INDEX

Abergavenny, 410.
Abergavenny, Earl of, wreck of the, [494] n.;
[495] n.
Abernethy, Dr. John, [525];
C. determines to place himself under the care of, [564], [565].
Achard, F. C., 299 and note.
Acland, Sir John, [523] and note.
Acting, [621-623].
Acton, 184, 186-188, 191.
Adams, Dr. Joseph, 442 and note.
Addison’s Spectator, studied by C. in connection with The Friend, [557], [558].
Address on the Present War, An, 85 n.
Address to a Young Jackass and its Tethered Mother, 119 and note, 120.
Aders, Mrs., [701] n., [702] n., [752];
letters from C., [701], [769].
Adscombe, 175, 184, 188.
Advising, the rage of, [474], [475].
Adye, Major, [493].
Æschylus, Essay on the Prometheus of, [740] and note.
Aids to Reflection, [688] n.;
preparation and publication of, [734] n., [738];
C. calls Stuart’s attention to certain passages in, [741];
favourable opinions of, [741];
[756] n.
Ainger, Rev. Alfred, 400 n.
Akenside, Mark, 197.
Albuera, the Battle of, C.’s articles on, [567] and note.
Alfoxden, 10 n.;
Wordsworth settles at, 224, 227;
326, [515].
Alison’s History of Europe, [628] n.
Allen, Robert, 41 and note, 45, 47, 50;
extract from a letter from him to C., 57 n.;
63, 75, 83, 126;
appointed deputy-surgeon to the Second Royals, 225 and note;
letter to C., 225 n.
Allsop, Mrs., [733] n.
Allsop, Thomas, friendship and correspondence with C., [695], [696];
publishes C.’s letters after his death, [696];
his Letters, Conversations, and Recollections of S. T. Coleridge, 41 n., [527] n., [675] n., [696] and note, [698] n., [721] n.;
[711];
C.’s letter of Oct. 8, 1822, [721] n.;
letter from C., [696].
Allston, Washington, [523];
his bust of C., [570] n., [571];
his portraits of C., [572] and note;
his art and moral character, [573], [574];
[581], [633];
his genius and his misfortunes, [650];
[695] and notes;
letter from C., [498].
Ambleside, 335;
Lloyd settles at, 344;
[577], [578].
America, proposed emigration of C. and other pantisocrats to, 81, 88-91, 98, 101-103, 146;
prospects of war with England, 91;
241;
progress of religious deism in, 414;
C.’s letter concerning the inevitableness of a war with, [629].
Amtmann of Ratzeburg, the, 264, 268, 271.
Amulet, The, 257.
Ancient Mariner, The, 81 n.;
written in a dream or dreamlike reverie, 245 n.;
[696].
Animal Vitality, Essay on, by Thelwall, 179, 212.
Annual Anthology, the, edited by Southey, 207 n., 226 n., 295 n., 298 n.;
C. suggests a classification of poems in, 313, 314, 317;
318, 320, 322 and note, 330, 331, [748] n.
Annual Review, [488], [489], [522].
Anti-Jacobin, The Beauties of the, its libel on C., 320 and note.
Antiquary, The, by Scott, C.’s portrait introduced into an illustration for, [736] and note.
Ants, Treatise on, by Huber, [712].
Ardinghello, by Heinse, [683] and note.
Arnold, Mr., [602], [603].
Arrochar, 432 and note.
Arthur’s Crag, 439.
A-seity, [688] and note.
Asgill, John, and his Treatises, [761] and note.
Ashburton, 305 n.
Ashe, Thomas, his Miscellanies, Æsthetic and Literary, [633] n.
Ashley, C. with the Morgans at, [631].
Ashley, Lord, and the Ten Hours Bills, [689] n.
Ashton, 140 and note.
As late I roamed through Fancy’s shadowy vale, a sonnet, 116 n., 118.
Atheism, 161, 162, 167, 199, 200.
Athenæum, The, 206 n., [536] n., [753] n.
Atlantic Monthly, 206 n.
Autobiographical letters from C. to Thomas Poole, 3-21.
Baader, Franz Xavier von, [683] and note.
Babb, Mr., 422.
Bacon, Lord, his Novum Organum, [735].
Badcock, Mr., 21.
Badcock, Harry, 22.
Badcock, Sam, 22.
Bala, 79.
Ball, Lady, [494] n., [497].
Ball, Sir Alexander John, [484], [487], [496], [497];
mutual regard of C. and, [508] n.;
[524], [554];
C.’s narrative of his life, [579] n.;
his opinions of Lady Nelson and Lady Hamilton, [637].
Ballad of the Dark Ladie, The, 375.
Bampfylde, John Codrington Warwick, his genius, originality, and subsequent lunacy, 309 and note;
his Sixteen Sonnets, 309 n.
Banfill, Mr., 306.
Barbauld, Anna Lætitia, 317 n.
Barbou Casimir, The, 67 and notes, 68.
Barlow, Caleb, 38.
Barr, Mr., his children, 154.
Barrington, Hon. and Rt. Rev. John Shute, Bishop of Durham, [582] and note.
Bassenthwaite Lake, 335, 376 n.;
sunset over, 384.
Beard, On Mrs. Monday’s, 9 n.
Beaumont, Lady, [459], [573], [580], [592], [593];
procures subscribers to C.’s lectures, [599];
[644], [645], [739], [741];
letter from C., [641].
Beaumont, Sir George, 440 n., [462];
his affection for C. preceded by dislike, [468];
[493];
extract from a letter from Wordsworth on John Wordsworth’s death, [494] n.;
[496];
lends the Wordsworths his farmhouse near Coleorton, [509] n.;
[579-581];
C. explains the nature of his quarrel with Wordsworth to, [592], [593];
[595] n., [629];
on Allston as an historical painter, [633];
[739], [741];
letter from C., [570].
Beauties of the Anti-Jacobin, The, its libel on C., 320 and note.
Becky Fall, 305 n.
Beddoes, Dr. Thomas, 157, 211, 338;
C.’s grief at his death, [543] and note, [544] and note;
his advice and sympathy in response to C.’s confession, [543] n.;
his character. [544].
Bedford, Grosvenor, 400 n.
Beet sugar, 299 and note.
Beguines, the, 327 n.
Bell, Rev. Andrew, D. D., [575], [582] and note, [605];
his Origin, Nature, and Object of the New System of Education, [581] and note, [582].
Bell, Rev. Andrew, Life of, by R. and C. C. Southey, [581] n.
Bellingham, John, [598] n.
Bell-ringing in Germany, 293.
Belper, Lord (Edward Strutt), 215 n.
Bennett, Abraham, his electroscope, 218 n., 219 n.
Bentley’s Quarto Edition of Horace, 68 and note.
Benvenuti, [498], [499].
Benyowski, Count, or the Conspiracy of Kamtschatka, a Tragi-comedy, by Kotzebue, 236 and note.
Berdmore, Mr., 80, 82.
Bernard, Sir Thomas, [579] and notes, [580], [582], [585], [595] n., [599].
Betham, Matilda, To. From a Stranger, 404 n.
Bible, The, as literature, C.’s opinion of, 200;
slovenly hexameters in, 398.

Bibliography, Southey’s proposed work, 428-430.
Bibliotheca Britannica, or an History of British Literature, a proposed work, 425-427, 429, 430.
Bigotry, 198.
Billington, Mrs. Elizabeth Weichsel, 368.
Bingen, [751].
Biographia Literaria, 3, 68 n., 74 n., 152 n., 164 n., 174 n., 232 n., 257, 320 n., [498] n., [607] n., [669] n., [670] n.;
C. ill-used by the printer of, [673], [674];
[679], [756] n.
Birmingham, 151, 152.
Bishop’s Middleham, 358 and note, 360.
Blackwood’s Magazine, [756].
Blake, William, as poet, painter, and engraver, [685] n., [686] n.;
C.’s criticism of his poems and their accompanying illustrations, [686-688];
his Songs of Innocence and Experience, [686] n.
Bloomfield, Robert, 395.
Blumenbach, Prof., 279, 298.
Book of the Church, The, [724].
Books, C.’s early taste in, 11 and note, 12;
in later life, 180, 181.
Booksellers, C.’s horror of, [548].
Borrowdale, 431.
Borrowdale mountains, the, 370.
Botany Bay Eclogues, by Robert Southey, 76 n., 116.
Bourbons, C.’s Essay on the restoration of the, [629] and note.
Bourne, Sturges, [542].
Bovey waterfall, 305 n.
Bowdon, Anne, marries Edward Coleridge, 53 n.
Bowdon, Betsy, 18.
Bowdon, John (C.’s uncle), C. goes to live with, 18, 19.
Bowdons, the, C.’s mother’s family, 4.
Bowles, the surgeon, 212.
Bowles, To, 111.
Bowles, Rev. William Lisle, C.’s admiration for his poems, 37, 42, 179;
63 n., 76 and note;
C.’s sonnet to, 111 and note;
115;
his sonnets, 177;
his Hope, an Allegorical Sketch, 179, 180;
196, 197, 211;
his translation of Dean Ogle’s Latin Iambics, 374 and note;
school life at Winchester, 374 n.;
C.’s, Southey’s, and Sotheby’s admiration of, and its effect on their poems, 396;
borrows a line from a poem of C.’s, 396;
his second volume of poems, 403, 404;
[637], [638], [650-652].
Bowscale, the mountain, 339.
Box, [631].
Boyce, Anne Ogden, her Records of a Quaker Family, [538] n.
Boyer, Rev. James, 61, 113, [768] n.
Brahmin creed, the, 229.
Brandes, Herr von, 279.
Brandl’s Samuel Taylor Coleridge and the English Romantic School, 258, [674] n., [740] n.
Bratha, 394, [535].
Bray, near Maidenhead, 69, 70.
Brazil, Emperor of, an enthusiastic student and admirer of C., [696].
Bread-riots, [643] n.
Brecon, 410, 411.
Bremhill, [650].
Brent, Mr., [598], [599].
Brent, Miss Charlotte, [520], [524-526];
C.’s affection for, [565];
[577], [585], [600], [618], [643], [722] n.;
letter from C., [722].
See [Morgan family, the].
Brentford, 326, [673] n.
Bridgewater, 164.
Bright, Henry A., 245 n.
Bristol, C.’s bachelor life in, 133-135;
138, 139, 163 n., 166, 167, 184, 326, 414, [520], [572] n., [621], [623], [624].
Bristol Journal, [633] n.
British Critic, the, 350.
Brookes, Mr., 80, 82.
Brothers, The, by Wordsworth, the original of Leonard in, [494] n.;
C. accused of borrowing a line from, [609] n.
Brown, John, printer and publisher of The Friend, [542] n.
Brun, Frederica, C.’s indebtedness to her for the framework of the Hymn before Sunrise in the Vale of Chamouni, 405 n.
Bruno, Giordano, 371.
Brunton, Miss, 86 and note, 87, 89;
verses to, 94.
Brunton, Elizabeth, 86 n.
Brunton, John, 86 n., 87.
Brunton, Louisa, 86 n.
Bryant, Jacob, 216 n., 219.
Buchan, Earl of, 139.

Buclé, Miss, 136.
See [Cruikshank, Mrs. John].
Buller, Sir Francis (Judge), 6 n.;
obtains a Christ’s Hospital Presentation for C., 18.
Buonaparte, 308, 327 n., 329 and note;
his animosity against C., [498] n.;
[530] n.;
C.’s cartoon and lines on, [642].
Burdett, Sir Francis, [598].
Burke, Edmund, C.’s sonnet to, 116 n., 118;
his Letter to a Noble Lord, 157 and note;
Thelwall on, 166;
177.
Burnett, George, 74, 121, 140-142, 144-151, 174 n., 325, [467].
Burns, Robert, 196;
C.’s poem on, 206 and note, 207.
Burton, 326.
Burton’s Anatomy of Melancholy, 428.
Busts of C., [570] n., [571], [695] n.
Butler, Samuel (afterwards Head Master of Shrewsbury and Bishop of Lichfield), 46 and note.
Buttermere, 393.
Byron, Lord, his Childe Harold, [583];
[666], [694], [726].
Byron, Lord, Conversations of, by Capt. Thomas Medwin, [735] and note.
Cabriere, Miss, 18.
Caermarthen, 411.
Caldbeck, 376 n., [724].
Calder, the river, 339.
Caldwell, Rev. George, 25 and note, 29, 71, 82.
Calne, Wiltshire, C.’s life at, [641-653].
Calvert, Raisley, 345 n.
Calvert, William, proposes to study chemistry with C. and Wordsworth, 345;
his portrait in a poem of Wordsworth’s, 345 n.;
proposes to share his new house near Greta Hall with Wordsworth and his sister, 346;
his sense and ability, 346;
347, 348.
Cambridge, description of, 39;
137, 270.
Cambridge, Reminiscences of, by Henry Gunning, 24 n., 363 n.
Cambridge Intelligencer, The, 93 n., 218 n.
Cambridge University, C.’s life at, 22-57, 70-72, 81-129;
C. thinks of leaving, 97 n.;
137.
Cameos and intaglios, casts of, [703] and note.
Campbell, James Dykes, 251 n., 337 n.;
his Samuel Taylor Coleridge, 269 n., [527] n., [572] n., [600] n., [631] n., [653] n., [666] n., [667] n., [674] n., [681] n., [684] n., [698] n., [752] n., [753] n., [772] n.
Canary Islands, 417, 418.
Canning, George, [542], [674].
Canova, Antonio, on Allston’s modelling, [573].
Cape Esperichel, [473].
Carlisle, Sir Anthony, 341 and note.
Carlton House, 392.
Carlyle, Thomas, his portrait of C. in the Life of Sterling, [771] n.
Carlyon, Clement, M. D., his Early Years and Late Recollections, 258, 298 n.
Carnosity, Mrs., [472].
Carrock, the mountain, a tempest on, 339, 340.
Carrock man, the, 339.
Cartwright, Major John, [635] and note.
Cary, Rev. Henry, his Memoir of H. F. Cary, [676] n.
Cary, H. F., Memoir of, by Henry Cary, [676] n.
Cary, Rev. H. F., his translation of the Divina Commedia, [676], [677] and note, [678], [679];
C. introduces himself to, [676] n.;
[685], [699];
letters from C., [676], [677], [731], [760].
Casimir, the Barbou, 67 and notes, 68.
Castlereagh, Lord, [662].
Castle Spectre, The, a play by Monk Lewis, C.’s criticism of, 236 and note, 237, 238;
[626].
Catania, [458].
Cat-serenades in Malta, [483] n., [484] n.
Catherine II., Empress of Russia, 207 n.
Cathloma, 51.
Catholic Emancipation, C.’s Letters to Judge Fletcher on, [629] and note, [634] and note, [635], [636], [642].
Catholicism in Germany, 291, 292.
Catholic question, the, letters in the Courier on, [567] and note;
C. proposes to again write for the Courier on, [660], [662];
arrangements for the proposed articles on, [664], [665].
Cattermole, George, [750] n.;
letter from C., [750].
Cattermole, Richard, [750] n.
Cattle, disposal of dead and sick, in Germany, 294.
Chalmers, Rev. Thomas, D. D., calls on C., [752] and note.
Chantrey, Mr. (afterwards Sir) Francis, R. A., C.’s impressions of, [699];
[727].
Chapman, Mr., appointed Public Secretary of Malta, [491], [496].
Character, A, [631] n.
Charity, 110 n.
Chatterton, Monody on the Death of, 110 n., 158 n.;
C.’s opinion of it in 1797, 222, 223;
[620] n.
Chatterton, Thomas, unpopularity of his poems, 221, 222;
Southey’s exertions in aid of his sister, 221, 222.
Chemistry, C. proposes to study, 345-347.
Chepstow, 139, 140 n.
Chester, John, accompanies C. to Germany, 259;
265, 267, 269 n., 272, 280, 281, 300.
Childe Harold, by Byron, [583].
Childhood, memory of, in old age, 428.
Children in cotton factories, legislation as to the employment of, [689] and note.
Christ, both God and man, [710].
Christabel, written in a dream or dreamlike reverie, 245 n.;
310, 313, 317, 337 and note, 342, 349;
Conclusion to Part II., 355 and note, 356 n.;
Part II., 405 n.;
a fine edition proposed, 421, 422;
437 n., [523];
C. quotes from, [609], [610];
the broken friendship commemorated in, [609] n.;
the copyright of, [669];
the Edinburgh Review’s unkind criticism of, [669] and note, [670];
Mr. Frere advises C. to finish, [674];
[696].
Christianity, the one true Philosophy (C.’s magnum opus), outline of, [632], [633];
fragmentary remains of, [632] n.;
the sole motive for C.’s wish to live, [668];
J. H. Green helps to lay the foundations of, [679] n.;
[694], [753];
plans for, [772], [773].
Christian Observer, [653] n.
Christmas Carol, A, 330.
Christmas Indoors in North Germany, 257, 275 n.
Christmas Out of Doors, 257.
Christmas-tree, the German, 289, 290.
Christ’s Hospital, C.’s life at, 18-22;
173 n.
Christ’s Hospital Five and Thirty Years Ago, by Charles Lamb, 20 n.
Christ’s Hospital, List of Exhibitioners, from 1566-1885, 41 n.
Chronicle, Morning, 111 n., 114, 116 n., 119 n., 126, 162, 167, [505], [506], [606] n., [615], [616].
Chubb, Mr., of Bridgwater, 231.
Church, The Book of the, by Southey, [724].
Church, the English, 135, 306, [651-653], [676], [757].
Church, the Scottish, in a state of ossification, [744], [745].
Church, the Wesleyan, [769].
Cibber, Colley, and his son, Theophilus, [693].
Cibber, Theophilus, his reply to his father, [693].
Cintra, Wordsworth’s pamphlet on the Convention of, [534] and note, [543] and note;
C.’s criticism of, [548-550].
Clagget, Charles, 70 and note.
Clare, Lord, [638].
Clarke, Mrs., the notorious, [543] n.
Clarkson, Mrs., [592].
Clarkson, Thomas, 363, 398;
his History of the Abolition of the Slave Trade, [527] and note, [528-530];
his character, [529], [530];
C.’s review of his book, [535], [536];
[538] n., [547], [548];
on the second rupture between C. and Wordsworth, [599] n.
Clement, Mr., a bookseller, [548].
Clergyman, an earnest young, [691].
Clevedon, C.’s honeymoon at, 136.
Clock, a motto for a market, [553] and note, [554] n.
Coates, Matthew, 441 n.;
his belief in the impersonality of the deity, 444;
letter from C., 441.
Coates, Mrs. Matthew, 442, 443.

Cobham, [673] n.
Cole, Mrs., 271.
Coleorton, Memorials of, 369 n., 440.
Coleorton Farmhouse, C.’s visit to the Wordsworths at, [509-514].
Coleridge, Anne (sister—usually called “Nancy”), 8 and note, 21, 26.
Coleridge, Berkeley (son), birth of, 247 and note, 248, 249;
taken with smallpox, 259 n., 260 n.;
262, 267, 272;
death of, 247 n., 282-287, 289.
Coleridge, David Hartley (son—usually called “Hartley”), birth of, 169;
176, 205, 213, 220, 231, 245, 260-262, 267 n., 289, 296, 305, 318;
his talkativeness and boisterousness at the age of three, 321;
his theologico-astronomical hypothesis as to stars, 323;
a pompous remark by, 332;
illness, 342, 343;
early astronomical observations, 342, 343;
an extraordinary creature, 343, 344;
345 n., 355, 356 n., 359;
a poet in spite of his low forehead, 395;
408, 413, 416, 421;
at seven years, 443;
plans for his education, [461], [462];
[468], [508];

visits the Wordsworths at Coleorton Farmhouse with his father, [509-514];
as a traveller, [509];
his character at ten years, [510], [512];
[511];
under his father’s sole care for four or five months, [511] n.;
spends five or six weeks with his father and the Wordsworths at Basil Montagu’s house in London, [511] n.;
portraits of, [511] n.;
[521];
his appearance, behavior, and mental acuteness at the age of thirteen, [564];
at fifteen, [576], [577];
at Mr. Dawes’s school, [576] and note, [577];
[583] n.;
friendly relations with his cousins, [675] and note;
C. asks Poole to invite him to Stowey, [675];
visits Stowey, [675] n.;
[684], [721], [726];
letter of advice from S. T. C., [511].
Coleridge, Derwent (son of S. T. C. and father of the editor), birth baptism of, 338 and note;
344, and 355, 359;
learns his letters, 393, 395;
408, 413, 416;
at three years, 443;
[462], [468], [521];
at nine years, [564];
at eleven years, [576], [577];
at Mr. Dawes’s school, [576] and note, [577];
[580], [605] n., [671] n.;
John Hookham Frere’s assistance in sending him to Cambridge, [675] and note;
[707], [711].
Coleridge, Miss Edith, [670] n.
Coleridge, Edward (brother), 7, 53-55, [699] n.
Coleridge, Rev. Edward (nephew), [724] n.;
letters from C., [724], [738], [744].
Coleridge, Frances Duke (niece), [726] and note, [740].
Coleridge, Francis Syndercombe (brother), 8, 9, 11, 12, 13;
his boyish quarrel with S. T. C., 13, 14;
becomes a midshipman, 17;
dies, 53 and note.
Coleridge, Frederick (nephew), 56.
Coleridge, Rev. George (brother), 7, 8;
his character and ability, 8;
12, 21 n., 25 n.;
his lines to Genius, Ibi Hæc Incondita Solus, 43 n.;
59;
his self-forgetting economy, 65;
extract from a letter from J. Plampin, 70 n.;
95, 97 n., 98 and note, 261;
visit from S. T. C. and his wife, 305 n., 306;
[467], [498] n., [512];
disapproves of S. T. C.’s intended separation from his wife and refuses to receive him and his family into his house, [523] and note;
[699] n.;
approaching death of, [746-748];
S. T. C.’s relations with, [747], [748];
letters from S. T. C., 22, 23, 42, 53, 55, 59, 60, 62-70, 103, 239.
Coleridge, the Rev. George, To, a dedication, 223 and note.
Coleridge, Rev. George May (nephew), his friendly relations with Hartley C., [675] and note;
letter from C., [746].
Coleridge, Hartley, Poems of, [511] n.
Coleridge, Henry Nelson (nephew and son-in-law), 3, [553] n., [570] n., [579] n., [744-746];
sketch of his life, [756] n.;
letter from S. T. C., [756].
Coleridge, Mrs. Henry Nelson (Sara Coleridge), 9 n., 163 n.;
extract from a letter from Mrs. Wordsworth, 220 n.;
320 n., 327 n., [572] n.
Coleridge, James, the younger, (nephew), his narrow escape, 56.

Coleridge, Colonel James (brother), 7, 54, 56, 61, 306, [724] n., [726] n.;
letter from S. T. C., 61.
Coleridge, Mrs. James (sister-in-law), [740].
Coleridge, John (brother), 7.
Coleridge, John (grandfather), 4, 5.
Coleridge, Mrs. John (mother), 5 n., 7, 13-17, 21 n., 25, 56;
letter from S. T. C., 21.
Coleridge, Rev. John (father), 5 and note, 6, 7, 10-12, 15, 16;
dies, 17, 18;
his character, 18.
Coleridge, John Duke, Lord Chief-Justice (great-nephew), [572] n., [699] n., [745] n.
Coleridge, Sir John Taylor (nephew), his friendly relations with Hartley C., [675] and note;
editor of The Quarterly Review, [736] and note, [737];
his judgment and knowledge of the world, [739];
delighted with Aids to Reflection, [739];
[740] n., [744], [745];
letter from S. T. C., [734].
Coleridge, Luke Herman (brother), 8, 21, 22.
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, his autobiographical letters to Thomas Poole, 3-18;
ancestry and parentage, 4-7;
birth, 6, 9 and note;
his brothers and sister, 7-9;
christened, 9;
infancy and childhood, 9-12;
learns to read, 10;
early taste in books, 11 and note, 12;
his dreaminess and indisposition to bodily activity in childhood, 12;
boyhood, 12-21;
has a dangerous fever, 12-13;
quarrels with his brother Frank, runs away, and is found and brought back, 13-15;
his imagination developed early by the reading of fairy tales, 16;
a Christ’s Hospital Presentation procured for him by Judge Buller, 18;
visits his maternal uncle, Mr. John Bowdon, in London, 18, 19;
becomes a Blue-Coat boy, 19;
his life at Christ’s Hospital, 20-22;
enters Jesus College, Cambridge, 22, 23;
becomes acquainted with the Evans family, 23 and note, 24;
writes a Greek Ode, for which he obtains the Browne gold medal for 1792, 43 and note;
is matriculated as pensioner, 44 and note;
his examination for the Craven Scholarship, 45 and note, 46;
his temperament, 47;
takes violin lessons, 49;
enlists in the army, 57 and note;
nurses a comrade who is ill of smallpox in the Henley workhouse, 58 and note;
his enlistment disclosed to his family, 57 n., 58, 59;
remorse, 59-61, 64, 65;
arrangements resulting in his discharge, 61-70;
his religious beliefs at twenty-one, 68, 69;
returns to the university and is punished, 70, 71;
drops his gay acquaintances and settles down to hard work, 71;
makes a tour of North Wales with Mr. J. Hucks, 72-81;
falls in love with Miss Sarah Fricker, 81;
proposes to go to America with a colony of pantisocrats, 81, 88-91, 101-103;
his interest in Miss Fricker cools and his old love for Mary Evans revives, 89;
his indolence, 103, 104;
on his own poetry, 112;
considers going to Wales with Southey and others to found a colony of pantisocrats, 121, 122;
his love for Mary Evans proves hopeless, 122-126;
in lodgings in Bristol after having left Cambridge without taking his degree, 133-135;
marries Miss Sarah Fricker and spends the honeymoon in a cottage at Clevedon, 136;
breaks with Southey, 136-151;
happiness in early married life, 139;
his tour to procure subscribers for the Watchman, 151 and note, 152-154;
poverty, 154, 155;
receives a communication from Mr. Thomas Poole that seven or eight friends have undertaken to subscribe a certain sum to be paid annually to him as the author of the monody on Chatterton, 158 n.;
discontinues the Watchman, 158;
takes Charles Lloyd into his home, 168-170;
birth of his first child, David Hartley, 169;
considers starting a day school at Derby, 170 and note;
has a severe attack of neuralgia for which he takes laudanum, 173-176;
early use of opium and beginning of the habit, 173 n., 174 n.;
selects twenty-eight sonnets by himself, Southey, Lloyd, Lamb, and others and has them privately printed, to be bound up with Bowles’s sonnets, 177, 206 and note;
his description of himself in 1796, 180, 181;
his personal appearance as described by another, 180 n., 181 n.;
anxious to take a cottage at Nether Stowey and support himself by gardening, 184-194;
makes arrangements to carry out this plan, 209;
his partial reconciliation with Southey, 210, 211;
in the cottage at Nether Stowey, 213;
his engagement as tutor to the children of Mrs. Evans of Darley Hall breaks down, 215 n.;
his visit at Mrs. Evans’s house, 216;
daily life at Nether Stowey, 219, 220;
visits Wordsworth at Racedown, 220 and note, 221;
secures a house (Alfoxden) for Wordsworth near Stowey, 224;
visits him there, 227;
finishes his tragedy, Osorio, 231;
suspected of conspiracy with Wordsworth and Thelwall against the government, 232 n.;
accepts an annuity of £150 for life from Josiah and Thomas Wedgwood, 234 and note, 235 and note;
declines an offer of the Unitarian pastorate at Shrewsbury, 235 and note, 236;
writes Joseph Cottle in regard to a third edition of his poems, 239;
rupture with Lloyd, 238, 245 n., 246;
first recourse to opium to relieve distress of mind, 245 n.;
birth of a second child, Berkeley, 247;
temporary estrangement from Lamb caused by Lloyd, 249-253;
goes to Germany with William Wordsworth, Dorothy Wordsworth, and John Chester, for the purpose of study and observation, 258-262;
life en pension with Chester in the family of a German pastor at Ratzeburg, after parting from the Wordsworths at Hamburg, 262-278;
learning the German language, 262, 263, 267, 268;
writes a poem in German, 263;
proposes to proceed to Göttingen, 268-270;
proposes to write a life of Lessing, 270;
travels by coach from Ratzeburg to Göttingen, passing through Hanover, 278-280;
enters the University, 281;
receives word of the death of his little son, Berkeley, 282-287;
learns the Gothic and Theotuscan languages, 298;
reconciliation with Southey, after the return from Germany, 303, 304;
with his wife and child he visits the Southeys at Exeter, 305 and note;
accompanies Southey on a walking-tour in Dartmoor, 305 and note;
makes a tour of the Lake Country, 312 n., 313;
in London, writing for the Morning Post, 315-332;
life at Greta Hall, near Keswick, 335-444;
proposes to write an essay on the elements of poetry, 338, 347;
proposes to study chemistry with William Calvert as a fellow-student, 345-347;
proposes to write a book on the originality and merits of Locke, Hobbes, and Hume, 349, 350;
spends a week at Scarborough, riding and bathing for his health, 361-363;
divides the winter of 1801-1802 between London and Nether Stowey, 365-368;
domestic unhappiness, 366;
writes the Ode to Dejection, addressing it to Wordsworth, 378-384;
discouraged about his poetic faculty, 388;
a separation from his wife considered and harmony restored, 389, 390;
makes a walking-tour of the Lake Country, 393 and note, 394;
makes a tour of South Wales with Thomas and Sarah Wedgwood, 410-414;
his regimen at this time, 412, 413, 416, 417;
birth of his daughter Sara, 416;
with Charles and Mary Lamb in London, 421, 422;
takes Mary Lamb to the private madhouse at Hugsden, 422;
his tour in Scotland, 431-441;
love for and delight in his children, 443;
visits Wordsworth at Grasmere and is taken ill there, [447], [448];
his rapid recovery, [451];
plans and preparations for going abroad, [447-469];
his mental attitude towards his wife, [468];
voyage to Malta, [469-481];
dislike of his own first name, [470], [471];
life in Malta, [481-484];
a Sicilian tour, [485] and note, [486] and note, [487];
in Malta again, [487-497];
his duties as Acting Public Secretary at Malta, [487], [491], [493], [494] and note, [495-497];
his grief at Captain John Wordsworth’s death, [494] and note, [495] and note, [497];
in Italy, [498-502];
returns to England, [501];
remains in and about London, writing political articles for the Courier, [505-509];
invited to deliver a course of lectures at the Royal Institution, [507];
visits the Wordsworths at Coleorton Farmhouse with his son Hartley, [509-514];
spends five or six weeks with Hartley in the company of the Wordsworths at Basil Montagu’s house in London, [511] n.;
outlines his course of lectures at the Royal Institution, [515], [516], [522];
begins his lectures, [525];
a change for the better in health, habits, and spirits, the result of his placing himself under the care of a physician, [533] and note, [543] n.;
with the Wordsworths at Grasmere, devoting himself to the publication of The Friend, [533-559];
in London, [564];
determines to place himself under the care of Dr. John Abernethy, [564], [565];
visits the Morgans in Portland Place, Hammersmith, [566-575];
life-masks, death-mask, busts, and portraits, [570] and note, [572] and notes;
last visit to Greta Hall and the Lake Country, [575-578];
misunderstanding with Wordsworth, [576] n., [577], [578], [586-588];
visits the Morgans at No. 71 Berners Street, [579-612];
preparations for another course of lectures, [579], [580], [582], [585];
writes Wordsworth letters of explanation, [588-595];
his Lectures on the Drama at Willis’s Rooms, [595] and notes, [596], [597], [599];
reconciled with Wordsworth, [596], [597], [599];
second rupture with Wordsworth, [599] n., [600] n.;
Josiah’s half of the Wedgwood annuity withdrawn on account of C.’s abuse of opium, [602], [611] and note;
successful production of his tragedy, Remorse (Osorio rewritten), at Drury Lane Theatre, [602-611];
sells a part of his library, [616] and note;
anguish and remorse from the abuse of opium, [616-621], [623], [624];
at Bristol, [621-626];
proposes to translate Faust for John Murray, [624] and note, [625], [626];
convalescent, [631];
with the Morgans at Ashley, near Box, [631];
writing at his projected great work, Christianity, the one true Philosophy, [632] and note, [633];
with the Morgans at Mr. Page’s, Calne, Wilts, [641-653];
resolves to free himself from his opium habit and arranges to enter the house of James Gillman, Esq., a surgeon, in Highgate (an arrangement which ends only with his life), [657-659];
submits his drama Zapolya to the Drury Lane Committee, and, after its rejection, publishes it in book form, [666] and note, [667-669];
publishes Sibylline Leaves and Biographia Literaria, [673];
disputes with his publishers, Fenner and Curtis, [673], [674] and note;
proposes a new Encyclopædia, [674];
his reputation as a critic, [677] n.;
visits Joseph Henry Green, Esq., at St. Lawrence, near Maldon, [690-693];
his snuff-taking habits, [691], [692] and note;
his friendship and correspondence with Thomas Allsop, [695], [696];
delivers a course of Lectures on the History of Philosophy at the Crown and Anchor, Strand, [698] and note;
criticises his portrait by Thomas Phillips, [699], [700];
at the seashore, [700], [701];
a candidate for associateship in the Royal Society of Literature, [726], [727];
elected as a Royal Associate, [728];
at Ramsgate, [729-731];
prepares and publishes Aids to Reflection, [734] n., [738];
reads an Essay on the Prometheus of Æschylus before the Royal Society of Literature, [739], [740];
another visit to Ramsgate, [742-744];
takes a seven weeks’ continental tour with Wordsworth and his daughter, [751];
illness, [754-756], [758];
convalescence, [760], [761];
begins to see a new edition of his poetical works through the press, [769] n.;
writes a letter to his godchild from his deathbed, [775], [776].
Coleridge, Early Recollections of, by Joseph Cottle, 139 n., 140 n., 151 n., 219 n., 232 n., 251 n., [616] n., [617] n., [633] n.
Coleridge, Life of, by James Gillman, 3, 20 n., 23 n., 24 n., 45 n., 46 n., 171 n., 257, [680] n., [761] n.
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, by James Dykes Campbell, 269 n., [527] n., [572] n., [600] n., [631] n., [653] n., [666] n., [667] n., [674] n., [681] n., [684] n., [698] n., [752] n., [753] n., [772] n.
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, and the English Romantic School, by Alois Brandl, 258, [674] n., [740] n.
Coleridge, S. T., Letters, Conversations, and Recollections of, by Thomas Allsop, 41 n., [527] n., [675] n.;
the publication of, regarded by C.’s friends as an act of bad faith, [696] and note, [721] n.;
[698] n.
Coleridge, S. T., Spiritual Philosophy, founded on the Teaching of, by J. H. Green, [680] n.
Coleridge’s Logic, article in The Athenæum, [753] n.
Coleridge and Southey, Reminiscences of, by Joseph Cottle, 268 n., 269 n., 417, [456] n., [617] n.
Coleridge, Mrs. Samuel Taylor (Sarah Fricker, afterwards called “Sara”), edits the second edition of Biographia Literaria, 3;
136, 145, 146, 150, 151;
illness and recovery of, 155, 156;
168;
birth of her first child, David Hartley, 169;
174 n., 181, 188-190, 205, 213, 214, 216, 224, 245;
birth of her second child, Berkeley, 247-249;
257, 258, 259 n.;
extract from a letter to S. T. C., 263 n.;
extract from a letter to Mrs. Lovell, 267 n.;
271, 297, 312 n., 313, 318, 321, 325, 326, 332;
birth and baptism of her third child, Derwent, 338 and note;
her devotion saves his life, 338 n.;
387;
fears of a separation from her husband operate to restore harmony, 389, 390;
her faults as detailed by S. T. C., 389, 390;
392, 393 n., 395, 396;
birth of a daughter, Sara, 416;
418, 443, [457], [467], [490], [491], [521];
extract from a letter to Poole, [576] n.;
[578];
John Kenyon a kind friend to, [639] n.;
letters from S. T. C., 259-266, 271, 277, 284, 288, 367, 410, 420, 431, [460], [467], [480], [496], [507], [509], [563], [579], [583], [602];
letter to S. T. C. after her little Berkeley’s death, 282 n.
Coleridge, Sara (daughter), her birth, 416;
in infancy, 443;
at the age of nine, [575], [576];
[580], [724];
marries her cousin, Henry Nelson C., [756] n.
See [Coleridge, Mrs. Henry Nelson].
Coleridge, Sara, Memoir and Letters of, [461] n., [758] n.
Coleridge, the Hundred of, in North Devon, 4 and note.
Coleridge, the Parish of, 4 n.
Coleridge, William (brother), 7.
Coleridge, William Hart (nephew, afterwards Bishop of Barbadoes), befriends Hartley C., [675] n.;
[707];
his portrait by Thomas Phillips, R. A., [740] and note.
Coleridge, William Rennell, [699] n.
Coleridge family, origin of, 4 n.
Collier, John Payne, [575] n.
Collins, William, his Ode on the Poetical Character, 196;
his Odes, 318.
Collins, William, A. R. A. (afterward, R. A.), letter from C., [693].
Colman, George, the younger, genius of, [621];
his Who wants a Guinea?, [621] n.
Columbus, the, a vessel, [730].
Combe Florey, 308 n.
Comberbacke, Silas Tomkyn, C.’s assumed name, 62.
Comic Drama, the downfall of the, [616].
Complaint of Ninathoma, The, 51.
Concerning Poetry, a proposed book, 347, 386, 387.
Conciones ad Populum, 85 n., 161 n., 166, [454] n., [527] n.
Confessions of an Enquiring Spirit, originally addressed to Rev. Edward Coleridge, [724] n.;
[756] n.
Coniston, 394.
Connubial Rupture, On a late, 179 n.
Consciousness of infants, 283.
Conservative Party in 1832, the, [757].
Consolation, a note of, 113.
Consolations and Comforts, etc., a projected book, [452], [453].
Constant, Benjamin, his tract On the Strength of the Existing Government of France, and the Necessity of supporting it, 219 and note.
Contempt, C.’s definition of, 198.
Contentment, Motives of, by Archdeacon Paley, 47.
Conversation, C.’s, 181, [752] and note;
C.’s maxims of, 244.
Conversation evenings at the Gillmans’, [740], [741], [774].
Cookson, Dr., Canon of Windsor and Rector of Forncett, Norfolk, 311 and note.
Copland, 400.
Cordomi, a pseudonym of C.’s, 295 n.
Cornhill Magazine, 345 n.
Cornish, Mr., 66.
Corry, Right Hon. Isaac, 390 and note.
Corsham, [650], [652] n.
Corsica, 174 n.
Corsican Rangers, [554].
Cote House, Josiah Wedgwood’s residence, C. visits, 416;
[455] n.
Cottle, Joseph, agrees to pay C. a fixed sum for his poetry, 136;
137;
his Early Recollections of Coleridge, 139 n., 140 n., 151 n., 219 n., 232 n., 251 n., [616] n., [617] n., [633] n.;
144, 184, 185, 191, 192, 212;
his Reminiscences of Coleridge and Southey, 268 n., 269 n., 417, [456] n., [617] n.;
his financial difficulties, 319;
358;
his Malvern Hill, 358;
his publication of C.’s letters of confession and remorse deeply resented by C.’s family and friends, [616] n., [617] n.;
convalescent after a dangerous illness, [619];
letters from C., 133, 134, 154, 218 n., 220, 238, 251 n., [616], [619].
Courier, the, 230;
C. writes for, [505], [506], [507] n., [520];
[534] and note, [543];
its conduct during the investigation of the charges against the Duke of York universally extolled, [545];
articles and recommendations for, [567] and notes, [568];
C. as a candidate for the place of auxiliary to, [568-570];
[568] n.;
C. breaks with, [574];
[598], [629] and notes, [634] and note;
change in the character of, [660-662], [664];
C. proposes to write on the Catholic question for, [660], [662];
arrangements for the proposed articles, [664], [665].
Courier office, C. lodges at the, [505], [520].
Cowper, William, “the divine chit-chat of,” 197 and note;
his Task, 242 n.
Craven, Countess of, 86 n.
Craven Scholarship, C.’s examination for the, 45 and note, 46.
Crediton, 5 n., 11.
Critical Review, 185, 489.
Criticism welcome to true poets, 402.
Crompton, Dr., of Derby, 215;
letter from Thelwall on the Wedgwood annuity, 234 n.
Crompton, Mrs., of Derby, 215.
Crompton, Mrs., of Eaton Hall, [758].
Crompton, Dr. Peter, of Eaton Hall, 359 and note, [758] n.
Cruikshank, Ellen, 165.
Cruikshank, John, 136, 177, 184, 188.
Cruikshank, Mrs. John (Anna), 177;
lines to, 177 n.;
213.
See [Buclé, Miss].
Cryptogram, C.’s, [597] n.
Cunningham, Rev. J. W., his Velvet Cushion, [651] and note.
Cupid turned Chymist, 54 n., 56.
Currie, James, 359 and note.
Curse of Kehama, The, by Southey, [684].

Curtis, Rev. T., partner of Fenner, C.’s publisher, his ill-usage of C., [674].
Cuxhaven, 259.
Dalton, John, [457] and note.
Damer, Hon. Mrs., 368.
Dana, Miss R. Charlotte, [572] n.
Dante and his Divina Commedia, [676], [677] and note, [678], [679], [731] n., [732].
Danvers, Charles, his kindness of heart, 316.
Dark Ladie, The Ballad of the, 375.
Darnley, Earl, [629].
Dartmoor, a walking-tour in, 305 and note.
Dartmouth, 305 and note.
Darwin, Dr. Erasmus, C.’s conversation with, 152, 153;
his philosophy of insincerity, 161;
C.’s opinion of his poems, 164;
211;
the first literary character in Europe, and the most original-minded man, 215;
386, [648].
Dash Beck, 375 n., 376 n.
Davy, Sir Humphry, 315-317, 321, 324, 326, 344, 350, 357, 365, 379 n., [448];
a Theo-mammonist, [455];
[456];
C. attends his lectures, [462] and note, [463];
C.’s esteem and admiration for, [514];
his successful efforts to induce C. to give a course of lectures at the Royal Institution, [515], [516];
seriously ill, [520], [521];
hears from C. of his improvement in health and habits, [533] n.;
[673] n.;
letters from C., 336-341, 345, [514].
Davy, Sir Humphry, Fragmentary Remains of, edited by Dr. Davy, 343 n., [533] n.
Dawe, George, R. A., his life-mask and portrait of C., [572] and note;
his funeral and C.’s epigram thereon, [572] n.;
immortalized by Lamb, [572] n.;
engaged on a picture to illustrate C.’s poem, Love, [573];
his admiration for Allston’s modelling, [573];
his character and manners, [581];
a fortunate grub, [605].
Dawes, Rev. John, teacher of Hartley and Derwent C., [576] and note, [577].
Death, fear of, responsible for many virtues, [744];
the nature of, [762], [763].
Death and life, meditations on, 283-287.
Death-mask of C., a, [570] n.
Death of Mattathias, The, by Robert Southey, 108 and note.
Deism, religious, 414.
Dejection: An Ode, 378 and note, 379 and note, 380-384, 405 n.
Della Cruscanism, 196.
Democracy, C. disavows belief in, 104-105;
134, 243.
See [Republicanism] and [Pantisocracy].
Denbigh, 80, 81.
Denman, Miss, [769], [770].
Dentist, a French, 40.
De Quincey, Thomas, 405 n., [525];
revises the proofs and writes an appendix for Wordsworth’s pamphlet On the Convention of Cintra, [549], [550] n.;
[563], [601], [772] n.
Derby, 152;
proposal to start a school in, 170 and note;
188;
the people of, 215 and note, 216.
Derwent, the river, 339.
Descartes, René, 351 and note.
Destiny of Nations, The, 278 n., 178 n.
Deutschland in seiner tiefsten Erniedrigung, by John Philip Palm, C.’s translation of, [530].
De Vere, Aubrey, extract from a letter from Sir William Rowan Hamilton to, [759] n.
Devil’s Thoughts, The, by Coleridge and Southey, 318.
Devock Lake, 393.
Devonshire, 305 and note.
Devonshire, Georgiana, Duchess of, Ode to, 320 and note, 330.
Dibdin, Mr., stage-manager at Drury Lane Theatre, [666].
Disappointment, To, 28.
Dissuasion from Popery, by Jeremy Taylor, [639].
Divina Commedia, C. praises the Rev. H. F. Cary’s translation of, [676], [677] and note, [678], [679];
Gabriele Rossetti’s essay on the mechanism and interpretation of, [732].
Doctor, The, [583] n., [584] n.
Döring, Herr von, 279.
Dove, Dr. Daniel, [583] and note, [584].
Dove Cottage, Grasmere, 379 n.
See [Grasmere].
Dowseborough, 225 n.
Drakard, John, [567] and note.
Drayton, Michael, his Poly-Olbion, 374 n.
Dreams, the state of mind in, [663].
Drury Lane Theatre, C.’s Zapolya before the committee of, [666] and note, [667].
Dryden, John, his slovenly verses, [672].
Dubois, Edward, [705] and note.
Duchess, Ode to the, 320 and note, 330.
Dunmow, Essex, [456], [459].
Duns Scotus, 358.
Dupuis, Charles François, his Origine de tous les Cultes, ou Religion Universelle, 181 and note.
Durham, Bishop of, [582] and note.
Durham, C. reading Duns Scotus at, 358-361.
Duty, [495] n.
Dyer, George, 84, 93, 316, 317;
his article on Southey in Public Characters for 1799-1800, 317 and note;
363, 422;
sketch of his life, [748] n.;
C.’s esteem and affection for, [748], [749];
his benevolence and beneficence, [749];
letter from C., [748].
Earl of Abergavenny, the wreck of, [494] n.;
[495] n.
Early Recollections of Coleridge, by Joseph Cottle, 139 n., 140 n., 151 n., 219 n., 232 n., 251 n., [616] n., [617] n., [633] n.
Early Years and Late Recollections, by Clement Carlyon, M. D., 258, 298 n.
East Tarbet, 431, 432 and note, 433.
Echoes, 400 n.
Edgeworth, Maria, her Helen, [773], [774].
Edgeworth, Richard Lovell, 262.
Edgeworth’s Essay on Education, 261.
Edgeworths, the, very miserable when children, 262.
Edinburgh, a place of literary gossip, 423;
C.’s visit to, 434-440;
Southey’s first impressions of, 438 n.
Edinburgh Review, The, 438 n.;
Southey declines Scott’s offer to secure him a place on, [521] and note, [522];
its attitude towards C., [527];
C.’s review of Clarkson’s book in, [527] and note, [528-530];
[636], [637];
severe review of Christabel in, [669] and note, [670];
Jeffrey’s reply to C. in, [669] n.;
re-echoes C.’s praise of Cary’s Dante, [677] n.;
its broad, predetermined abuse of C., [697], [723];
its influence on the sale of Wordsworth’s books in Scotland, [741], [742].
Edmund Oliver, by Charles Lloyd, drawn from C.’s life, 252 and note;
311.
Education, Practical, by Richard Lovell Edgeworth and Maria Edgeworth, 261.
Education through the imagination preferable to that which makes the senses the only criteria of belief, 16, 17.
Edwards, Rev. Mr., of Birmingham, extract from a letter from C. to, 174 n.
Edwards, Thomas, LL. D., 101 and note.
Egremont, 393.
Egypt, Observations on, [486] n.
Egypt, political relations of, [492].
Eichhorn, Prof., of Göttingen, 298, [564], [707], [773].
Einbeck, 279, 280.
Elbe, the, 259, 277.
Electrometers of taste, 218 and note.
Elegy, by Robert Southey, 115.
Elleray, [535].
Elliot, H., Minister at the Court of Naples, [508] and note.
Elliston, Mr., an actor, [611].
Elmsley, Rev. Peter, 438 and note, 439.
Encyclopædia Metropolitana, a work projected by C., [674], [681].
Encyclopædias, 427, 429, 430.
Ennerdale, 393.
Epitaph, by C., [769] and note, [770], [771].
Epitaph, by Wordsworth, 284.
Erigena, Joannes Scotus, 417;
the modern founder of the school of pantheism, 424.
Erskine, Lord, his Bill for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, [635] and note.
Erste Schiffer, Der (The First Navigator), by Gesner, 369, 371, 372, 376-378, 397, 402, 403.
Eskdale, 393, 401.
Essay on Animal Vitality, by Thelwall, 179, 212.
Essay on Fasting, 157.
Essay on the New French Constitution, 320 and note.
Essay on the Prometheus of Æschylus, [740] and note.
Essay on the Science of Method, [681] and note.
Essays on His Own Times, 156 n., 157 n., 320 n., 327 n., 329 n., 335 n., 414 n., [498] n., [567] n., [629] n., [634] n.
Essay on the Fine Arts, [633] and note, [634].
Essays upon Epitaphs, by Wordsworth, [585] and note.
Estlin, Mrs. J. P., 190, 213, 214.
Estlin, Rev. J. P., 184, 185, 190, 239, 287, 288;
his sermons, 385;
416;
letters from C., 213, 245, 246, 414.
Ether, 420, 435.
Etna, [458], [485] n., [486] n.
Evans, Mrs., C. spends a fortnight with, 23 and note;
24;
C.’s filial regard for, 26, 27;
her unselfishness, 46;
letters from C., 26, 39, 45.
Evans, Anne, 27, 29-31;
letters from C., 37, 52.
Evans, Eliza, 78.
Evans, Mrs. Elizabeth, of Darley Hall, her proposal to engage C. as tutor to her children, 215 n.;
her kindness to C. and Mrs. C., 215 n., 210;
231, 367.
Evans, Mary, 23 n., 27, 30;
an acute mind beneath a soft surface of feminine delicacy, 50;
C. sees her at Wrexham and confesses to Southey his love for her, 78;
97 and note;
song addressed to, 100;
C.’s unrequited love for, 123-125;
letters from C., 30, 41, 47, 122, 124;
letter to C., 87-89.
Evans, Walter, 231.
Evans, William, of Darley Hall, 215 n.
Evolution, [648].
Examiner, The, its notice of C.’s tragedy, Remorse, [606].
Excursion, The, by Wordsworth, 244 n., 337 n., [585] n.;
C.’s opinion of, [641];
the Edinburgh Review’s criticism of, [642];
C. discusses it in the light of his previous expectations, [645-650].
Exeter, 305 and note.
Ezekiel, [705] n.
Faith, C.’s definition of, 202;
204.
Fall of Robespierre, The, 85 and note, 87, 93, 104 and notes.
Falls of Foyers, the, 440.
Farmer, Priscilla, Poems on the Death of, by Charles Lloyd, 206 and note.
Farmers, 335 n.
Farmhouse, by Robert Lovell, 115.
Fasting, Essay on, 157.
Faulkner: a Tragedy, by William Godwin, [524] and note.
Fauntleroy’s trial, [730].
Faust, C.’s proposal to translate, [624] and note, [625], [626].
Favell, Robert, 86, 109 n., 110 n., 113, 225 and note.
Fayette, 112.
Fears in Solitude, published, 261 n.;
318, 321, 328, [552], [703] and note.
Fellowes, Mr., of Nottingham, 153.
Female Biography, or Memoirs of Illustrious and Celebrated Women, by Mary Hayes, 318 and note.
Fenner, Rest, publishes Zapolya for C., [666] n.;
his ill-usage of C. in regard to Sibylline Leaves, Biographia Literaria, and the projected Encyclopædia Metropolitana, [673], [674] and note.
Fenwick, Dr., 361 and note.
Fenwick, Mrs. E., [465] and note.
Fernier, John, 211.
Fichte, Johann Gottlieb, the philosophy of, [682], [683], [735].
Field, Mr., 93.
Fine Arts, Essays on the, [633] and note, [634].
Fire, The, by Robert Southey, 108 and note.
Fire and Famine, 327.
First Landing Place, The, [684] n.
First Navigator, The, translation of Gesner’s Der Erste Schiffer, 369, 371, 372, 376-378, 397, 402, 403.
Fitzgibbon, John, [638].
Fletcher, Judge, C.’s Courier Letters to, [629] and note, [634] and note, [635], [636], [642].
Florence, [499] n.
Flower, Benjamin, editor of the Cambridge Intelligencer, 93 and note.
Flower, The, by George Herbert, [695].
Flowers, [745], [746].
Fort Augustus, 435.
Foster-Mother’s Tale, The, [510] n.
Fox, Charles James, his Letter to the Westminster Electors, 50;
327;
Coleridge versus, 423, 424;
proposed articles on, [505];
[506];
death of, [507] and note;
[629] and note.
Fox, Dr., [619].
Foyers, the Falls of, 440.
Fragment found in a Lecture Room, A, 44.
Fragments of a Journal of a Tour over the Brocken, 257.
France, political condition of, in 1800, 329 and note.
France, an Ode, 261 n., [552].
Freeling, Sir Francis, [751].
French, C. not proficient in, 181.
French Constitution, Essay on the New, 320 and note.
French Empire under Buonaparte, C.’s essays on the, [629] and note.
French Revolution, the, 219, 240.
Frend, William, 24 and note.
Frere, George, [672].
Frere, Right Hon. John Hookham, [672] and note;
advice and friendly assistance to C. from, [674], [675] and note;
[698], [731], [732], [737].
Fricker, Mrs., 98, 189;
C. proposes to allow her an annuity of £20, 190;
423, [458].
Fricker, Edith (afterwards Mrs. Robert Southey), 82;
marries Southey, 137 n.;
163 n.
See [Southey, Mrs. Robert].
Fricker, George, 315, 316.
Fricker, Martha, [600].
Fricker, Sarah, C. falls in love with, 81;
83-86;
C.’s love cools, 89;
marries C., 136;
138, 163 n.;
letter from Southey, 107 n.
See [Coleridge, Mrs. Samuel Taylor].
Friend, The, 11 n., 25 n., 86 n., 257, 274 n., 275 n., 351 n., 404 n., 412 n., [453] n., [454] n.;
preliminary prospectus of, and its revision, [533], [536] and note, [537-541], [542] n.;
arrangements for the publication of, [541], [542] and note, [544], [546], [547];
its vicissitudes during its first eight months, [547], [548], [551], [552], [554-559];
Addison’s Spectator compared with, [557], [558];
the reprint of, [575], [579] and note, [580] n., [585] and note;
[606], [611], [629] and note, [630], [667] n.;
J. H. Frere’s advice in regard to, [674];
the object of the third volume of, [676];
[684] n.;
[697], [756] n., [768] and note.
Friends, C. complains of lack of sympathy on the part of his, [696], [697].
Friend’s Quarterly Examiner, The, [536] n., [538] n.
Frisky Songster, The, 237.
Frost at Midnight, 8 n., 261 n.
Gale and Curtis, [579] and note, [580] n.
Gallow Hill, 359 n., 362, 379 n.
Gallows and hangman in Germany, 294.
Gardening, C. proposes to undertake, 183-194;
C. begins it at Nether Stowey, 213;
recommended to Thelwall, 215;
at Nether Stowey, 219, 220.
Gebir, 328.
Gentleman’s Magazine, The, [455] n.
Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire, Ode to, 320 and note, 330.
German language, the, C. learning, 262, 263, 267, 268.
German philosophers, C.’s opinions of, [681-683], [735].
German playing-cards, 263.
Germans, their partiality for England and the English, 263, 264;
their eating and smoking customs, 276, 277;
an unlovely race, 278;
their Christmas-tree and other religious customs, 289-292;
superstitions of the bauers, 291, 292, 294;
marriage customs of the bauers, 292, 293.
Germany, 257, 258;
C.’s sojourn in, 259-300;
post coaches in, 278, 279;
the clergy of, 291;
Protestants and Catholics of, 291, 292;
bell-ringing in, 293;
churches in, 293;
shepherds in, 293;
care of owls in, 293;
gallows and hangman in, 294;
disposal of dead and sick cattle in, 294;
beet sugar in, 299.
Gerrald, Joseph, 161 and note, 166, 167 n.
Gesenius, Friedrich Heinrich Wilhelm, [773].
Gesner, his Erste Schiffer (The First Navigator), 369, 371, 372, 376-378, 397, 402, 403;
his rhythmical prose, 398.
Ghosts, [684].
Gibraltar, [469], [473], [474];
description of, [475-479];
[480], [493].
Gifford, William, his criticism of C.’s tragedy, Remorse, [605], [606];
[669], [737].
Gillman, Alexander, [703] n.
Gillman, Henry, [693] n.
Gillman, James, his Life of Coleridge, 3, 20 n., 23 n., 24 n., 45 n., 46 n., 171 n., 257;
442 n., [680] n., [761] n.;
his faithful friendship for C., [657];
C. arranges to enter his household as a patient, [657-659];
C.’s pecuniary obligations to, [658] n.;
character and intellect of, [665];
[670] n., [679], [685], [692], [704];
C.’s gratitude to and affection for, [721], [722];
on C.’s opium habit, [761] n.;
[768];
extracts from a letter from John Sterling to, [772] n.;
letters from C., [657], [700], [721], [729], [742].
Gillman, James, the younger, passes his examination for ordination with great credit, [755].
Gillman, Mrs. James (Anne), her faithful friendship for C., [657];
character of, [665];
[679], [684], [685], [702] n., [705], [721], [722], [729], [733];
illness of, [738];
C.’s attachment to, [746];
C.’s gratitude to and affection for, [754];
[764], [774];
letters from C., [690], [745], [754].
Ginger-tea, 412, 413.
Glencoe, 413, 440.
Glen Falloch, 433.
Gloucester, 72.
Gnats, [692].
Godliness, C.’s definition of, 203 n., 204;
St. Peter’s paraphrase of, 204.
Godwin, William, 91, 114;
C.’s sonnet to, 116 n., 117;
lines by Southey to, 120;
his misanthropy, 161, 162;
161 n., 167;
C.’s book on, 210;
316, 321;
his St. Leon, 324, 325;
a quarrel and reconciliation with C., [457], [464-466];
his Faulkner: a Tragedy, [524] and note;
C. accepts his invitation to meet Grattan, [565], [566];
letter from C., [565].
Godwin, William: His Friends and Contemporaries, by Charles Kegan Paul, 161 n., 324 n., [465] n.
Godwin, Mrs. William, [465], [466], [566].
Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von, his Faust, C.’s proposal to translate, [624] and note, [625], [626];
his Zur Farbenlehre, [699].
Gosforth, 393.
Goslar, 272, 273.
Göttingen, C. proposes to visit, 268-270, 272;
268 n., 269 n.;
C. calls on Professor Heyne at, 280;
C. enters the University of, 281;
the Saturday Club at, 281;
the gallows near, 294;
C.’s stay at, 281-300.
Gough, Charles, 369 n.
Governments as effects and causes, 241.
Grasmere, 335, 346, 362, 379 n., 394, 405 n., 419, 420;
C. visits and is taken ill there, [447], [448];
C. visits, [533-569].
See [Kendal].
Grattan, Henry, C.’s admiration for, [566].
Greek Islands, the, 329.
Greek poetry contrasted with Hebrew poetry, 405, 406.
Greek Sapphic Ode, On the Slave Trade, 43 and note.
Green, Mr., clerk of the Courier, [568] and note.
Green, Joseph Henry, [605], [632] n.;
his eminence in the surgical profession, [679] n.;
C.’s amanuensis and collaborateur, [679] n.;
C. appoints him his literary executor, [679] n.;
his published works, [679] n., [680] n.;
his character and intellect, [680] n.;
his faithful friendship for C., [680] n.;
his Spiritual Philosophy, founded on the Teaching of S. T. Coleridge, [680] n.;
receives a visit from C. at St. Lawrence, near Maldon, [690-693];
[753] n.;
letters from C., [669], [680], [688], [699], [704], [706], [726], [728], [751], [754], [767].
Green, Mrs. Joseph Henry, [691], [692], [699], [705].

Greenough, Mr., [458] and note.
Greta, the river, 339.
Greta Hall, near Keswick, C.’s life at, 335-444;
situation of, 335;
description of 391, 392;
C. urges Southey to make it his home, 391, 392, 394, 395;
Southey at first declines but subsequently accepts C.’s invitation to settle there, 395 n.;
Southey makes a visit there which proves permanent, 435;
[460] n.;
sold by its owner in C.’s absence, [490], [491];
C.’s last visit to, [575] and note, [576-578];
[724], [725].
See [Keswick].
Grey, Mr., editor of the Morning Chronicle, 114.
“Grinning for joy,” 81 n.
Grisedale Tarn, [547].
Grose, Judge, [567] and note.
Grossness versus suggestiveness, 377.
Group of Englishmen, A, by Eliza Meteyard, 269 n., 308 n.
Growth of the Individual Mind, On the, C.’s extempore lecture, [680] and note, [681].
Gunning, Henry, his Reminiscences of Cambridge, 24 n.
Gwynne, General, K. L. D., 62.
Hæmony, Milton’s allegorical flower, 406, 407.
Hague, Charles, 50.
Hale, Sir Philip, a “titled Dogberry,” 232 n.
Hall, S. C., 257, [745] n.
Hamburg, 257, 259;
C.’s arrival at, 261;
268 n.
Hamilton, a Cambridge man at Göttingen, 281.
Hamilton, Lady, [637] and note.
Hamilton, Sir William Rowan, [759] and note, [760].
Hamlet, Notes on, [684] n.
Hancock’s house, 297.
Hangman and gallows in Germany, 294.
Hanover, 279, 280.
Happiness, 75 n.
Happy Warrior, The, by Wordsworth, the original of, [494] n.
Harding, Miss, sister of Mrs. Gillman, [703].
Harper’s Magazine, [570] n., [571] n.
Harris, Mr., [666].
Hart, Dick, 54.
Hart, Miss Jane, 7, 8.
Hart, Miss Sara, 8.
Hartley, David, 113, 169, 348, 351 n., 428.
Haunted Beach, The, by Mrs. Robinson, 322 n.;
C. struck with, 331, 332.
Hayes, Mary, 318 and note;
her Female Biography, 318 and note;
her correspondence with Lloyd, 322;
C.’s opinion of her intellect, 323.
Hazlitt, William, supposed to have written the Edinburgh Review criticism of Christabel, [669] and note.
Hebrew poetry richer in imagination than the Greek, 405, 406.
Heinse’s Ardinghello, [683] and note.
Helen, by Maria Edgeworth, [773], [774].
Helvellyn, [547].
Henley workhouse, C. nurses a fellow-dragoon in the, 58 and note.
Herald, Morning, its notice of C.’s tragedy, Remorse, [603].
Herbert, George, C.’s love for his poems, [694], [695];
his Temple, [694];
his Flower, [695].
Heretics of the first two Centuries after Christ, History of the, by Nathaniel Lardner, D. D., 330.
Herodotus, [738].
Hertford, C. a Blue-Coat boy at, 19 and note.
Hess, Jonas Lewis von, [555] and note.
Hessey, Mr., of Taylor and Hessey, publishers, [739].
Hexameters, parts of the Bible and Ossian written in slovenly, 398.
Heyne, Christian Gottlob, 279;
C. calls on, 280;
281.
Higginbottom, Nehemiah, a pseudonym of C.’s, 251 n.
Highgate, History of, by Lloyd, [572] n.
Highland Girl, To a, by Wordsworth, [549].
Highland lass, a beautiful, 432 and note, [459].
High Wycombe, 62-64.
Hill, Mrs. Herbert. See [Southey, Bertha].
Hill, Thomas, [705] and note.
History of Highgate, by Lloyd, [572] n.
History of the Abolition of the Slave Trade, by Thomas Clarkson, C.’s review of, [527] and note, [528-530], [535], [536].
History of the Heretics of the first two Centuries after Christ, by Nathaniel Lardner, D. D., 330.
History of the Levelling Principle, proposed, 323, 328 n., 330.
Hobbes, Thomas, 349, 350.
Holcroft, Mr., C.’s conversation on Pantisocracy with, 114, 115;
the high priest of atheism, 162.
Hold your mad hands!, a sonnet by Southey, 127 and note.
Holland, [751].
Holt, Mrs., 18.
Home-Sick, Written in Germany, quoted, 298.
Homesickness of C. in Germany, 265, 266, 272, 273, 278, 288, 289, 295, 296, 298.
Hood, Thomas, his Odes to Great People, 250 n.
Hope, an Allegorical Sketch, by Bowles, 179, 180.
Hopkinson, Lieutenant, 62.
Horace, Bentley’s Quarto Edition of, 68 and note.
Hospitality in poverty, 340.
Hour when we shall meet again, The, 157.
Howe, Admiral Lord, 262 and note.
Howe, Emanuel Scoope, second Viscount, 262 n.
Howell, Mr., of Covent Garden, 366 and note.
Howick, Lord, [507].
Howley, Miss, [739].
Huber’s Treatise on Ants, [712].
Hucks, J., accompanies C. on a tour in Wales, 74-81;
his Tour in North Wales, 74 n., 81 n.;
76, 77 and note, 81 and note, 306.
Hume, David, 307, 349, 350.
Hume, Joseph, M. P., a fermentive virus, [757].
Hungary, 329.
Hunt, Leigh, Autobiography of, 20 n., 41 n., 225 n., [455] n.
Hunter, John, 211.
Hurwitz, Hyman, [667] n.;
his Israel’s Lament, [681] n.
Hutchinson, George, 358 and note, 359 n., 360.
Hutchinson, Joanna, 359 n.
Hutchinson, John, of Penrith, 358 n.
Hutchinson, John, of the Middle Temple, 359 n.
Hutchinson, Mary, marries William Wordsworth, 359 n.;
367.
Hutchinson, Sarah, 359 n., 360, 362, 367, 393 n.;
her motherly care of Hartley C., [510];
[511];
C.’s amanuensis, [536] n., [542] n.;
[582], [587], [590] n.
Hutchinson, Thomas, of Gallow Hill, 359 n., 362.
Hutton, James, M. D., 153 and note;
his Investigation of the Principles of Knowledge, 167.
Hutton, Lawrence, [570] n.
Hutton Hall, near Penrith, 296.
Hymn before Sunrise in the Vale of Chamouni, origin of, 404 and 405 and note.
Ibi Hæc Incondita Solus, by George Coleridge, 43 n.
Idolatry of modern religion, the, 414, 415.
Illuminizing, 323, 324.
Illustrated London News, The, 258, 453 n., 497 n., [768] n.
Imagination, education of the, 16, 17.
Imitated from the Welsh (a song), 112 and note, 113.
Imitations from the Modern Latin Poets, 67 n., 122.
Impersonality of the Deity, 444.
Indolence, a vice of powerful venom, 103, 104.
Infant, the death of an, 282-287.
Infant, who died before its Christening, On an, 287.
Ingratitude, C. complains of, [627-631].
Insincerity, a virtue, 161.
Instinct, definition of, 712.
In the Pass of Killicranky, by Wordsworth, [458].
Ireland, Account of, by Edward Wakefield, [638].
Ireland, View of the State of, by Edmund Spenser, [638] n.
Irving, Rev. Edward, [723];
a great orator, [726];
on Southey and Byron, [726];
[741], [742], [744], [748], [752].
Isaiah, 200.
Israel’s Lament, by Hyman Hurwitz, C. translates, [681] and note.
Jackson, Mr., owner of Greta Hall, 335, 368, 391, 392, 394, 395, 434, [460] and note, [461];
godfather to Hartley C., [461] n.;
sells Greta Hall, [491];
Hartley C.’s attachment for, [510].
Jackson, William, 309 and notes.
Jackstraws, [462], [468].
Jacobi, Heinrich Freidrich, [683].
Jacobinism in England, [642].
Jardine, Rev. David, 139 and note.
Jasper, by Mrs. Robinson, 322 n.
Jeffrey, Francis (afterwards Lord), [453] n., [521] n.;
C. accuses him of being unwarrantably severe on him, [527];
[536] n., [538] n.;
C.’s accusation of personal and ungenerous animosity against himself and his reply thereto, [669] and note, [670];
[735];
his attitude toward Wordsworth’s poetry, [742];
letters from C., [527], [528], [534].
See [Edinburgh Review].
Jerdan, Mr., of Michael’s Grove, Brompton, [727].
Jesus College, C.’s life at, 22-57, 70-72, 81-129.
Jews in a German inn, 280.
Joan of Arc, by Southey, 141, 149, 178 and note, 179;
Cottle sells the copyright to Longman, 319.
John of Milan, [566] n.
Johnson, J., the bookseller, lends C. £30, 261;
publishes Fears in Solitude, for C., 261 and notes, 318;
321.
Johnson, Dr. Samuel, on the condition of the mind during stage representations, [663].
Johnston, Lady, [731].
Johnston, Sir Alexander, [730] and note;
C.’s impressions of, [731].
Josephus, 407.
Kant, Immanuel, 204 n., 351 n.;
C.’s opinion of the philosophy of, [681], [682];
his Kritik der praktischen Vernunft, [681], [682] and note;
his Religion innerhalb der Grenzen der blossen Vernunft, [682];
valued by C. more as a logician than as a metaphysician, [735];
his Critique of the Pure Reason, [735].
Keats, John, [764] n.
Keenan, Mr., 309.
Keenan, Mrs., 309 and note.
Kehama, The Curse of, by Southey, [684].
Kempsford, Gloucestershire, 267 n.
Kendal, [447], [451], [452], [535], [575].
See [Grasmere].
Kendall, Mr., a poet, 306.
Kennard, Adam Steinmetz, [762] n.;
letter from C., [775].
Kennard, John Peirse, [762] n.;
letter from C., [772].
Kenyon, Mrs., [639], [640].
Kenyon, John, [639] n.;
letter from C., [639].
Keswick, 174 n.;
C. passes through, during his first tour in the Lake Country, 312 n.;
a Druidical circle near, 312 n.;
C.’s house at, 335;
climate of, 361;
405 n., [530], [535], [724], [725].
See [Greta Hall].
Keswick, the lake of, 335.
Keswick, the vale of, 312 n., 313 n.;
its beauties, 410, 411.
Kielmansegge, Baron, and his daughter, Mary Sophia, 263 n.
Kilmansig, Countess, C. becomes acquainted with, 262, 263.
King, Mr., 183, 185, 186.
King, Mrs., 183.
Kingsley, Rev. Charles, [771] n.
Kingston, Duchess of, her masquerade costume, 237.
Kinnaird, Douglas, [666], [667].
Kirkstone Pass, a storm in, 418-420.
Kisses, 54 n.
Klopstock, Friedrich Gottlieb, 257;
his Messias, 372, 373.
Knecht, Rupert, 289 n., 290, 291.
Knight, Rev. William Angus, LL.D., his Life of William Wordsworth, 164 n., 220 n., [447] n., [585] n., [591] n., [596] n., [599] n., [600] n., [733] n., [759] n.
Kosciusko, C.’s sonnet to, 116 n., 117.
Kotzebue’s Count Benyowski, or the Conspiracy of Kamtschatka, a Tragi-comedy, 236 and note.
Kubla Khan, when written, 245 n.;
437 n.
Kyle, John, the Man of Ross, 77, [651] n.
Lake Bassenthwaite, 335, 376 n.;
sunset over, 384.
Lake Country, the, C. makes a tour of, 312 n., 313;
another tour of, 393 and note, 394;
C.’s last visit to, [575] n.
See [Grasmere], [Greta Hall], [Kendal], [Keswick].
Lalla Rookh, by Moore, [672].
Lamb, C., To, 128 and note.
Lamb, Charles, love of Woolman’s Journal, 4 n.;
visit to Nether Stowey, 10 n.;
his Christ’s Hospital Five and Thirty Years Ago, 20 n.;
a man of uncommon genius, 111;
writes four lines of a sonnet for C., 111, 112 and note;
and his sister, 127, 128;
C.’s lines to, 128 and note;
163 n.;
correspondence with C. after his (Lamb’s) mother’s tragic death, 171 and note;
182;
extract from a letter to C., 197 n.;
206 n.;
his Grandame, 206 n.;
C.’s poem on Burns addressed to, 206 and note, 207;
extract from a letter to C., 223 n.;
visits C. at Nether Stowey, 224 and note, 225-227;
temporary estrangement from C., 249-253;
his relations to the quarrel between C. and Southey, 304, 312, 320 n.;
visits C. at Greta Hall with his sister, 396 n.;
a Latin letter from, 400 n.;
405 n., 421, 422, [460] n., [474];
his Recollections of a Late Royal Academician, [572] n.;
his connection with the reconciliation of C. and Wordsworth, [586-588], [594];
on William Blake’s paintings, engravings, and poems, [686] n.;
[704];
his Superannuated Man, [740];
[744];
his acquaintance with George Dyer, [748] n.;
[751] n., [760];
letter of condolence from C., 171;
other letters from C., 249, [586].
Lamb, Charles, Letters of, 164 n., 171 n., 197 n., 396 n., 400 n., [465] n., [466] n., [686] n., [748] n.
Lamb’s Prose Works, 4 n., 20 n., 25 n., 41 n.
Lamb, Mary, 127, 128, 226 n.;
visits the Coleridges at Greta Hall with her brother Charles, 396 n.;
becomes worse and is taken to a private madhouse, 422;
[465];
learns from C. of his quarrel with Wordsworth, [590], [591];
endeavors to bring about a reconciliation between C. and Wordsworth, [594];
[704].
Lampedusa, island, essay on, [495] and note.
Landlord at Keswick, C.’s, 335.
See [Jackson, Mr.]
Lardner, Nathaniel, D. D., his Letter on the Logos, 157;
his History of the Heretics of the first two Centuries after Christ, 330;
on a passage in Josephus, 407.
Latin essay by C., 29 n.
Laudanum, used by C. in an attack of neuralgia, 173 and note, 174 and note, 175-177;
193, 240, [617], [659].
See [Opium].
Lauderdale, James Maitland, Earl of, [689] and note.
Law, human as distinguished from divine, [635], [636].
Lawrence, Miss, governess in the family of Dr. Peter Crompton, [758] n.;
letter from C., [758].
Lawrence, William, [711] n.
Lawson, Sir Gilford, 270;
C. has free access to his library, 336;
392.
Lay of the Last Minstrel, The, by Scott, [523].
Lay Sermon, the second, [669].
Leach, William Elford, C. meets, [711] and note.
Lecky, G. F., British Consul at Syracuse, [458];
C. entertained by, [485] n.
Lectures, C.’s at the Royal Institution, [506] n., [507], [508], [511], [515], [516], [522], [525];
at the rooms of the London Philosophical Society, [574] and note, [575] and note;
a proposed course at Liverpool, [578];
preparations for another course in London, [579], [580], [582], [585];
at Willis’s Rooms on the Drama, [595] and note, [596], [597], [599];
[602], [604];
an extempore lecture On the Growth of the Individual Mind, at the rooms of the London Philosophical Society, [680] and note, [681];
regarded as a means of livelihood, [694];
on the History of Philosophy, delivered at the Crown and Anchor, Strand, [698] and note.
Lectures on Shakespeare, [575] n.
Lectures on Shakespeare and Other Dramatists, [756] n.
Leghorn, [498], [499] and note, [500].
Le Grice, Charles Valentine, 23, 24;
his Tineum, 111 and note;
225 and note, 325.
Leibnitz, Gottfried Wilhelm, Baron von, 280, 360, [735].
Leighton, Robert, Archbishop of Glasgow, his genius and character, [717], [718];
his orthodoxy, [719];
C. proposes to compile a volume of selections from his writings, [719], [720];
C. at work on the compilation, which, together with his own comment and corollaries, is finally published as Aids to Reflection, [734] and note.
Leslie, Charles Robert, [695] and note;
his pencil sketch of C., [695] n.;
introduces a portrait of C. into an illustration for The Antiquary, [736] and note.
Lessing, Life of, C. proposes to write, 270;
321, 323, 338.
Letters, C.’s reluctance to open and answer, [534].
Letters from the Lake Poets, 25 n., 86 n., 267 n., 366 n., 369 n., [527] n., [534] n., [542] n., [543] n., [705] n.
Letter smuggling, [459].
Letters on the Spaniards, [629] and note.
Letter to a Noble Lord, by Edmund Burke, 157 and note.
Leviathan, the man-of-war, [467];
a majestic and beautiful creature, [471], [472];
[477].
Lewis Monk, his play, Castle Spectre, 236 and note, 237, 238, [626].
Liberty, the Progress of, 206.
Life and death, meditations on, 283-287.
Life-masks of C., [570] and note.
Lime-Tree Bower my Prison, this, 225 and note, 226 and notes, 227, 228 n.
Lines on a Friend who died of a Frenzy Fever, 98 and note, 103 n., 106 and note.
Lines to a Friend, 8 n.
Lippincott’s Magazine, [674] n.
Lisbon, the Rock of, [473].
Literary Life. See [Biographia Literaria].
Literary Remains, [684] n., [740] n., [756] n., [761] n.
Literature, a proposed History of British, 425-427, 429, 430.
Literature as a profession, C.’s opinion of, 191, 192.
Live nits, 360.
Liverpool, [578].
Liverpool, Lord, [665], [674].
Llandovery, 411.
Llanfyllin, 79.
Llangollen, 80.
Llangunnog, 79.
Lloyd, Mr., father of Charles, 168, 186.
Lloyd, Charles, and Woolman’s Journal, 4 n.;
goes to live with C., 168-170;
character and genius of, 169, 170;
184, 189, 190, 192, 205, 206;
his Poems on the Death of Priscilla Farmer, 206 n.;
207 n., 208 n.;
with C. at Nether Stowey, 213;
238;
a serious quarrel with C., 238, 245 n., 246, 249-253;
his Edmund Oliver drawn from C.’s life, 252 and note;
his relations to the quarrel between C. and Southey, 304;
reading Greek with Christopher Wordsworth, 311;
unworthy of confidence, 311, 312;
his Edmund Oliver, 311;
his moral sense warped, 322, 323;
settles at Ambleside, 344;
C. spends a night with him at Bratha, 394;
[563];
his History of Highgate, [572] n., [578].
Llyswen, 234 n., 235 n.
Loch Katrine, 431, 432 and note, 433.
Loch Lomond, 431, 432 n., 433, 440.
Locke, John, C.’s opinion of his philosophy, 349-351, [648];
[713].
Lockhart, Mr., [756].
Lodore, the waterfall of, 335, 408.
Lodore mountains, the, 370.
Logic, The Elements of, [753] n.
Logic, The History of, [753] n.
Logos, Letter on the, by Dr. Nathaniel Lardner, 157.
London, Bishop of, [739];
his favourable opinion of Aids to Reflection, [741].
London Philosophical Society, C.’s lectures at the rooms of, [574] and note, [575] and note, [680] n.
Longman, Mr., the publisher, 319, 321;
on anonymous publications, 324, 325;
328, 329, 341, 349, 357;
loses money on C.’s translation of Wallenstein, 403;
[593].
Lonsdale, Lord, [538] n., [550], [733] n.
Losh, James, 219 and note.
Louis XVI., the death of, 219 and note.
Love, George Dawe engaged on a picture to illustrate C.’s poem, [573].
Love and the Female Character, C.’s lecture, [574] n., [575] and note.
Lovell, Robert, 75;
C.’s opinion of his poems, 110;
114;
his Farmhouse, 115, 121, 122, 139, 147, 150;
dies, 159 n.;
317 n.
Lovell, Robert, and Robert Southey of Balliol College, Bath, Poems by, 107 n.
Lovell, Mrs. Robert (Mary Fricker), 122, 159 and note, [485].
Lover’s Complaint to his Mistress, A, 36.
Low was our pretty Cot, C.’s opinion of, 224.
Lubec, 274, 275.
Lucretius, his philosophy and his poetry, [648].
Luff, Captain, 369 and note, [547].
Luise, ein ländliches Gedicht in drei Idyllen, by Johann Heinrich Voss, quotation from, 203 n.;
an emphatically original poem, [625];
[627].
Lüneburg, 278.
Lushington, Mr., 101.
Luss, 431.
Lycon, Ode to, by Robert Southey, 107 n., 108.
Lyrical Ballads, by Coleridge and Wordsworth, 336, 337, 341, 350 and note, 387, [607], [678].
Macaulay, Alexander, death of, [491].
Mackintosh, Sir James, his rejected offer to procure a place for C. under himself in India, [454], [455];
C.’s dislike and distrust of, [454] n., [455] n.;
[596].
Macklin, Harriet, [751] and note, [764].
Madeira, 442, [451], [452].

Madoc, by Southey, C. urges its completion and publication, 314, [467];
357;
C.’s enthusiasm for, 388, 489, 490;
a divine passage of, 463 and note.
Mad Ox, The, 219 n., 327.
Magee, William, D. D., [761] n.
Magnum Opus. See [Christianity, the one true Philosophy].
Maid of Orleans, 239.
Malta, C. plans a trip to, [457], [458];
the voyage to, [469-481];
sojourn at, [481-484], [487-497];
army affairs at, [554], [555].
Maltese, the, [483] and note, [484] and note.
Maltese, Regiment, the, [554], [555].
Malvern Hills, by Joseph Cottle, 358.
Manchester Massacre, the, [702] n.
Manchineel, 223 n.
Marburg, 291.
Margarot, 166, 167 n.
Markes, Rev. Mr., 310.
Marriage as a means of ensuring the nature and education of children, 216, 217.
Marsh, Herbert, Bishop of Peterborough, his lecture on the authenticity and credibility of the books collected in the New Testament, [707], [708].
Martin, Rev. H., 74 n., 81 n.
Mary, the Maid of the Inn, by Southey, 223.
Massena, Marshal, defeats the Russians at Zurich, 308 and note.
Masy, Mr., 40.
Mathews, Charles, C. hears and sees his entertainment, At Home, [704], [705];
letter from C., [621].
Mattathias, The Death of, by Robert Southey, 108 and note.
Maurice, Rev. John Frederick Dennison, [771] n.
Maxwell, Captain, of the Royal Artillery, [493], [495], [496].
McKinnon, General, 309 n.
Medea, a subject for a tragedy, 399.
Meditation, C.’s habits of, [658].
Medwin, Capt. Thomas, his Conversations of Lord Byron, [735] and note.
Meerschaum pipes, 277.
Melancholy, a Fragment, 396 and note, 397.
Memory of childhood in old age, 428.
Mendelssohn, Moses, 203 n., 204 n.
Men of the Time, 317 n.
Merry, Robert, 86 n.
Messina, [485], [486].
Metaphysics, 102, 347-352;
C. proposes to write a book on Locke, Hobbes, and Hume, 349, 350;
in poetry, 372;
effect of the study of, 388;
C.’s projected great work on, [632] and note, [633];
of the German philosophers, [681-683], [735];
[712], [713].
See [Christianity, the One True Philosophy], [Philosophy], [Religion].
Meteyard, Eliza, her Group of Englishmen, 269 n., 308 n.
Method, Essay on the Science of, [681] and note.
Methuen, Rev. T. A., [652] and note.
Microcosm, 43 and note.
Middleton, H. F. (afterwards Bishop of Calcutta), 23, 25, 32, 33.
Milman, Henry Hart, [737] and note.
Milton, John, 164, 197 and note;
a sublimer poet than Homer or Virgil, 199, 200;
the imagery in Paradise Lost borrowed from the Scriptures, 199, 200;
his Accidence, 331;
on poetry, 387;
his platonizing spirit, 406, 407;
[678], [734].
Milton, Lord, [567] and note.
Mind versus Nature, in youth and later life, [742], [743].
Minor Poems, 317 n.
Miscellanies, Æsthetic and Literary, [711] n.
Miss Rosamond, by Southey, 108 and note.
Mitford, Mary Russell, 63 n.
Molly, 11.
Monarchy likened to a cockatrice, 73.
Monday’s Beard, On Mrs., 9 n.
Money, Rev. William, [651] n.;
letter from C., [651].
Monody on the Death of Chatterton, 110 n., 158 n., [620] n.
Monologue to a Young Jackass in Jesus Piece, 119 n.
Monopolists, 335 n.
Montagu, Basil, 363 n., [511] n.;
causes a misunderstanding between C. and Wordsworth, [578], [586-591], [593], [599], [612];
endeavours to have an associateship of the Royal Society of Literature conferred on C., [726], [727];
his efforts successful, [728];
[749].
Montagu, Mrs. Basil, her connection with the quarrel between C. and Wordsworth, [588], [589], [591], [599].
Monthly Magazine, the, 179 and note, 185, 197, 215, 251 n., 310, 317.
Moore, Thomas, his Lalla Rookh, [672];
his misuse of the possessive case, [672].
Moors, C.’s opinion of, 478.
Morality and religion, [676].
Moreau, Jean Victor, [449] and note.
Morgan, Mrs., 145, 148.
Morgan, John James, [524], [526];
a faithful and zealous friend, [580];
C. confides the news of his quarrel with Wordsworth to, [591], [592];
[596], [650], [665];
letter from C., [575].
Morgan, Mrs. John James, C.’s affection for, [565];
[578], [600], [618], [650], [722] n.;
letter from C., [524].
Morgan family, the (J. J. Morgan, his wife, and his wife’s sister, Miss Charlotte Brent), C.’s feelings of affection, esteem, and gratitude towards, [519], [520], [524-526], [565];
C. visits, [566-575] and note, [579-622];
[585];
C. confides the news of his quarrel with Wordsworth to, [591], [592];
C. regards as his saviours, [592];
[600] n.;
with C. at Calne, [641-653];
their faithful devotion to C., [657], [722] n.;
letters from C., [519], [524], [564].
Mortimer, John Hamilton, 373 and note.
Motion of Contentment, by Archdeacon Paley, 47.
Motley, J. C., [467-469], [475].
Mountains, of Portugal, [470], [473];
about Gibraltar, [478].
Mumps, the, [545] and note.
Murray, John, [581];
proposes to publish a translation of Faust, [624-626];
his connection with the publication of Zapolya, [666] and note, [667-669];
offers C. two hundred guineas for a volume of specimens of Rabbinical wisdom, [667] n.;
[699] n.;
proposal from C. to compile a volume of selections from Archbishop Leighton, [717-720];
[723];
his proposal to publish an edition of C.’s poems, [787];
letters from C., [624], [665], [717].
Murray, John, Memoirs of, [624] n., [666] n.
Music, 49.
Myrtle, praise of the, [745], [746].
Mythology, Greek and Roman, contrasted with Christianity, 199, 200.
Nanny, 260, 295.
Naples, [486], [502].
Napoleon, 308, 327 n., 329 and note;
his animosity against C., [498] n.;
[530] n.;
C.’s cartoon and lines on, [642].
Napoleon Bonaparte, Life of, by Sir Walter Scott, 174 n.
Natural Theology, by William Paley, 424 n., 425 n.
Nature, her influence on the passions, 243, 244;
Mind and, two rival artists, [742], [743].
Natur-philosophen, C. on the, [682], [683].
Navigation and Discovery, The Spirit of, by William Lisle Bowles, 403 and note.
Necessitarianism, the sophistry of, [454].
Neighbours, 186.
Nelson, Lady, [637].
Nelson, Lord, [637] and note.
Nesbitt, Fanny, C.’s poem to, 56, 57.
Netherlands, the, [751].
Nether Stowey, 165 and note;
C. proposes to move to, 184-194;
arrangements for moving to, 209;
settled at, 213;
C.’s description of his place at, 213;
Thelwall urged not to settle at, 232-234;
the curate-in-charge of, 267 n.;
297, 325, 366;
C.’s last visit to, 405 n.;
[497] n.
Neuralgia, a severe attack of, 173-177.
Newcome’s (Mr.) School, 7, 25 n.
Newlands, 393 and note, 411, [725].
New Monthly Magazine, 257.
Newspapers, freshness necessary for, [568].
New Testament, the, Bishop March’s lecture on the authenticity and credibility of the books collected in, [707], [708].
Newton, Mr., 48.
Newton, Mrs., sister of Thomas Chatterton, 221, 222.
Newton, Sir Isaac, 352.
Nightingale, The, a Conversational Poem, 296 n.
Ninathoma, The Complaint of, 51.
Nixon, Miss Eliza, unpublished lines of C. to, [773] n., [774] n.;
letter from C., [773].
Nobs, Dr. Daniel Dove’s horse, in The Doctor, [583] and note, [584].
No more the visionary soul shall dwell, 109 and note, 208 n.
Nordhausen, 273.
Northcote, Sir Stafford, 15 and note.
Northmore, Thomas, C. dines with, 306, 307;
an offensive character to the aristocrats, 310.
North Wales, C.’s tour of, 72-81.
Notes on Hamlet, [684] n.
Notes on Noble’s Appeal, [684] n.
Notes Theological and Political, [684] n., [761] n.
Nottingham, 153, 154, 216.
Novi, Suwarrow’s victory at, 307 and note.
Nuremberg, [555].
Objective, different meanings of the term, [755].
Observations on Egypt, [486] n.
Ocean, the, by night, 260.
Ode in the manner of Anacreon, An, 35.
Ode on the Poetical Character, by William Collins, 196.
Odes to Great People, by Thomas Hood, 250 n.
Ode to Dejection, 378 and note, 379 and note, 380-384, 405 n.
Ode to Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire, 320 and note, 330.
Ode to Lycon, by Robert Southey, 107 n., 108.
Ode to Romance, by Robert Southey, 107 and note.
Ode to the Departing Year, 212 n.;
C.’s reply to Thelwall’s criticisms on, 218 and note;
221.
Ode to the Duchess, 320 and note, 330.
O gentle look, that didst my soul beguile, a sonnet, 111, 112 and note.
Ogle, Captain, 63 and note.
Ogle, Lieutenant, 374 n.
Ogle, Dr. Newton, Dean of Westminster, his Latin Iambics, 374 and note.
Oken, Lorenz, his Natural History, [736].
Old Man in the Snow, 110 and note.
Omniana, by C. and Southey, 9 n., [554] n., [718] n.
On a Discovery made too late, 92 and note, 123 n.
On a late Connubial Rupture, 179 n.
On an Infant who died before its Christening, 287.
Once a Jacobin, always a Jacobin, 414.
On Revisiting the Sea-Shore, 361 n.
Onstel, 97 n.
On the Slave Trade, 43 and note.
Opium, C.’s early use of, and beginning of the habit, 173 and note, 174 and note, 175;
first recourse to it for the relief of mental distress, 245 n.;
daily quantity reduced, 413;
regarded as less harmful than other stimulants, 413;
420;
its use discontinued for a time, 434, 435;
anguish and remorse from its abuse, [616-621], [623], [624];
in order to free himself from the slavery, C. arranges to live with Mr. James Gillman as a patient, [657-659];
a final effort to give up the use of it altogether, [760] and note;
the habit regulated and brought under control, but never entirely done away with, [760] n., [761] n.
Oporto, seen from the sea, [469], [470].
Orestes, by William Sotheby, 402, 409, 410.
Original Sin, C. a believer in, 242.
Original Sin, Letter on, by Jeremy Taylor, [640].
Origine de tous les Cultes, ou Religion universelle, by Charles François Dupuis, 181 and note.
Origin, Nature, and Object of the New System of Education, by Andrew Bell, D. D., [581] and note, [582].
Osorio, a tragedy, 10 n., 229 and note, 231, 284 n., [603] n.
See [Remorse].
Ossian, hexameters in, 398.
Otter, the river, 14, 15.
Ottery St. Mary, 6-8, 305 n.;
C. wished by his family to settle at, 325;
C.’s last visit to, 405 n.;
a proposed visit to, [512], [513];
[745] n.
Owen, William, 425 n.
O what a loud and fearful shriek was there, a sonnet, 116 n., 117.
Owls, care of, in Germany, 293.
Oxford University, C.’s feeling towards, 45, 72.
Paignton, 305 n.
Pain, a sonnet, 174 n.
Pain, C. interested in, 341.
Pains of Sleep, The, 435-437 and note.
Paley, William, Archdeacon of Carlisle, his Motives of Contentment, 47;
his Natural Theology, 424 and note;
[713].
Palm, John Philip, his pamphlet reflecting on Napoleon leads to his trial and execution, [530] and note;
C. translates his pamphlet, [530].
Pantisocracy, 73, 79, 81, 82, 88-91, 101-103, 109 n., 121, 122, 134, 135, 138-141, 143-147, 149, 317 n., [748] n.
Paradise Lost, by Milton, its imagery borrowed from the Scriptures, 199, 200.
Parasite, a, [705].
Parliamentary Reform, essay on, [567].
Parndon House, [506] n., [507], [508].
Parret, the river, 165.
Parties, political, in England, 242.
Pasquin, Antony, [603] and note.
Patience, 203 and note.
Patteson, Hon. Mr. Justice, [726] n.
Paul, Charles Kegan, his William Godwin: His Friends and Contemporaries, 161 n., 324 n., [465] n.
Pauper’s Funeral, by Robert Southey, 108 and note, 109.
Peace and Union, by William Friend, 24 n.
Pearce, Dr., Master of Jesus College, 23, 24, 65, 70-72.
Pedlar, The, former title of Wordsworth’s Excursion, 337 and note.
Peel, Sir Robert, [689] n.
Penche, M. de la, 49.
Penmaen Mawr, C.’s ascent of, 81 n.
Penn, William, [539].
Pennington, W., [541], [542] n., [544].
Penrith, 420, 421, [547], [548], [575] n.
Penruddock, 420, 421.
Perceval, Rt. Hon. Spencer, assassination of, [597], [598] and note.
Perdita, see [Robinson, Mrs. Mary].
Peripatetic, The, or Sketches of the Heart, of Nature, and of Society, by John Thelwall, 166 and note.
Perry, James, 114.
Perspiration. A Travelling Eclogue, 73.
Peterloo, [702] n.
Philip Van Artevelde, by Sir Henry Taylor, [774] and note.
Phillips, Elizabeth (C.’s half sister), 54 n.
Phillips, Sir Richard, 317 and note, 325, 327.
Phillips, Thomas, R. A., [699];
his two portraits of C., [699] and note, [700], [740];
his portrait of William Hart Coleridge, Bishop of Barbadoes and the Leeward Islands, [740] and note.
Philological Museum, [733] n.
Philosophy, [648-650];
German, [681-683]
C.’s lectures on the History of, [698] and note.
See [Metaphysics] and [Religion].
Pickering, W., [579] n.
Picture, The: or The Lover’s Resolution, 405 n., [620] n.
Pinney, Mr., of Bristol, 163 n.;
his estate in the West Indies, 360, 361.
Pipes, meerschaum, 277.
Pisa, C.’s stay at, [499] n., [500] n.;
his account of, [500] n.
Pitt, Rt. Hon. William, C.’s report in the Morning Post of his speech on the continuance of the war with France, 327 and note;
proposed articles on, [505];
C.’s detestation of, [535] and note;
[629] and note.
Pixies’ Parlour, The, 222.
Plampin, J., 70 and note.
Plato, his gorgeous nonsense, 211;
his theology, 406.
Playing-cards, German, 263.
Pleasure, intoxicating power of, 370.
Plinlimmon, C.’s ascent of, 81 n.
Plot Discovered, The, 156 and note.
Poems by Robert Lovell and Robert Southey of Balliol College, Bath, 107 n.
Poems and fragments of poems introduced by C. into his letters, 28, 35, 36, 51, 52, 54, 56, 73, 75, 77, 83, 92, 94, 98, 100, 111-113, 207, 212, 225, 355, 379-384, 388, 389, 397, 404, 412, 435-437, [553], [609], [620], [642], [646], [702], [770], [771].
Poems on the Death of Priscilla Farmer, by Charles Lloyd, 206 and note.
Poetical Character, Ode on the, by Collins, 196.
Poetry, Concerning, a proposed book, 347, 386, 387.
Poetry, C. proposes to write an essay on, 338, 347, 386, 387;
Greek and Hebrew, 405, 406.
Poetry, C.’s, not obscure or mystical, 194, 195.
Poland, 329.
Political parties in England, 242.
Politics, 240-243, [546], [550], [553], [574], [702], [712], [713], [757].
See [Democracy], [Pantisocracy], [Republicanism].
Poole, Richard, 249.
Poole, Mrs. Richard, 248.
Poole, Thomas, contributes to The Watchman, 155;
collects a testimonial in the form of an annuity of £35 or £40 for C., 158 n.;
C.’s gratitude, 158, 159;
C. proposes to visit, 159;
C.’s affection for, 168, 210, 258, [609], [610], [753];
C. proposes to visit him with Charles Lloyd, 170;
C.’s happiness at the prospect of living near, 173;
his connection with C.’s removal to Nether Stowey, 183-193, 208-210;
213, 219, 220;
his opinion of Wordsworth, 221;
232 and note, 233, 239, 257, 258, 260, 282 n., 289;
effects a reconciliation between C. and Southey, 390;
308, 319;
C.’s reasons for not naming his third son after, 344;
death of his mother, 364;
396, 437 n.;
nobly employed, [453];
his rectitude and simplicity of heart, [454];
[456] n.;
his forgetfulness, [460];
[515], [523];
extract from a letter from C., [533] n.;
a visit to Grasmere proposed, [545];
his narrative of John Walford, [553] and note;
C. complains of unkindness from, [609], [610];
[639] n., [657];
meets C. at Samuel Purkis’s, Brentford, [673];
extract from a letter from C. about Samuel Purkis, [673] n.;
autobiographical letters from C., 3-18;
other letters from C., 136, 155, 158, 168, 172, 176, 183-187, 208, 248, 249, 258, 267, 282, 305, 335, 343, 348, 350, 364, [452], [454], [541], [544], [550], [556], [609], [673], [753].
Poole, Thomas, and his Friends, by Mrs. Henry Sandford, 158 n., 165 n., 170 n., 183 n., 232 n., 234 n., 258, 267 n., 282 n., 391 n., 335 n., [456] n., [533] n., [553] n., [673] n., [676] n.
Poole, William, 176.
Pope, the, C. leaves Rome at a warning from, [498] n.
Pope, Alexander, his Essay on Man, [648];
a favorite walk of, [671].
Pople, Mr., publisher of C.’s tragedy, Remorse, [602].
Porson, Mr., 114, 115.
Portinscale, 393 and note.
Portraits of C., crayon sketch by Dawe, [572] and note;
full-length portrait by Allston begun at Rome, [572] and note;
portrait by Allston taken at Bristol, [572] n.;
pencil sketch by Leslie, [695] n.;
two portraits by Thomas Phillips, [699] and note, [700], [740];
Wyville’s proofs, [770].
Portugal, C. on Southey’s proposed history of, 387, 388, 423;
the coast of, [469-471], [473].
Possessive case, Moore’s misuse of the, [672].
Post, Morning, 310;
C. writing for, 320 and note, 324, 326, 327 and note, 329 and note;
331, 335 n., 337, 376, 378 n., 379 n., 398, 404 n., 405, 414, 423, [455] n.;
Napoleon’s animosity aroused by C.’s articles in, [498] n.;
its notice of C.’s tragedy, Remorse, [603] n.
Postage, rates too high, 345.
Posthumous Fame, 29 n.
Potter, Mr., 97 and note, 106.
Poverty, in England, 353, 354;
blessings of, 364.
Pratt, 321.
Prelude, The, by Wordsworth, a reference to C. in, [486] n.;
C.’s lines To William Wordsworth after hearing him recite, [641], [644], [646], [647] and note;
C.’s admiration of, [645], [647] n.
Pride, 149.
Priestley, Joseph, C.’s sonnet to, 116 and note;
his doctrine as to the future existence of infants, 286.
Progress of Liberty, The, 296.
Prometheus of Æschylus, Essay on the, [740] and note.
Property, to be modified by the predominance of intellect, 323.
Pseudonym, Ἔστησε, 398;
its meaning, 407 and note, 408.
Public Characters for 1799-1800, published by Richard Phillips, 317 n.
Puff and Slander, projected satires, [630] and notes, [631] n.
Purkis, Samuel, 326, [673] n.
Quack medicine, a German, 264.
Quaker Family, Records of a, by Anne Ogden Boyce, [538] n.
Quaker girl, inelegant remark of a little, 362, 368.
Quakerism, 415;
C.’s belief in the essentials of, [539-541];
C.’s definition of, [556].
Quakers, as subscribers to The Friend, [556], [557].
Quakers and Unitarians, the only Christians, 415.
Quantocks, the, 405 n.
Quarterly Review, The, [606];
its review of The Letters of Lord Nelson to Lady Hamilton, [637] and note, [667];
reëchoes C.’s praise of Cary’s Dante, [677] n.;
its attitude towards C., [697], [723];
John Taylor Coleridge editor of, [736] and notes, [737].

Rabbinical Tales, [667] and note, [669].
Racedown, C.’s visit to Wordsworth at, 163 n., 220 and note, 221.
Race of Banquo, The, by Southey, 92 and note.
Rae, Mr., an actor, [611], [667].
Rainbow, The, by Southey, 108 and note.
Ramsgate, [700], [722], [729-731], [742-744].
Ratzeburg, 257;
C.’s stay in, 262-278;
the Amtmann of, 264, 268, 271;
description of, 273-277;
C. leaves, 278;
292-294.
“Raw Head” and “Bloody Bones,” 45.
Reading, see [Books].
Reading, Berkshire, 66, 67.
Reason and understanding, the distinction between, [712], [713].
Recluse, The, a projected poem by Wordsworth of which The Excursion (q. v.) was to form the second part and to which The Prelude (q. v.) was to be an introduction, C.’s hopes for, [646], [647] and note, [648-650].
Recollections of a Late Royal Academician, by Charles Lamb, [572] n.
Records of a Quaker Family, by Anne Ogden Boyce, [538] n.
Redcliff, 144.
Redcliff Hill, 154.
Reflection, Aids to, [688] n.
Reflections on having left a Place of Retirement, [606] n.
Reform Bill, [760], [762].
Reich, Dr., [734], [736].
Rejected Addresses, by Horace and James Smith, [606].
Religion, beliefs and doubts of C. in regard to, 64, 68, 69, 88, 105, 106, 127, 135, 152, 153, 159-161, 167, 171, 172, 198-205, 210, 211, 228, 229, 235 n., 242, 247, 248, 285, 286, 342, 364, 365, 407, 414, 415, 444, [538-541], [617-620], [624], [676], [688], [694], [706-712], [746-748], [750], [754], [758-760], [762], [763], [771], [775], [776].
Religious Musings, 239.
Reminiscences of Cambridge, by Henry Gunning, 24 n., 363 n.
Reminiscences of Coleridge and Southey, by Cottle, 268 n., 269 n., 417, [456] n., [617] n.
Remorse, C.’s definition of, [607].
Remorse, A Tragedy (Osorio rewritten), rehearsal of, [600];
has a brief spell of success, [600] n., [602], [604], [610], [611];
business arrangements as to its publication, [602];
press notices of, [603] and note, [604];
William Gifford’s criticism of, [605];
the underlying principle of the plot of, [607], [608];
wretchedly acted, [608], [611];
metres of, [608];
lack of pathos in, [608];
plagiarisms in, [608];
labors occasioned to C. by its production and success, [610];
financial success of, [611];
Quarterly Review’s criticism of, [630];
[696].
Repentance preached by the Christian religion, 201.
Reporting the debates for the Morning Post, 324, 326, 327.
Republicanism, 72, 79-81, 243.
See [Democracy], [Pantisocracy].
Retrospect, The, by Robert Southey, 107 and note.
Revelation, [676].
Reynell, Richard, [497] and note.
Rheumatism, C.’s sufferings from, 174 n., 193, 209, 307, 308, 432, 433.
Rhine, the, [751].
Richards, George, 41 and note.
Richardson, Mrs., 145.
Richter, Jean Paul, his Vorschule der Aisthetik, [683] and note.
Rickman, John, [456] n., [459], [462], [542], [599].
Ridgeway and Symonds, publishers, [638] n.
Robbers, The, by Schiller, 96 and note, 97, 221.
Roberts, Margaret, 358 n.
Robespierre, Maximilian Marie Isidore, 203 n., 329 n.
Robespierre, The Fall of, 85 and note, 87, 93, 104 and notes.
Robinson, Frederick John (afterwards Earl of Ripon), his Corn Bill, [643] and note.
Robinson, Henry Crabb, 225 n., [593], [599], [670] n.;
in old age, [671] n.;
reads William Blake’s poems to Wordsworth, [686] n.;
extract from a letter from C. to, [689] n.;
his Diary, 225 n., [575] n., [591] n., [595] n., [686] n., [689] n.;
letter from C., [671].
Robinson, Mrs. Mary (“Perdita”), contributes poems to the Annual Anthology, 322 and note;
her Haunted Beach, 331, 332;
her ear for metre, 332.
Roman Catholicism in Germany, 291, 292.
Romance, Ode to, by Southey, 107 and note.
Rome, C.’s flight from, [498] n.;
[501], [502].
Rosamund, Miss, by Southey, 108 and note.
Rosamund to Henry; written after she had taken the veil, by Southey, 108 n.
Roscoe, William, 359 and note.
Rose, Sir George, [456] and note.
Rose, The, 54 and note.
Rose, W., [542].
Roskilly, Rev. Mr., 267 n., 270;
letter from C., 267.
Ross, 77.
Ross, the Man of, 77, [651] n.
Rossetti, Gabriele, [731] and note, [732], [733].
Rough, Sergeant, 225 and note.
Royal Institution, C. obtains a lectureship at the, [506] n., [507], [508], [511];
an outline of proposed lectures at the, [515], [516], [522];
C.’s lectures at the, [525].
Royal Society of Literature, the, Basil Montagu’s endeavors to secure for C. an associateship of, [726], [727];
C. an associate of, [728];
[731];
an essay for, [737], [738];
C. reads an Essay on the Prometheus of Æschylus before, [739], [740].
Rulers, always as bad as they dare to be, 240.
Rush, Sir William, 368.
Rushiford, 358.

Russell, Mr., of Exeter, C.’s fellow-traveller, [498] n., [500] and note.
Rustats, 24, 43.
Ruth, by Wordsworth, 387.
Ruthin, 78.
St. Albyn, Mrs., the owner of Alfoxden, 232 n.
St. Augustine, 375.
St. Bees, 392, 393.
St. Blasius, 292.
St. Clear, 411, 412.
St. Lawrence, near Maldon, description of, [690-692].
St. Leon, by Godwin, the copyright sold for £400, 324, 325.
St. Nevis, 360, 361.
St. Paul’s Epistle to the Hebrews, 200.
Salernitanus, [566] and note.
Salisbury, 53-55.
Samuel, C.’s dislike of the name, [470], [471].
Sandford, Mrs. Henry, 183 n.;
her Thomas Poole and his Friends, 158 n., 165 n., 170 n., 183 n., 232 n., 234 n., 258, 267 n., 282 n., 319 n., 335 n., [456] n., [533] n., [553] n., [673] n., [676] n.
Saturday Club, the, at Göttingen, 281.
Satyrane’s Letters, 257, 274 n., [558].
Savage, Mr., [534].
Savory, Mr., 316.
Scafell, 393, 394;
in a thunderstorm on, 400 and note;
view from the summit of, 400, 401;
suggests the Hymn before Sunrise in the Vale of Chamouni, 404 and note, 405 and note.
Scale Force, 375.
Scarborough, 361-363.
Schelling, Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von, the philosophy of, [683], [735].
Schiller, his Robbers, 96 and note, 97, 221;
C. translates manuscript plays of, 331;
C.’s translation of his Wallenstein, 403, [608].
Scholarship examinations, 24, 43, 45 and note, 46.
Schöning, Maria Eleanora, the story of, [555] and note, [556].
Scoope, Emanuel, second Viscount Howe, 262 n.
Scotland, C.’s tour in, 431-441;
the four most wonderful sights in, 439, 440.
Scott, an attorney, his manner of revenging himself on C., 310, 311.
Scott, Sir Walter, his Life of Napoleon Bonaparte, 174 n.;
his house in Edinburgh, 439;
takes Hartley C. to the Tower, [511] n.;
his offer to use his influence to get a place for Southey on the staff of the Edinburgh Review, [522] and note, [522];
his Lay of the Last Minstrel, [523];
[605], [694];
his Antiquary, [736] and note.
Sea-bathing, 361 n., 362 and note.
Seasickness, no sympathy for, [743], [744].
Sermoni propriora, [606] and note.
Shad, 82, 89, 96.
Shaftesbury, Lord, [689] n.
Shakespeare, Lectures on, [557] n.
Shakespeare and other Dramatists, Lectures on, [756] n.
Sharp, Richard, [447] n.;
letter from C., [447].
Shepherds, German, 293.
Sheridan, R. B., Esq., To, 116 n., 118.
Shrewsbury, C. offered the Unitarian pastorate at, 235 and note, 236.
Sibylline Leaves, 178 n., 378 n., 379 n., 404 n.;
C. ill-used by the printer of, [673], [674];
[678], [770].
Sicily, C. plans to visit, [457], [458];
C.’s first tour in, [485] and note, [486] and note, [487];
[523].
Siddons, Mrs., 50.
Sieyès, Abbé, 329 and note.
Sigh, The, 100 and note.
Simplicity, Sonnet to, 251 and note.
Sin, original, C. a believer in, 242.
Sincerity, regarded by Dr. Darwin as vicious, 161.
Sixteen Sonnets, by Bampfylde, 369 n.
Skiddaw, 335, 336;
sunset over, 384.
Skiddaw Forest, 376 n.
Slavery, question of its introduction into the proposed pantisocratic colony, 89, 90, 95, 96.
Slave Trade, History of the Abolition of the, by Thomas Clarkson, C.’s review of, [527] and note, [528-530], [535], [536].
Slave Trade, On the, 43 and note.

Slee, Miss, 362, 363.
Sleep, C.’s sufferings in, 435, 440, 441, [447].
Smerdon, Mrs., 21, 22.
Smerdon, Rev. Mr., Vicar of Ottery, 22, 106 and note.
Smith, Charlotte, 326.
Smith, Horace and James, their Rejected Addresses, [606].
Smith, James, [704].
Smith, Raphael, [701] n.
Smith, Robert Percy (Bobus), 43 and note.
Smith, William, M. P., [506] n., [507] and note.
Snuff, [691], [692] and note.
Social Life at the English Universities, by Christopher Wordsworth, 225 n.
Something Childish, but Very Natural, quoted, 294.
Song, 100.
Songs of the Pixies, 222.
Sonnet, an anonymous, 177, 178.
Sonnet composed on a journey homeward, the author having received intelligence of the birth of a son, 194 and note, 195.
Sonnets, 111, 112, and note;
to Priestley, 116 and note;
to Kosciusko, 116 n., 117;
to Godwin, 116 n., 117;
to Sheridan, 116 n., 117, 118;
to Burke, 116 n., 118;
to Southey, 116 n., 120;
a selection of, privately printed by C., 177, 206 and note;
by “Nehemiah Higginbottom,” 251 n.
Sonnets, Sixteen, by Bampfylde, 309 n.
Sonnet to Simplicity, 251 and note.
Sonnet to the Author of the Robbers, 96 n.
Sorrel, James, 21.
Sotheby, William, C. translates Gesner’s Erste Schiffer at his instance, 369, 371, 372, 376-378, 397, 402, 403;
his translation of the Georgics of Virgil, 375;
his Poems, 375;
his Netley Abbey, 396;
his Welsh Tour, 396;
his Orestes, 402, 409, 410;
proposes a fine edition of Christabel, 421, 422;
[492], [579], [595] n., [604], [605];
letters from C., 369, 376, 396-408.
Sotheby, Mrs. William, 369, 375, 378.
Soul and body, [708], [709].
South Devon, 305 n.
Southey, Lieutenant, [563].
Southey, Bertha, daughter of Robert S., born, [546], [547] and note, [578].
Southey, Catharine, daughter of Robert S., [578].
Southey, Rev. Charles Cuthbert, his Life and Correspondence of Robert Southey, 308 n., 309 n., 327 n., 329 n., 384 n., 395 n., 400 n., 425 n., [488] n., [521] n., [584] n., [748] n.;
on the date of composition of The Doctor, [583] n.
Southey, Edith, daughter of Robert S., [578].
Southey, Dr. Henry, [615] and note.
Southey, Herbert, son of Robert S., [578];
his nicknames, [583] n.
Southey, Margaret, daughter of Robert S., born, 394 n., 395 n.;
dies, 435 n.
Southey, Mrs. Margaret, mother of Robert S., 138, 147.
Southey, Robert, his and C.’s Omniana, 9 n., [554] n., [718] n.;
his Botany Bay Eclogues, 76 n., 116;
proposed emigration to America with a colony of pantisocrats, 81, 82, 89-91, 95, 96, 98, 101-103;
his sonnets, 82, 83, 92, 108;
his connection with C.’s engagement to Miss Sarah Fricker, 84-86, 126;
his Race of Banquo, 92 and note;
97 n.;
his Retrospect, 107 and note;
his Ode to Romance, 107 and note;
his Ode to Lycon, 107 n., 108;
his Death of Mattathias, 108 and note;
his sonnets, To Valentine, The Fire, The Rainbow, 108 and notes;
his Rosamund to Henry, 108 and notes;
his Pauper’s Funeral, 108 and note, 109;
his Chapel Bell, 110 and note;
C. prophesies fame for, 110;
his Elegy, 115;
C.’s sonnet to, 116 n., 120;
lines to Godwin, 120;
suggestion that the proposed colony of pantisocrats be founded in Wales, 121, 122;
his sonnet, Hold your mad hands!, 127 and note;
his abandonment of pantisocracy causes a serious rupture with C., 134-151;
marries Edith Fricker, 137 n.;
his Joan of Arc, 141, 149, 178 and note, 210, 319;
163 n.;
the poet for the patriot, 178;
198 and note;
his verses to a college cat, 207;
C. compares his poetry with his own, 210;
personal relations with C. after the partial reconciliation, 210, 211;
his exertions in aid of Chatterton’s sister, 221, 222;
his Mary the Maid of the Inn, 223;
C.’s Sonnet to Simplicity not written with reference to, 251 and note;
a more complete reconciliation with C., 303, 304;
visits C. at Stowey with his wife, 304;
C., with his wife and child, visits him at Exeter, 305 and note;
accompanies C. on a walking tour in Dartmoor, 305 and note;
his Specimens of the Later English Poets, 309 n.;
his Madoc, 314, 357, 388, [463] and note, [467], [489], [490];
his Thalaba the Destroyer, 314, 319, 324, 357, [684];
out of health, 314;
C. suggests his removing to London, 315;
George Dyer’s article on, 317 and note;
The Devil’s Thoughts, written in collaboration with C., 318;
320 n.;
thinks of going abroad for his health, 326, 329, 360, 361;
an advocate of the establishment of Protestant orders of Sisters of Mercy, 327 n.;
proposes the establishment of a magazine with signed articles, 328 n.;
extract from a letter to C. on the condition of France, 329 n.;
C. begs him to make his home at Greta Hall, 354-356, 362, 391, 392, 394, 395;
367, 379 n.;
his proposed history of Portugal, 387, 388, 423;
secretary to the Chancellor of the Exchequer for Ireland for a short time, 390 and note;
birth of his first child, Margaret, 394 n., 395 n.;
his admiration of Bowles and its effect on his poems, 396;
400 n.;
his prose style, 423;
his proposed bibliographical work, 428-430;
makes a visit to Greta Hall which proves permanent, 435;
death of his little daughter, Margaret, 435 and note, 437;
his first impressions of Edinburgh, 438 n.;
442;
on Hartley and Derwent Coleridge, 443;
[460], [463], [468], [484], [488] n.;
poverty, [490];
his Wat Tyler, [507] n.;
declines an offer from Scott to secure him a place on the staff of the Edinburgh Review, [521] and note;
[542] n.;
extract from a letter to J. N. White, [545] n.;
on the mumps, [545] n.;
[546];
birth of his daughter Bertha, [546], [547] and note;
[548];
corrects proofs of The Friend, [551] and note;
[575];
C.’s love and esteem for, [578];
his family in 1812, [578];
C.’s estimate of, [581];
on the authorship of The Doctor, [583] n., [584] n.;
[585];
C. states his side of the quarrel with Wordsworth in conversation with, [592];
[604], [609] n., [615], [617] n.;
writes of his friend John Kenyon, [639] n.;
his protection of C.’s family, [657];
C.’s letter introducing Mr. Ludwig Tieck, [670];
his Curse of Kehama, [684];
[694], [718], [724];
his Book of the Church, [724];
[726];
his acquaintance with George Dyer, [748] n.;
letters from C., 72-101, 106-121, 125, 134, 137, 221, 251 n., 303, 307-332, 354-361, 365, 384, 393, 415, 422-430, 434, 437, [464], [469], [487], [520], [554], [597], [605], [670];
letter to Miss Sarah Fricker, 107 n.
See [Annual Anthology, the, edited by Southey].
Southey, Robert, Life and Correspondence of, by Rev. Charles Cuthbert Southey, 108 n., 308 n., 309 n., 327 n., 329 n., 384 n., 395 n., 400 n., 425 n., [488] n., [521] n., [584] n., [736] n., [748] n.
Southey, Robert, Selections from Letters of, 305 n., 438 n., [447] n., [543] n., [545] n., [583] n., [584] n., [736] n.
Southey, Robert, of Balliol College, Bath, Poems by Robert Lovell and, 107 n.
Southey, Mrs. Robert (Edith Fricker), Southey’s sonnet to, 127 and note;
384, 385, 390-392;
birth of her first child, Margaret, 394 n., 395 n.;
[484];
birth of her daughter Bertha, [546], [547] and note;
[592].
Southey, Thomas, 108 n., 109 n., 147;
a midshipman on the Sylph at the time of her capture, 308 and note.
South Molton, 5.
Spade of a Friend (an Agriculturist), To the, by Wordsworth, in honor of Thomas Wilkinson, [538] n.
Spaniards, C.’s opinion of, [478].
Spaniards, Letters on the, [629] and note.
Sparrow, Mr., head-master of Newcome’s Academy, 24, 25 n.
Specimens of the Later English Poets, by Southey, 309 n.
Spectator, Addison’s, studied by C. in connection with The Friend, [557], [558].
Speedwell, the brig, [467];
on board, [469-481].
Spenser, Edmund, his View of the State of Ireland, [638] and note;
quotation from, [694].
Spillekins, [462], [468].
Spinoza, Benedict, [632].
Spirit of Navigation and Discovery, The, by William Lisle Bowles, 403 and note.
Spiritual Philosophy, founded on the Teaching of S. T. Coleridge, by J. H. Green, with memoir of the author’s life, by Sir John Simon, [680] n.
Spurzheim, Johann Kaspar, his life-mask and bust of C., [570] n.
Stage, illusion of the, [663].
Stamford News, [567] n.
Stanger, Mrs. Joshua (Mary Calvert), 345 n.
Stanzas written in my Pocket Copy of Thomson’s Castle of Indolence, by Wordsworth, 345 n.
Steam vessels, [730] and note, [743].
Steffens, Heinrich, [683].
Steinburg, Baron, 279.
Steinmetz, Adam, C.’s letter to his friend, John Peirse Kennard, after his death, [762];
his character and amiable qualities, [763], [764], [775].
Steinmetz, John Henry, [762] n.
Stephen, Leslie, on C.’s study of Kant, 351 n.
Stephens (Stevens), Launcelot Pepys, 25 and note.
Sterling, Life of, by Carlyle, [771] n., [772] n.
Sterling, John, his admiration for C., [771] n., [772] n.;
letter from C., [771].
Sternbald’s Wanderungen, by Ludwig Tieck, [683] and note.
Stevens (Stephens), Launcelot Pepys, 25 and note.
Stoddart, Dr. (afterwards Sir) John, [477] and note, [481], [508];
detains C.’s books and MSS., [523];
[524].
Stoke House, C. visits the Wedgwoods at, [673] n.
Storm, on a mountain-top, 339, 340;
with lightning in December, 365, 366;
on Scafell, 400 and note;
in Kirkstone Pass, 418-420.
Stowey, see [Nether Stowey].
Stowey Benefit Club, 233.
Stowey Castle, 225 n.
Street, Mr., editor of the Courier, [506], [533], [567], [568], [570], [616], [629], [634];
his unsatisfactory conduct of the Courier, [661], [662].
Strutt, Mr., 152, 153.
Strutt, Edward (Lord Belper), 215 n.
Strutt, Joseph, 215 n., 216, 367.
Strutt, Mrs. Joseph, 216.
Strutt, William, 215 and note.
Stuart, Miss, a personal reminiscence of C. by, [705] n.
Stuart, Daniel, proprietor and editor of the Morning Post and Courier, 311, 315;
engages C. for the Morning Post, 319, 320;
321, 329;
engages lodgings in Covent Garden for C., 366 n.;
on C.’s dislike of Sir James Mackintosh, [454] n., [455] n.;

[458], [468], [474], [486] n., [507], [508], [519], [520], [542], [543] n.;
a friend of Dr. Henry Southey, [615] n.;
his steadiness and independence of character, [660];
his public services, [660];
his knowledge of men, [660];
letters from C., [475], [485], [493], [501], [505], [533], [545], [547], [566], [595], [615], [627], [634], [660], [663], [740].
See [Courier] and [Post, Morning].
Stutfield, Mr., amanuensis and disciple of C., [753] and note.
Sugar, beet, 299 and note.
Sun, The, [633].
Sunset in the Lake Country, a, 384.
Supernatural, C.’s essay on the, [684].
Superstitions of the German bauers, 291, 292, 294.
Suwarrow, Alexander Vasilievitch, 307 and note.
Swedenborg, Emanuel, his De Cultu et Amore Dei, [684] n.;
his De Cœlo et Inferno, [684] n.;
[688], [729], [730].
Swedenborgianism, C. and, [684] n.
Swift, Jonathan, his Drapier Letters, [638] and note.
Sylph, the gun-brig, capture of, 308 n.
Sympathy, C.’s craving for, [696], [697].
Synesius, by Canterus, 67 and note, 68.
Syracuse, Sicily, [458];
C.’s visit to, [485] n., [486] n.
Table Talk, 81 n., 440 n., [624] n., [633] n., [684] n., [699] n., [756] n., [763] n., [764] n.
Table Talk and Omniana, 9 n., [554] n., [571] n., [718] n., [764] n.
Tatum, 53, 54.
Taunton, 220 n.;
C. preaches for Dr. Toulmin in, 247.
Taxation, C.’s Essay on, [629] and note.
Taxes, [757].
Taylor, Sir Henry, his Philip Van Artevelde, [774] and note.
Taylor, Jeremy, his Dissuasion from Popery, [639];
his Letter on Original Sin, [640];
a complete man, [640], [641].
Taylor, Samuel, 9.
Taylor, William, 310;
on double rhymes in English, 332;
[488], [489].
Tea, 412, 413, 417.
Temperance, suggestions as to the furtherance of the cause of, [767-769].
Temple, The, by George Herbert, [694].
Teneriffe, 414, 417.
Terminology, C. wishes to form a better, [755].
Thalaba the Destroyer, by Southey, 414;
C.’s advice as to publishing, 319;
324, 357, [684].
The Hour when we shall meet again, 157.
Thelwall, John, his radicalism, 159, 160;
his criticisms of C.’s poetry, 163, 164, 194-197, 218;
on Burke, 166;
his Peripatetic, or Sketches of the Heart, of Nature, and of Society, 166 and note;
his Essay on Animal Vitality, 179, 212;
his Poems, 179, 197;
his contemptuous attitude towards the Christian Religion, 198-205;
two odes by, 218;
C. criticises a poem and a so-called sonnet by, 230;
C. advises him not to settle at Stowey, 232-234;
letter to Dr. Crompton on the Wedgwood annuity, 234 n.;
extract from a letter from C. on the Wedgwood annuity, 235 n.;
letters from C., 159, 166, 178, 193, 210, 214, 228-232.
Thelwall, Mrs. John (Stella, first wife of preceding), 181, 205, 206 n., 207, 214.
Theology, C.’s great interest in, 406;
C.’s projected great work on, [632] and note, [633].
Theory of Life, [711] n.
The piteous sobs which choke the virgin’s breast, a sonnet by C., 206 n.
This Lime-Tree Bower my Prison, 225 and note, 226 and notes, 227, 228 n.
Thompson, James, 343 and note.
Thornycroft, Hamo, R. A., [570] n.;
his bust of C., [695] n.
Thou gentle look, that didst my soul beguile, see [O gentle look], etc.
Though king-bred rage with lawless tumult rude, a sonnet, 116 and note.
Thought, a rule for the regulation of, 244, 245.
Three Graves, The, 412 and note, [551], [606].
Thunder-storm, in December, 365, 366;
on Scafell, 400 and note.
Tieck, Ludwig, a letter of introduction from C. to Southey, [670];
two letters to C. from, [670] n.;
[671], [672], [680];
his Sternbald’s Wanderungen, [663] and note;
[699].
Times, The, 327 n.;
its notice of C.’s tragedy Remorse, [603] and note.
Tineum, by C. Valentine Le Grice, 111 and note.
Tiverton, 56.
To a Friend, together with an Unfinished Poem, 128 n., 454 n.
To a friend who had declared his intention of writing no more poetry, 206 n.
To a Gentleman, [647] n.
See [To William Wordsworth].
To a Highland Girl, by Wordsworth, [459].

To a Young Ass; its mother being tethered near it, 119 and note, 120, [606] and note.
To a Young Lady, with a Poem on the French Revolution, 94 and note.
To a Young Man of Fortune who had abandoned himself to an indolent and causeless melancholy, 207 and note, 208 and note.
Tobin, Mr., his habit of advising [474], [475].
Tobin, James, [460] n.
Tobin, John, [460] n.
To Bowles, 111 and note.
To Disappointment, 28.
Tomalin, J., his Shorthand Report of Lectures, 11 n., [575] n.
To Matilda Betham. From a Stranger, 404 n.
Tomkins, Mr., 397, 402, 403.
To my own Heart, 92 n.
Tooke, Andrew, [455] n.;
his Pantheon, [455] and note.
Tooke, Horne, 218.
To one who published in print what had been intrusted to him by my fireside, 252 n.
Torbay, 305 n.
To R. B. Sheridan, Esq., 116 n., 118.
To the Spade of a Friend (an Agriculturist), by Wordsworth, in honor of Thomas Wilkinson, [538] n.
Totness, 305.
Toulmin, Rev. Dr., 220 n.;
tragic death of his daughter, 247, 248.
Tour in North Wales, by J. Hucks, 74 n., 81 n.
Tour over the Brocken, 257.
Tour through Parts of Wales, by William Sotheby, 396.
To Valentine, by Southey, 108 and note.
Towers, 321.
To William Wordsworth, [641], [644];
C. quotes from, [646], [647];
[647] n.
Treaty of Vienna, [615] and note.
Trossachs, the, 431, 432, 440.
Tuckett, G. L., 57 n.;
letter from C., 57.
Tulk, Charles Augustus, [684] n.;
letters from C., [684], [712].
Turkey, 329.
Turner, Sharon, 425 n., [593].
Two Founts, The, [702] n.
Two Round Spaces on a Tombstone, The, the hero of, [455].
Two Sisters, To, [702] n.
Tychsen, Olaus, 398 and note.
Tyson, T., 393.
Ulpha Kirk, 393.
Understanding, as distinguished from reason, [712], [713].
Unitarianism, 415, [758], [759].
Upcott, C. visits Josiah Wedgwood at, 308.
Usk, the vale of, 410.
Valentine, To, by Southey, 108 and note.
Valetta, Malta, C.’s visit to, [481-484], [487-497].
Valette, General, [484];
given command of the Maltese Regiment, [554], [555].
Vane, Sir Frederick, his library, 296.
Velvet Cushion, The, by Rev. J. W. Cunningham, [651] and note.
Vienna, Treaty of, [615] and note.
Violin-teacher, C.’s, 49.
Virgil’s Æneid, Wordsworth’s unfinished translation of, [733] and note, [734].
Virgil’s Georgics, William Sotheby’s translation, 375.
Visions of the Maid of Orleans, The, 192, 206.
Vital power, definition of, [712].
Vogelstein, Karl Christian Vogel von, a letter of introduction from Ludwig Tieck to C., [670] n.
Von Axen, Messrs. P. and O., 269 n.
Voss, Johann Heinrich, his Luise, 203 n., [625], [627];
his Idylls, 398.
Voyage to Malta, C.’s, [469-481].
Wade, Josiah, 137 n., 145, 151 n., 152 n., 191, 288;
publication by Cottle of Coleridge’s letter of June 26, 1814, to, [616] n., [617] n.;
letters from C., 151, [623].
Waithman, a politician, [598].
Wakefield, Edward, his Account of Ireland, [638].
Wales, proposed colony of pantisocrats in, 121, 122, 140, 141.
Wales, Tour through Parts of, by William Sotheby, 396.
Wales, North, C.’s tour of, 72-81.

Wales, South, C.’s tour of, 410-414.
Walford, John, Poole’s narrative of, [553] and note.
Walker, Thomas, 162.
Walk into the country, a, 32, 33.
Wallenstein, by Schiller, C.’s translation of, 403, [608].
Wallis, Mr., [498-500], [523].
Wallis, Mrs., 392.
Wanderer’s Farewell to Two Sisters, The, [722] n.
Ward, C. A., [763] n.
Ward, Thomas, 170 n.
Wardle, Colonel, leads the attack on the Duke of York in the House of Commons, [543] and note.
Warren, Parson, 18.
Wastdale, 393, 401.
Watchman, The, 57 n.;
C.’s tour to procure subscribers for, 151 and note, 152-154;
155-157;
discontinued, 158;
174 n., [611].
Watson, Mrs. Henry, [698] n., [702] n.
Wat Tyler, by Southey, [506] n.
Wedgwood, Josiah, 260, 261, 268, 269 n.;
visit from C. at Upcott, 308;
his temporary residence at Upcott, 308 n.;
337 n., 350, 351 and note, 416 n.;
withdraws his half of the Wedgwood annuity from C., [602], [611] and note;
C.’s regard and love for, [611], [612].
Wedgwood, Josiah and Thomas, settle on C. an annuity for life of £150, 234 and note, 235 and note;
269 n., 321.
Wedgwood, Miss Sarah, 412, 416, 417.
Wedgwood, Thomas, 323, 379 n.;
with C. in South Wales, 412, 413;
his fine and subtle mind, 412;
proposes to pass the winter in Italy with C., 413, 414, 418;
415, 416;
a genuine philosopher, [448], [449];
C.’s gratitude towards, [451];
[456] n., [493];
C.’s love for, mingled with fear, [612];
letter from C., 417.
Welles, A., [462].
Wellesley, Marquis of, [674].
Welsh clergyman, a, 79, 80.
Wensley, Miss, an actress, and her father, [704].
Wernigerode Inn, 298 n.
West, Mr., [633].
Whitbread, Samuel, [598].
White, Blanco, [741], [744].
White, J. N., extract from a letter from Southey, [545] n.
White Water Dash, 375 and note, 376 n.
Wilberforce, William, [535].
Wilkie, Sir David, his portraits of Hartley C., [511] n.;
his Blind Fiddler, [511] n.
Wilkinson, Thomas, [538] n.;
letter from C., [538].
Will, lunacy or idiocy of the, [768].
Williams, Edward (Iolo Morgangw), 162 and note.
Williams, John (“Antony Pasquin”), [603] n.
Wilson, Mrs., housekeeper for Mr. Jackson of Greta Hall, [461] and note, [491];
Hartley C.’s attachment for, [510].
Wilson, Professor, [756].
Windy Brow, 346.
Wish written in Jesus Wood, February 10, 1792, A, 35.
With passive joy the moment I survey, an anonymous sonnet, 177, 178.
With wayworn feet, a pilgrim woe-begone, a sonnet by Southey, 127 and note.
Wolf, Freiherr Johann Christian von, [735].
Wollstonecraft, Mary, 316, 318 n., 321.
Woodlands, 271.
Woolman, John, [540].
Woolman, John, the Journal of, 4 and note.
Worcester, 154.
Wordsworth, Catherine, [563].
Wordsworth, Rev. Christopher, D. D., 225 n.;
Charles Lloyd reads Greek with, 311.
Wordsworth, Rev. Christopher, M. A., his Social Life at the English Universities in the Eighteenth Century, 225 n.
Wordsworth, Rt. Rev. Christopher, D. D., his Memoirs of William Wordsworth, 432 n., [585] n.
Wordsworth, Dorothy, 10 n.;
C.’s description of, 218 n.;
visits C. with her brother, 224-227;
228, 231, 245 n., 249;
goes to Germany with William Wordsworth, Coleridge, and John Chester, 259;
with her brother at Goslar, 272, 273;
returns with him to England, 288, 296;
311 n., 346, 367, 373, 385;
accompanies her brother and C. on a tour in Scotland, 431, 432 and note;
[577], [599] n.
Wordsworth, John, son of William W., [545].
Wordsworth, Captain John, and the effect of his death on C.’s spirits, [494] and note, [495] and note, [497].
Wordsworth, Thomas, death of, [599] n.;
C.’s love of, [600].
Wordsworth, William, 10 n., 163 and note, 164 and note, 218 n.;
visit from C. at Racedown, 220 and note, 221;
greatness of, 221, 224;
settles at Alfoxden, near Stowey, 224;
at C.’s cottage, 224-227;
C. visits him at Alfoxden, 227;
228, 231, 232;
suspected of conspiracy against the government, 232 n., 233;
memoranda scribbled on the outside sheet of a letter from C., 238 n.;
his greatness and amiability, 239;
his Excursion, 244 n., 337 n., [585] n., [641], [642], [645-650];
245;
C.’s admiration for, 246;
250 n.;
accompanies C. to Germany, 259;
268, 269 n.;
considers settling near the Lakes, 270;
271;
at Goslar with his sister, 272, 273;
an Epitaph by, 284;
returns to England, 288, 296;
wishes C. to live near him in the North of England, 296;
his grief at C.’s refusal, 296, 297;
304, 313;
his and C.’s Lyrical Ballads, 336, 337, 341, 350 and note, 387;
his admiration for Christabel, 337;
338, 342;
proposal from William Calvert in regard to sharing his house and studying chemistry with him, 345, 346;
his Stanzas written in my Pocket Copy of Thomson’s Castle of Indolence, 345 n.;
348, 350;
marries Miss Mary Hutchinson, 359 n.;
363, 367, 370, 373;
his opinion of poetic license, 373-375;
C. addresses his Ode to Dejection to, 378 and note, 379 and note, 380-384;
385-387;
his Ruth, 387;
400, 418, 428;
with C. on a Scotch tour, 431-434;
his Peter Bell, 432 and note;
441, 443;
receives a visit at Grasmere from C., who is taken ill there, [447];
his hypochondria, [448];
his happiness and philosophy, [449], [450];
a most original poet, [450];
[451];
his To a Highland Girl, [459];
[464], [468];
his reference to C. in The Prelude, 386 n.;
[452];
his Brothers, [494] n., [609] n.;
his Happy Warrior, [494] n.;
extract from a letter to Sir George Beaumont on John Wordsworth’s death, [494] n.;
[511] and note, [522];
his essays on the Convention of Cintra, [534] and note, [543] and note, [548-550];
[535];
his To the Spade of a Friend, [558] n.;
[543] and note, [546], [522], [553] n., [556];
C.’s misunderstanding with, [576] n., [577], [578], [586-588], [612];
his Essays upon Epitaphs, [585] and note;
a long-delayed explanation from C., [588-595];
reconciled with C., [596], [597], [599], [612];
death of his son Thomas, [599] n.;
second rupture with C., [599] n., [600] n.;
his projected poem, The Recluse, [646], [647] and note, [648-650];
[678];
on William Blake as a poet, [686] n.;
his unfinished translation of the Æneid, [733] and note, [734];
felicities and unforgettable lines and stanzas in his poems, [734];
influence of the Edinburgh Review on the sale of his works in Scotland, [741], [742];
[759] n.;
letters from C., 234, [588], [596], [599], [643], [733].
Wordsworth, William, Life of, by Rev. William Angus Knight, LL. D., 164 n., 220 n., [447] n., [585] n., [591] n., [596] n., [599] n., [600] n., [733] n., [759] n.
Wordsworth, William, Memoirs of, by Christopher Wordsworth, 432 n., [550] n., [585] n.
Wordsworth, William, To, [641], [644];
C. quotes from, [646], [647];
[647] n.
Wordsworth, Mrs. William, extract from a letter to Sara Coleridge, 220;
[525].
See [Hutchinson, Mary].
Wordsworths, the, visit from C. and his son Hartley at Coleorton Farmhouse, [509-514];
[545];
letter from C., [456].
Wrangham, Francis, 363 and note.
Wrexham, 77, 78.
Wright, Joseph, A. R. A. (Wright of Derby), 152 and note.
Wright, W. Aldis, 174 n.
Wynne, Mr., an old friend of Southey’s, [639] n.
Wyville’s proofs of C.’s portrait, [770].
Yarmouth, 258, 259.
Yates, Miss, 39.
Yews near Brecon, 411.
York, Duke of, [543] n., [555] n., [567] and note.
Young, Edward, 404.
Youth and Age, [730] n.
Zapolya: A Christmas Tale, in two Parts, its publication in book form after rejection by the Drury Lane Committee, [666] and note, [667-669].