Temple, Lord and Lady Mount, [270]
Tenderness, in English hero, [365]
‘Tennyson, Alfred, Birthday Address,’ [32]
‘Tennyson, Alfred,’ sonnet to, [286]
Tennyson, Lord, [4], [32], [144]; dishonest criticism, opinion of, [211]; Watts-Dunton’s friendship with, [285]; Watts-Dunton’s criticism of and essays on, [289], [290]; ‘Memoir,’ Watts-Dunton’s contribution, [291]; anecdotes concerning, [287]–89; ‘The Princess,’ defects of, [290]; portraits of, Watts-Dunton’s articles on, [290]; ‘Maud,’ compared with Rhona Boswell, [413]; Watts-Dunton and:—sympathy between him and, [285]; sonnet on birthday, [286]; meeting at garden party; open invitation to Aldworth and Farringford; his ear not defective, [286]; sensibility to delicate metrical nuances, [287]; challenges a sibilant in a sonnet, [287]; ‘scent’ better than ‘scents,’ [287]; his morbid modesty, [288]; a poet is not born to the purple, [288]; reading ‘Becket’ in summer-house; desired free criticism, [288]; alleged rudeness to women, [289]; detraction of, [289]; could not invent a story, [289]; the nucleus of ‘Maud,’ [289]
Terry, Ellen, Watts-Dunton’s friendship with, [117], [121]; sonnet on, [122]
Thackeray, [295], [305], [325], [328]; ‘softness of touch,’ [350]–53
Théâtre Française, Swinburne and Watts at, [123]–29