Read the passage below and answer the following questions (4 & 5).
Samuel Taylor Coleridge is one of the most remarkable figures of the Romantic Age. Coleridge was born on the 21st of October, 1772 at Ottery St. Mary in Devonshire. The poet was the youngest of the thirteen children of his parents. In his tenth year, Coleridge lost his father, and in the course of the next few months, he was admitted to Christ's Hospital. At the age of nineteen, he entered Jesus College in Cambridge as a charity student. But he left the university in 1794 without taking a degree and went out into the world as a general reformer of society. In 1795, Coleridge married Sarah Fricker. At that time, he was struggling to earn a livelihood; he delivered lectures on various topics, literary and political, preached in Unitarian pulpits and published his first volume, "Poems on Various Subjects" in 1796 for which he got thirty guineas from Joseph Cottle. In the same year in December their first child Hartley was born. In 1797, he moved to Nether Stowey in Somersetshire and settled there with his wife and infant. Shortly afterwards, Wordsworth and his sister. Dorothy settled at Alfoxden House. Coleridge met Wordsworth at Racedown Lodge in Dorsetshire and the meeting resulted in a fruitful and memorable friendship. In 1798, they jointly published a little Volume of their poetry "Lyrical Ballads". In 1810, there took place a quarrel between Coleridge and Wordsworth and Coleridge had returned to London and broke with Wordsworth in anger. In 1817, he published Biographia Literaria, Lay Sermons. From 1830 till his death in 1834, he was practically confined to his sick room and quietly passed away on July 25, 1834. Charles Lamb called him an archangel-slightly damaged.