for long walks in the surrounding hills and countryside. His epic poem, The Rime of the Ancient Mariner is said to have been inspired by Watchet Harbour. While he was writing Kubhla Khan in a laudanum induced haze, he was famously disturbed by "a man from Porlock." Frost at Midnight describes the interior of the house at Nether Stowey. In 1800 the Coleridges moved to Keswick in the Lake District.
Coleridge Cottage in Nether Stowey is now owned by the National Trust and it is open to the public.
Cottage on Old Church Road, Clevedon where the Coleridges stayed
Coleridge Cottage, Lime Street, Nether Stowey
Plaque on Coleridge Cottage in Lime Street, Nether Stowey
Statue of the Ancient Mariner and dead albatross, Watchet Harbour
Plaque on the Unitarian Chapel, Dampiet Street, Bridgwater
Plaque on the Unitarian Chapel, Mary Street, Taunton
Alfoxton House
Alfoxton House
Looking very sad and semi-derelict in January 2019
After the war Sassoon wrote more poetry, but also prose and autobiographies. In 1957 he became a Catholic. He died on 1st September 1967 at his home in Heytesbury near Warminster in Wiltshire. He was buried in the churchyard of St Andrew's Church in Mells, close to the grave of the Roman Catholic priest Father Ronald Knox, who he greatly admired.
Siegfried Sassoon's grave in the churchyard of St Andrew's Church, Mells
St Andrew's Church, Mells
Thomas Stearns Eliot (1888-1965) was born in St Louis Missouri but he moved to England in 1917 and became a British citizen in 1927. One of his Eliot ancestors had lived in East Coker before immigrating to America in the 1660s.
T.S. Eliot's best known poetic works include The Lovesong of J. Alfred Prufrock, The Waste Land, Ash Wednesday, The Hollow Men, Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats and Four Quartets. Four Quartets is a set of four long poems, the second of which is entitled East Coker. He also wrote several plays and essays.
T.S. Eliot died of emphysema at his home in London on 4th January 1965. At his request his ashes were interred at St Michael's Church, East Coker. There is a commemorative plaque to him on the wall of the church, which quotes some lines from Four Quartets: "In my beginning is my end" and "In my end is my beginning."
T.S. Eliot's memorial plaque in St Michael's Church, East Coker
T.S. Eliot's memorial plaque in St Michael's Church, East Coker
St Michael's Church, East Coker
In the mid-18th century the author William Makepeace Thackeray was a frequent visitor of the Elton Family, who lived at Clevedon Court. He is best known as a novelist but he did also write some poetry.
Alfred Tennyson had a close friend at Cambridge University called Arthur Hallam. Arthur’s mother was a member of the Elton family of Clevedon Court. Arthur, who was a poet and essayist, was engaged to marry Tennyson’s sister Emily but he died suddenly in Vienna in 1833 at the age of 22. His body was brought back to England and he was buried in the family vault at St Andrew’s Church in Clevedon. In 1850 Tennyson wrote a poem called In Memorium in tribute to his friend. In the same year he made his first visit to Clevedon. The house on Old Church Road in Clevedon, where he is said to have stayed, is called Tennyson House. A nearby road is called Tennyson Avenue.
No comments:
Post a Comment