[102] Mr. Southey's grandfather lived in the old manor-house at Bedminster, where, in his younger days. Mr. S. passed many of his happiest hours. When spending a week with me at Bedminster, with a year of the date of this letter, he went to the old house, and requested permission of the strangers who inhabited his grandfather's mansion, to walk round the garden, and renew his acquaintance with the old trees which he used to climb nearly six years before; a request which was readily granted. The revival of such interesting associations, had they occurred at a former period, would doubtless have produced some exquisite poetical record.
[103] The illness of Mrs. Edith Southey.
[104] Mr. S. deemed it an admirable likeness of Mr. W. as he appeared in younger life; and said that it bore at the present time, a striking resemblance to Mr. W.'s son.
[105] The eminent Edinburgh Professor. For three years the private tutor of Mr. T. Wedgewood.
[106] Westbury, near Bristol, the then residence of Mr. John Wedgewood, Esq.
[107] The then residence of Mr. Wordsworth.
[108] List of Works and Poems which Mr. Coleridge intended to write, with the pages in which they are noticed.
[Transcriber's note: After the page number the starting words of the matching paragraph are given.]
Poem on the Nativity (800 lines), p. 66 ["He speaks in the same
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Plan of General Study, p. 66 ["In a letter of Mr. C. dated">[