weekend break seaton devon

weekend break seaton devon
Meadowlands
weekend break seaton devon



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Famous Devonians - Samuel T Coleridge Poet 1772 - 1834

Samuel Taylor Coleridge was born at the vicarage at Ottery St Mary in 1772.He was the son of the Rev John Taylor, and it is said that he had a pretty miserable childhood.But he loved the countryside around Ottery St Mary, and he often walked along the River Otter.

When his father died, Samuel was sent to school in London at the age of 10. This was where he really became an avid reader, and where his interest in writing was born. He also took an interest in other things too...opium, alcohol and women.

His addiction to opium probably started following an illness in the 1790s, for which he took laudanum. It's at around this time, too, that he started to get into debt. So what did he do to get himself out of debt...he joined the army!

Here was a man ill-equipped to fight and who was no horse-rider, to put it mildly. In fact, he only managed to join the army at all after making up a name - Silas Tomkyn Comberbache (he obviously used some poetic licence here).

In the end, his family arranged his discharge and he went to Cambridge, which is where he met his wife, Sara - and his great friend, William Wordsworth.

Coleridge's famous work, The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, was published in 1797 as part of the Lyrical Ballads poems.Lyrical Ballads was published with Wordsworth...and so the Romantic movement was born.

Coleridge went to Malta in 1804, where he hoped the warmer climate would cure an illness. While there, it's said he did some spying for Britain.

He returned home two years later, still unwell and still addicted to opium. Barely able to work, he asked Sara for a divorce.He died of a heart condition in 1834 at the age of 61.

His lasting legacy of course is the poem, Kubla Khan - which talks of Xanadu and the pleasure dome. Which raises the question: was he under the influence of something at the time? The likelihood is that he may well have been.

A plaque in honour of the poet can be found on the churchyard wall in Ottery St Mary.

Frank Bickerton

The achievements of a Plymouth man who took part in some of the earliest expeditions to Antarctica have gone largely unrecognised. Frank Bickerton was responsible for the pioneering use of an aeroplane and wireless telegraphy in the Antarctic. He also led a three-man sledging expedition which discovered the first meteorite to be found in the Antarctic.

Captain Sir Richard Burton

Torquay-born Captain Sir Richard Burton was an explorer extraordinaire! Brave to the point of stupidity almost, Capt Burton got to places other explorers failed to reach.Not only that, he also found time to discover and translate some famous works - including the Kama Sutra.

Sir Francis Chichester

Barnstaple-born Sir Francis Chichester was one of Britain's biggest adventure heroes of the 20th century.His biggest achievement was in 1966-67, when he sailed around the world solo in his ketch, Gipsy Moth IV - returning to Plymouth to a hero's welcome.

weekend break seaton devon