Coleridge Family Papers. Vol. dcxxxiv. Inscribed: 'To the Revd. George Coleridge with John Taylor Coleridge's grateful and sincere Love'; 1813. The volume returned to John Taylor Coleridge in 1850 after the death of William Coleridge, Bishop of Barbados.
Coleridge Family Papers. Vols. dcxxxiv-dcxxxv. John Taylor Coleridge, 'Miscellanies'; 1813. Coleridge's two Oxford prize essays, 'Etymology' and 'Quam vim in moribus Populi Romani arrigendis habuerit Potestas Censorias', were printed in 1813. Coleridge subsequently transcribed his Oxford prize poem 'Pyramides Ægypticæ' (1809) into several copies of the printed essays, and presented two of these to his father and uncle.
Coleridge Family Papers. Vol. dcxxxv. Inscribed: 'To James Coleridge, Esq, with his son John Taylor Coleridge's sincere love, in token of his gratitude for an excellent education'; 1813.
Coleridge Family Papers. Vol. dcxxxvi. Volume of essays by John Taylor Coleridge entitled 'The Substance of the Odes of Pindar in English'; 1811-1822. With a draft of an intended introduction to the work, written in 1822. 231 x 186mm.
Coleridge Family Papers. Vol. dcxxxvii. Analysis of Quintilian's Institutio Oratoria; 1809. 1. Part 1; 29 Apr. 1809. Marbled paper boards. 201 x 164mm. 2. Part 2; 22 May 1809. Marbled paper boards. 201 x 164mm.
Coleridge Family Papers. Vols. dcxxxvii-dcxli. Analyses, translations and abridgements of classical authors by John Taylor Coleridge; 1809-1811. Five volumes.