Wolseley, Lord, Decline and Fall of Napoleon, v. 551
Woman's Hair, A, i. 233; iii. 12
Wood, J. T., Modern Discoveries on the Site of Ancient Ephesus, ii. 441
Wood, the pedestrian, i. 322
Woodhouselee, Alexander Fraser Tytler, Lord, Essay on Petrarch, ii. 351
Woodward, Dr. John, Fossils of England, v. 632
Worcester, battle of, ii. 395
Wordsworth, Miss Dorothy, i. 422; iv. 585
Wordsworth, John, captain of The Earl of Abergavenny, vi. 91
Wordsworth, William, i. 305, 318, 331; ii. 311; iii. 149; vi. 39, 80, 587; vii. [70] Byron's review of his Poems, i. 234; Lyrical Ballads, i. 315, 316; iv. 269; Distributor of Stamps for the County of Westmorland, i. 321; iv. 582; vi. 5; "Yet let them not to vulgar Wordsworth stoop," etc., i. 368; "Let simple Wordsworth chime his childish verse," i. 369; "write but like Wordsworth—live beside a lake," i. 422; on Bland Burges, i. 437; Concerning the Relations of Great Britain, Spain, and Portugal, ii. 87; "l'acent Wordsworthien," ii. 115; iv. 6; as preached by Shelley, ii. 219; Emperors and Kings, etc., ii. 227; "Not in the Lucid Intervals of Life," ii. 258; Tintern Abbey, ii. 261, 272; v. 613; Intimations of Immortality, ii. 271, 352; Excursion, ii. 272, 281; v. 94, 613; vi. 4, 176; On the Extinction of the Venetian Republic, ii. 336; In the Pass of Killycranky, ii. 337; Near the Lake of Thrasymene, ii. 377, 378; Descriptive Sketches, ii. 385; "How clear, how keen, how marvellously bright!" iii. xx; Coleridge's Lines to a Gentleman, iii. 336; his quarrel with Byron, iii. 533; iv. 479; Song at the Feast of Brougham Castle, iv. 16, 27; Ruth, iv. 24; Works, iv. 25, 27, 33, 220; A Poet's Epitaph, iv. 26; Byron an admirer of, iv. 47; "Wordsworth and Co.," iv. 182; depreciates Voltaire, iv. 184; Resolution and Independence (originally The Leech-gatherer), iv. 267, 582 Two Addresses to the Freeholders of Westmorland, iv. 341; Peter Bell, iv. 341; vi. 177; vii. [63], [64]; Hazlitt on, iv. 518; referred to in The Blues, iv. 585; Sonnet to a Painter, v. 251; "crazed beyond all hope," vi. 74; "unexcised, unhired," vi. 175; Benjamin the Waggoner, vi. 177; "poet Wordy," vi. 214; Supplement to the Preface (Poems), ibid.; compared with Jacob Benmen, vi. 268; Thanksgiving Ode, vi. 332; "has supporters two or three," vi. 445; Mackintosh, vii. [32]; The White Doe of Rylstone; or, The Fate of the Nortons, a Poem, vii. [45]; "the great metaquizzical poet," vii. [72], [73]