A.
Abuses, i. 284.
Acquiescence, not choice, i. 19.
Action,
springs of, i. 160.
Addresses, Two,
to the Freeholders of Westmoreland, i. 211. 270;
occasion
of writing, i. 214.
Addison, i. 357.iii. 508.
Adventurers, i. 241.
Advice to the
Young, i. 295.326.
Admiration, unqualified, i. 312.
Advancement and preferment of youth, i. 352.
'Age, present,' supposed moral inferiority of, i.
310.
Agitators, i. 249.
Alban's, St., ii. 46.
Alfoxden, iii. 16.[277]
Alpedrinha, i. 56.
Allies, to be
supported, i. 138.
how, i. 138-9.et
seqq.
Alston, ii. 193.
'Altering' of poems, ii. 207.
Ambleside, ii. 224-6;
road from, to Keswick, ii.
227-8.
'Amends,' how to make, i.
130-1,et seqq.
American war, i.
135.6.
American edition of poems, iii.
483-4.
Anxiety, moderate, i. 324.
Appendix
to Bishop
Watson's Sermon, i. 24-30;
to Contention of Cintra, i. 175-79.
(See
preface, I. xiv.-xix.)
Apology
for the French Revolution, i. 1-23.
(See preface, I. x.-xix.)
Arbitrary,
distinctions, i. 16-17;
power,
i. 158-9.
Aristocracy, i. 19.
Aristarchus, ii.
17.
Armistice, i. 84.
preamble of, i. 86.
articles of, i. 88-94.
Armstrong, Dr., iii. 506.
Army,
British, departure of, i. 38.
Spanish,
the people, i. 47.
French, and the French government, i. 95.
'Arrow,' i.
21.
Artevelde, van, Philip, iii. 492.
Art and nature, ii. 157-61.
Arts
and science, i. 154.
fine, i. 323.
Ashe, i. 360.
Ashley, iii. 507.
Assembly, i.
147.
Asturias, i. 52-3.
B.
' Bad people,' ii. 41.
'Babes in the wood,' ii. 98.
Bacon,
quotation from, i. 357.
and
Shakespeare, iii. 457.
Beia, i. 55.
Benevolence, i.
171.
'Beck.' i. 336.
Beaumont, Sir George H. and Lady,
letters
to, ii. 146-201;
drawings by Sir George, ii.
151.
Beaumont, Sir John, i. 346.iii. 505.
Bell, Peter, ii.
182.
Bell, Dr., iii. 507.
Bede, iii. 506.
Biscayans, i. 60.
Biography, of authors, ii. 11-12.
Birthday, iii.
443-4.
Bonaparte, i. 37.
acknowledgment of titles, i.
84-5;
influence of
concession on, i. 93-4;
ravager of Europe, i. 115.
formidable yet weak, i.
163-4;
to decrease, i. 200.ii. 18. et alibi
frequenter.
Books, religious, i.
335.
'Bolton, Mr.,' i. 350.
Boswell's Johnson, ii. 9.
Bran
[misprinted Braw], iii. 69.
Bleeding,
good, i. 86.
Britain, history of a noble
one, i. 101-2.
Brougham,
public life of, i. 225.
et seqq., i. 242-8, et seqq.
later opinion of, iii.
504.
Bruce, Michael, ii. 21.i. 343.
Bruce, P.H..iii.
507.
Browne, Sir Thomas, ii. 23.
Browning, Robert,
letter to
the Editor, i. xxxiv.;
quotation
from poem of, iii. 508.
Brun,
Frederica, iii. 505.
Brooke, Lord, iii. 506.
Burke, i.
21. i. 357.
Burns, Robert, Cottar's
Saturday-night, i. 356-60;
letter to a friend of, ii.
1.ii. 19;
Gilbert, ii. 5. ii. 19.ii. 343;
fitted to tell the whole truth of, ii. 6-7;
quotations
from, ii. 7. ii. 13-14, 331, 343 (bis), ii. 347,iii. 436. iii. 506.
Building and gardening,
ii. 184. ii. 191.
Buttermere and Crummock, ii. 230.
Burnet, Thomas, ii. 327. ii.
507.
Burnet, Bishop, iii. 506.
Buchanan, iii. 459.
Byron, iii. 462-3, ii. 503.
C.
Calamity, how to be regarded, i.
52.
Castile, council of, i. 59.
Cadiz, governor of, i. 92.
Catholic
Relief Bill, i. 259. i. 70.
Camden, ii. 27. 343-4.
Carter,
Miss, 'Spring,' iii. 426.
Campbell, odd
forgetfulness of, ii. 445.
Celandine,
small, iii. 505.
Chamber, personal
character of and its chief, ii. 140-1.
Child and man, i. 170.
Charles I.,
tyranny of, i. 310.
epitaph of, ii. 49.
Sydney and, ii. 50.
Chatterton, ii. 21. ii.
343.
Chiabiera, ii. 58. ii. 68, et seqq.
Christabelle, iii. 427.
Chronological classification of
poems, iii. 474.
Church of England,
servility of its clergy, i. 3-4;
notices of, i. 262-4, i. 283, et seqq.
Churchyard,
village, ii. 33-4;
country, ii. 41. et
seqq.;
on sea-coast, iii. 434.
Clark, Mrs., ii. 66-7, iii. 344-5.
Classical study, iii. 479.
Clergyman, the, i. 286-7,et seqq.
Cleveland, history of, iii. 508.
Cockburn, Mrs., iii. 509.
Coleridge, ii. 155-6, 163, 164, 166,
167,
168,
170, 174-5, 184-4, 193, iii. 427.
441, 442, 444,
469-70, 492, 507,
et
alibi frequenter.
Coleridge, Hartley, iii. 482. et alibi.
Coleridge, the
Lord, i. xxxiii.
Collins, ii. 120.iii. 419.
Commissioners, report of, i. 274.
'Common life,' ii. 81-2, et seqq.
Companions, i. 229.
'Compulsory'
relief, i. 278.
Conciliation and
concession, i. 265.
Condemnation,
inevitable, i. 82-3.
Coniston, ii. 226-7.
Constancy, i.
51.
Contempt, ii. 18.
Contention
of Cintra, i. 31.172;
occasion of writing, i.
35.129;
importance of, i. 37.143;
impression
produced by the, i. 37.
condemned, i. 65.
reception by the people, i.
69.
results of, as a
military act, i. 70-1;
critical examination of its terms, i. 71. et seqq.;
not necessary, i. 82.
military results, i.
84. et seqq.;
conditions
of, thus far examined, i. 99.
injury done to British character, i. 99-100,101-102;
sorrow of the nation over, i. 103-4;
punishment
demanded, i. 104-5;
to be repudiated, i. 105-6;
disgrace of, i. 121.
Vindication of the Opinions on, i. 195. 209.
(See preface. Vol. I.
xiv.-xix.
Continuous education, i.
355-6.
Contradictions, i. 237.
Conversations and personal reminiscences of Wordsworth, iii. 403. 504.
Coöperation
of working people, i. 282.
Copyright,
international, iii. 483.
Corruption, i. 20.
Cortes, i. 147.
Cotton, Charles, and Walton, ii. 89. 345.
Cotton, Dr., ii.
142-4.
Counters and stakes, i. 81.
County elections, entire charge of, i. 251-2.
Courage, i. 50.
intellectual, lacking, i.
74-5.
Cowley, iii. 465.
Courts, corruption of, i. 14.
Cowper, ii. 104. 211, 346.
Crabbe, iii. 503.
et alibi.
Crashaw, ii. 344.
Criticism, false, ii. 175.181;
result of in Edinburgh Review and
Quarterly, iii. 437.
a low ability for, iii. 438.
9;
verbal,
iii. 474. 5.
Critic, decision of, ii. 110.
Cromwell, i. 166. 359.
Crowe, iii. 506.
Cuckoo, ii. 136-7.
Cumberland's Calvary, iii. 415.
Curates, i.
285-6.
Currie, Dr., ii. 5.
indignation with, ii. 7-8,
i12
D.
Dalrymple, Sir Hew, i. 72. et frequenter.
Daughter, education of a, i. 329-33.
Dante, i. 359. et alibi.
Da Vinci, Leonardo, iii. 506.
Darwin,
Dr., iii. 507.
D'Abrantes, title of,
wrongly acknowledged, i. 68. 357.
Delusions, i. 19.
Debt, national,
i. 20.
'Declarations,' i.
43-4.
Defeats and disasters, i. 44-5.
Delicacy, no, i. 98.
Defence of
fellow-countrymen, i. 113.
Despotismi. 139. 40 229.
Despond, those who, i. 171-2.
Detraction, no, ii. 42.
Dedication, to
the Queen, i. v.;
of 1815, ii. 144.
De Vere, Sir Aubrey, iii. 495. 509-510.
De Quincey, i. xxxiii.-iv., iii. 507.
Diction, of poetic, ii. 101. 5.
'Difficulties,' i. 72.
Diogenes, i. 238.
Disabilities, civil, i. 269.
Dissenters, i.
262.
'Dignity,' individual, i. 292.
Discrimination in epitaphs, ii. 37-8.
Doe, White, the, iii. 430. et alibi.
Double sense, ii. 45-6.
Drummond, Miss.ii. 65-6.
Dryden, ii.
118. iii. 416. 419.
Duty, i. 40.1, 129, 326, 349.
Dupont, i. 358.
Duppa, ii. 162. 346, iii. 506.
Dubartas, ii.
111-12.
Dyer, John, ii. 196. 7, ii. 196. iii.
216. 405, 506, et
alibi.
E.
Economists, unfortunate, i. 233.
Education, of, i. 327. 56;
what it is, i. 343-4, et
seqq.,
moral, i. 346-7;
of
Scotland, i. 348.
continuous, i. 355-6.
Edinburgh Review, censured, ii. 16. et
alibi.
Edwards, John, ii. 33. 344.
Edgeworth, Francis, iii. 508.
Egle, bank of, iii. 508.
Election, free, i. 234.
Elizabeth, i.
310.
Elliot, Jane, iii. 509.
Emerson, i. xxxiv, et alibi
Ends, i. 80-1.
Enthusiasm, i. 149.
Epitaphs, upon, from 'The
Friend,' ii. 27. 40;
laws of, 31, et
seqq.;
requisites of, ii. 35. et seqq.;
a perfect, ii. 39.
The country Churchyard, and critical
Examination of ancient, ii. 41. 59;
in
Germany, ii. 44.
homeliness, ii. 46-7;
in Westmoreland, ii.
51-2;
of Pope, criticised,
ii. 55. et seqq.;
Celebrated Epitaphs considered, ii. 60. 75;
favourable examples, ii. 72.
et seqq. (See preface, I.xxiv.-v.)
Equality, i. 14. 288.
Established church and priesthood, i. 232.
preservation of, i.
290.
Eschylus, iii. 508.
'Estate,' gift of, ii. 151.
Europe, state of, i. 220-1.
Evil, ii. 91.
Excursion, ii.
145. 8, 168-9.
Executive, the power, i. 13.
F.
Faith, ii. 109-10.
Fancy
and imagination, ii. 134-5, et seqq.
'Favourite spots,' iii. 424.
Fame, posthumous, iii. 458. 493.
Faber, iii. 488. 506.
Family, a single, 215-16. et seqq.;
defence of the, 217-18.
et seqq.
Feelings, i. 65.
158, ii. 83. 4, et seqq.;
rely
on our, ii. 99.
Ferguson,
General, i. 137.
Fermor, Mrs., ii. 178.
Fenwick, Miss, xxvi-xxx.
Ferdinand VII., i. 358.
'Fire.' i.
118-19.
Flowers, iii. 447.
Florus, i. 359.
Fortitude,
ancient, i. 205-6.
Forebodings, i. 249-50.
Fore-feeling, ii. 344.
Founders of a school to be
remembered, i. 351.
Fool, in Lear, iii. 419.
Fools, Paradise of, ii. 18.
Fox, letter to, on poems, ii. 202. 5;
reply, ii. 205-6.
Frere, i. 67.8, 96, 358.
French
armies, character of, i. 79-80;
to surrender at discretion, i.
81.
under French
government, i. 90.
'Free,' a
nation resolved to be, i. 146.
Franchise, i. 223. 239.
Fuller, iii. 506.
G.
Gardening, ii. 174.
and building, ii. 184.
191.
Generals, British, bearing
of, i. 79.
political,
i. 95.
incompetent
and competent, i. 143.
Girl,
peasant, iii. 466-7;
education of, i. 341.
Goldsmith, ii. 154. 333.
Goethe, iii. 435.6, 465.
Grammar, &c., i.
353.
Grasmere, ii. 229.
Gratifications, what, i. 315-16.
Gratuitous instruction, i. 346.
Gratitude for kindnesses, ii. 149.
Graves, Rev. R.P., M.A., i. xxxv-vi.;
prayer by, i. 359-60.
Gray, ii. 41. 67-68,
85-6, 327, 344, 345, iii.
507.
Gray, James, ii. 5. 343.
Gregoire, i. 4,
5, 357.
Grievances, national, i. 4.
Grimm, Baron,
ii. 113.
Guide through the District
of the Lakes, ii. 215. 313.(See
under
Lakes and different places.)
H.
Hamlet, i. 22.
Hakewell, ii. 113. 345.
Hamilton, Sir R.W., iii. 492. 506,