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Lamb, Charles, and books for children, 499. —— and William Godwin, 499, 505. —— and Mrs. Godwin, 500, 502. —— on Mrs. Barbauld and Mrs. Trimmer, 500, 501. —— and Tales from Shakespear, 501. —— and the Godwins' illustrator, 502. —— and The Adventures of Ulysses, 505. —— kisses Chapman's Homer, 505. —— commends it to Coleridge, 505. —— on publishers and authors, 506. —— and Mrs. Leicester's School, 508. —— his affection for St. Dunstan's giants, 512. —— and Stackhouse's picture of the witch, 513. —— his father and Lincolnshire, 513. Lamb, Charles, and church bells, 513. —— his first children's book, 513. —— and The King and Queen of Hearts, 513. —— and Poetry for Children, 515. —— his union with his sister, 515. —— and Prince Dorus, 522. — Elizabeth, the Lambs' mother, 512. — John, the Lambs' father, 513. —— the Lambs' brother, his poem, 451, 520. —— his lameness, 517. — Mary, and Tales from Shakespear, 501. —— her difficulty with "All's Well that Ends Well," 502. —— her anonymity, 504. —— and Mrs. Leicester's School, 508. —— her "new source of the pathetic," 509. —— a preface in her name, 509. —— her memory of Mackery End (?), 510. —— her recollections of Blakesware, 511. —— her relations with her grandmother, 511. —— her first play, 511. —— on her aunt Hetty and her mother, 512. —— and Poetry for Children, 515. —— her union with her brother, 515. "Lame Brother, The," 418, 517. Landor, Walter Savage, on Mrs. Leicester's School, 508. "LEICESTER, MRS., HER SCHOOL," 316, 508. Lloyd, Robert, and the Lambs, 515. Looking Glass, The, 514. "Louisa Manners," 328, 510. "Love, Death, and Reputation," 449, 519.