[58] Printed in The Keepsake, Lond. 1829.
[59] These words are ineffectual and metaphorical. Most words are so,—no help!
INDEX.
- Addison, his Cato, ii. [16]
- Æschylus, quoted, ii. [340]
- Alfieri, ii. [390]
- Alps, the, i. [119], [120], [348]
- Anacreon’s swallow, ii. [359]
- Anastasius, ii. [341]
- Annual Parliaments, i. [364], [365]
- Apollodorus, a pupil of Socrates, ii. [49]
- Apollonius Rhodius, i. [410]
- Ariosto, tomb of, ii. [245];
- his arm-chair, [246];
- handwriting of, [247]
- Aristotle, ii. [49]
- Aspasia, ii. [134], [135]
- Bacon, quoted, ii. [4];
- a poet, [8], [49]
- Barthélemi, ii. [44]
- Bisham wood, ii. [278]
- Blackstone, quoted, i. [254]
- Boccaccio, ii. [294], [295]
- Buffon, his sublime but gloomy theory respecting the future of this globe, i. [352]
- Byron, Lord, his Hours of Idleness, quotations or plagiarisms from? i. [132], [174];
- visit to, at Ravenna, [390], [391];
- his meeting with “Monk” Lewis, ii. [208];
- at Venice, [226];
- a gondoliere’s opinion of, [236];
- Shelley’s visit to, at Venice, [237];
- his Don Juan, [241];
- his Childe Harold, [259];
- his low debauchery, ib.;
- a great poet, [260];
- visit to, at Ravenna, [332-345];
- his Letter to Bowles, [342];
- his Cain, [355];
- at Leghorn, [362], [364]
- Calderon, i. [388], ii. [14], [305], [306];
- his Magico Prodigioso, [353], [354]
- Calvin and Servetus, i. [229]
- Castlereagh, ii. [268]
- Catholic emancipation, i. [242] sqq.
- Charlotte, Princess, death of, i. [369]
- Chaucer, ii. [27]
- Chesterfield, Lord, his distinction between simulation and dissimulation, ii. [394]
- Chillon, castle of, i. [340]
- Cicero, ii. [8], [49]
- Clarens, i. [341]
- Cobbett, William, on Annual Parliaments, i. [365]; ii. [276], [289]
- Coleridge, S. T., his tragedy of Remorse, ii. [292], [353], [354]
- Coliseum, the, i. [394]; ii. [260]
- Como, ii. [223-225]
- Comyns, Lord Chief Baron, his definition of libel, i. [254]
- Constantine, the first Christian Emperor, atrocities of, i. 306;
- arch of, ii. [261], [280], [281]
- Correggio, two pictures of, ii. [249], [250]
- Dante, i. [385]; ii. [24];
- the first religious reformer, [27], [40];
- tomb of, [344]
- Danube, the, i. [15], [32]
- Democritus, i. [400]
- Diotima, the prophetess, ii. [88], [89]
- Dowden, Professor, ii. [387]
- Drummond, Sir William, his Academical Questions, i. [327]; ii. [176]
- Eaton, Daniel Isaac, sentence on, for publishing Paine’s Age of Reason, ii. [369-386]
- Ellenborough, Lord, Shelley’s letter to, ii. [369-386]
- Epicurus, i. [421]
- Evian, town of, i. [335], [336]
- Finnerty, Mr. Peter, i. [255]; ii. [399]
- Fitzwilliam, Lord, recall of, ii. [303]
- Fletcher, John, his Two Noble Kinsmen, ii. [255]
- Forsyth’s Travels in Italy, ii. [285]
- Fox, Charles James, i. [238]
- Franceschini, pictures of, ii. [251], [252]
- Fust, specimens of his press, ii. [344]
- Genoa, i. [153]
- George III., i. [237]
- George IV., i. [238]
- Gibbon, his house at Lausanne, i. [343]
- Gisborne, Mr. and Mrs., letters to, ii. [229-231], [290-291], [296-299], [301-309], [312-319], [326-330], [350-356]
- Gisborne, Mrs., ii. [228], [229]
- Godwin, William, his novels, i. [412-416];
- letter to, ii. [231-233], [317];
- his answer to Malthus, [352];
- his law-suit and pecuniary embarrassments, [360], [361]
- Goethe, his Faust, ii. [353]
- Guercino, pictures by, ii. [253]
- Guiccioli, Contessa, Byron’s liaison with, ii. [333], [337], [340];
- her letter to Shelley, [343], [350], [351]
- Guido, his picture of the Rape of Proserpine, ii. [249];
- his Samson, [250];
- his Murder of the Innocents, [250], [251];
- his “Fortune,” [251];
- his “Madonna Lattante,” ib.;
- his picture of Beatrice Cenci, [293]
- Heraclitus, i. [400]
- Hermance, village of, described, i. [333]
- Hesiod, quoted, ii. [61]
- Heyne, on the opinions entertained of the Jews by ancient poets and philosophers, i. [301]
- Hogg, Thomas Jefferson, his Memoirs of Prince Alexy Haimatoff, ii. [387-396]
- Homer, quoted, ii. [56], [62];
- on Calamity, [80], [81];
- the most admirable of all poets, [115];
- quoted, [124], [126], [127]
- Horace, quoted, i. [105]; ii. [275]
- Hume, on causation, i. [327]
- Hunt, Leigh, letters to, i. [381-391];
- invited by Lord Byron to Italy, ii. [268];
- letter to, [294-296], [317], [362], [364]
- Kean, Edmund, ii. [293]
- Keats, John, his Endymion, ii. [322-324];
- his sufferings, [323];
- death of, [327]
- Lafayette, words of, i. [262]
- Lamb, Charles, i. [384]; ii. [295]
- Laplace, demonstration of, i. [319]
- Lausanne, i. [343]
- Lear, King, ii. [14]
- Lewis, M. G., his ghost stories, ii. [208-212]
- Livy, ii. [9];
- description by, [256]
- Lloyd, Charles, ii. [295]
- Locke, on sensation, i. [327]
- Lucretius, quoted, i. [296]
- Luther, ii. [27]
- Lyttelton, Lord, ii. [210], [211], [212]
- Macbeth, quoted, i. [47], [93], [273]; ii. [21], [31], [375]
- Macchiavelli, on political institutions, ii. [17]
- Malthus, i. [280], [281];
- Godwin’s answer to, ii. [232], [352];
- a very clever man, [243]
- Marlow, ii. [223];
- Shelley’s house at, [226]
- Marsyas, ii. [106], [107]
- Mellerie, i. [336], [337]
- Michael Angelo, i. [384], [385];
- his Bacchus, [409]
- Milan Cathedral, ii. [225]
- Milton, death of, i. [370]
- Milton, his Paradise Lost quoted, i. [146], [415];
- stood alone, ii. [16];
- his Paradise Lost, [25], [33];
- quoted, [35]
- Mirabaud’s Système de la Nature, i. [326]
- Mont Blanc, i. [348]
- Moore, Thomas, ii. [339], [357], [358], [361]
- Music, ii. [70], [71]
- Nerni, village of, described, i. [334]
- Newton, Sir Isaac, ii. [374]
- Obscenity, blasphemy against the divine beauty in life, ii. [17]
- O’Neill, Miss, part of Beatrice Cenci fitted for, ii. [293]
- Oxford, reminiscence of, ii. [193]
- Paine, Thomas, i. [278]
- Peacock, Thomas Love, letters to, ii. [221-229], [241-290], [291-293]
- Petrarch, ii. [40]
- Petronius, poetical description of, ii. [265]
- Plato, i. [421];
- essentially a poet, ii. [7], [22], [24];
- the greatest among the Greek philosophers, [48];
- his Symposium, [232]
- Pliny quoted, i. [294]
- Pompeii, ii. [270-275]
- Queen Mab, piratical republication of, ii. [328], [350]
- Raphael, i. [384];
- his St. Cecilia, ii. [252], [253]
- Ravenna, ii. [338]
- Reveley, Henry, letters to, ii. [299-301], [309-312], [325], [326]
- Richardson, Samuel, his Grandison quoted, ii. [237]
- Rome, a city of the dead, ii. [261];
- English burying-place at, [262]
- Rousseau, his Julie, i. [333], [337], [339-341], [343];
- essentially a poet, ii. [30]
- Schiller, his Jungfrau von Orleans, ii. [352]
- Scott’s Lay of the Last Minstrel quoted, i. [47], [212];
- Marmion quoted, [100]
- Shakespeare, quoted, i. [384];
- the greatest individual mind, ii. [40];
- attribution to him of part of The Two Noble Kinsmen, [255]
- Shelley, Mrs., her Frankenstein, i. [417-419]
- Socrates, ii. [53-135], [381]
- Sophocles, ii. [317]
- Southey, Robert, Shelley’s visit to, at Keswick, ii. [295]
- Spinosa, quoted, i. [328]
- St. Gingoux, village of, i. [338]
- St. Peter’s, Rome, ii. [282], [283]
- Suetonius, quoted, i. [294]
- Tasso, bold and true words of, ii. [35], [175];
- manuscripts of, [246], [247]
- Terence, i. [409]
- Theocritus, ii. [19];
- quoted, [291]
- Thomson, quoted, i. [77]
- Translation, vanity of, ii. [7]
- Tuberose, odour of the, ii. [17]
- Vallière, Madame de la, ii. [214]
- Velino, cataract of the, ii. [257]
- Venice, i. [87], [88]; ii. 241
- Vesuvius, ii. [263], [265-267]
- Vevai, i. [343]
- Virgil, quoted, ii. [25];
- his Sixth Æneid, [264]
- Wellesley, Marquis, quotation from a speech of, ii. [369]
- Wieland, his novels, ii. [44]
- Wollstonecraft, Mary, her writings, i. [413]
- Wordsworth, i. [413];
- quoted, ii. [206], [263], [353]
- Yvoire, village of, i. [335]
END OF VOL. I.
Printed by Ballantyne, Hanson & Co. Edinburgh and London
Transcriber’s Notes
A number of typographical errors were corrected silently.
Cover image is in the public domain.
The chapter number jump from VIII(8) to X(10) in the Zastrossi section is in the original text.