Coleorton, Memorials of, iv. 585
Coleridge, Miss Edith, iii. 454
Coleridge, Hartley, Essays, ii. 331; First Visit to the Theatre in London, v. 474
Coleridge, H. N., Study of the Classics, vi. 117
Coleridge, Sara, i. 489
Coleridge, Mrs. S. T., iv. 521
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, The Devils Walk, i. 31; vii. [21]; Byron and, i. 305, 365; iii. 444; vi. 74; nitrous oxide, i. 307; Poems, i. 315, 316; ii. 22; referred to in English Bards, and Scotch Reviewers, i. 316, 369; on Monk Lewis, i. 138; Letters of, i. 318; ii. 401; iv. 225, 585; v. 175, 544; vi. 350, 421; Table Talk of, i. 318; iv. 318, 339, 485; v. 175; vi. 152; Cottle's Early Recollections of, i. 329; Anima Poetæ, i. 367; ii. 113, 236; iv. 587; vi. 91; and Charles Lloyd, i. 368; Frost at Midnight, i. 369; Sir J. Bland Burges, i. 437; on dancing in Germany, i. 475; on Kotzebue, i. 489; Biographia Literaria, i. 489; iii. 435; vi. 4, 39, 167, 168, 175; Ancient Mariner, ii. 22; iv. 22, 27, 104, 225, 230, 506; vi. 106, 114; Lamb's apology for, ii. 22; Christabel, ii. 134, 274, 360; iii. 443, 471, 476, 511, 519, 537; iv. 20, 82, 224; v. 281; vi. 243, 279; vii. [45]; Hymn before Sunrise in the Valley of Chamouni, ii. 254; iv. 110; Dejection: An Ode, ii. 264; vi. 39; The Friend, ii. 281, 301; vi. 174; Lines to Nature, ii. 302; vi. 179; "Oh for one hour of The Recluse," ii. 337; Boccaccio, ii. 374; Essays on His Own Times, ii. 397, 401; a Parliamentary reporter, ii. 401; Kubla Khan, ii. 416, 418, 447; iv. 267; v. 73, 277; Israel's Lament, ii. 450; his influence on Rogers, iii. 320; Lines to a Gentleman, iii. 336; Byron's letters to, iii. 441; iv. 338; Byron's beneficiary, iii. 444; "Apostacy and Renegadoism," iii. 488; Songs of the Pixies, iii. 524; Zapolya, iv. 24; Sibylline Leaves, iv. 42; Religions Musings, ibid.; depreciates Voltaire, iv. 184; "No more my visionary soul shall dwell," iv. 225; on Walpole's Mysterious Mother, iv. 339; author of the libel on Shelley? iv. 475; The Plot Discovered, etc., iv. 512; Miscellanies, etc., iv. 515; Hazlitt on, iv. 518; the result of pantisocracy, iv. 521; on Southey's Life of Wesley, iv. 522; translates Schiller's Piccolomini, iv. 566; Lectures of 1811-1812, iv. 575; his visit to the Beaumonts, iv. 585; Pains of Sleep, v. 78; on Keats and Adam Steinmetz, "There is death in that hand," v. 175; and Pitt's description of Napoleon, v. 544; Critique on Maturin's Bertram, vi. xvii, 4; Morning Post, vi. 175; his marriage, ibid.; "hath the sway," vi. 445; Literary Remains, vi. 576; his note-books, vii. [18]; Mackintosh on, vii. [32]
Coligny, vi. 246
Coliseum (or Colosseum), Rome, ii. 423-435; iv. 131
Collegio dei Signore di notte al Criminal, iv. 427