• Adams, Dr. Joseph Adams, recommends Coleridge to James Gillman, ii, 149.
  • Addington, Right Honourable H., Prime Minister of England in 1801, i, 286.
  • Aders, Mrs., ii, 217.
  • Aeolian Harp, The, poem by Coleridge, i, 167; ii, 110.
  • Aesthetic, The, ii, 237.
  • Aids to Reflection, origin of, ii, 279–84, 286, 293.
  • Ainger, Canon, Letters of Lamb, Preface, xi, xvii; i, 92.
  • Albion, The, newspaper, i, 247.
  • Alfoxden, ii, 31.
  • Alice du Clos, a ballad by Coleridge, ii, 293–4.
  • Alison, Sir Archibald, Historian (1792–1867), on Coleridge, ii, 89.
  • Allegorical Lines, “Myrtle Leaf that ill besped,” i, 126.
  • Allegoric Vision, ii, 113.
  • Allen, Robert, early friend of Coleridge, ii, 250.
  • Allsop, Thomas, friend of Coleridge, Preface, vi, ix, xvi; ii, 158–80;
    • introduces himself to Coleridge, 158;
    • birth of his daughter, 259, 267–8, 278, 279.
    • See also “Letters.”
  • Allsop, Mrs., ii, 250, 258, 267–8, 289.
  • Allston, Washington, American Artist, i, 115; ii, 6, 136, 300.
  • Amiel, Henri Frederic (1821–1881), and Coleridge, Preface, xiv; ii, 139.
  • Amulet, The, Preface, viii; ii, 292.
  • Ancient Mariner, The, i, 150, 159, 160; ii, 104, 111, 293–4.
  • Anima Poetae, by E. H. Coleridge, Preface, vii, xi, xvii.
  • Anniversary, The, an annual, ii, 292.
  • Annual Anthology, The, i, 195.
  • Anster, Professor John (1793–1867), translator of Faust, ii, 247.
  • Antonio, a tragedy by William Godwin, i, 201, 247.
  • Aristotle, i, 271.
  • Ashe, Thomas (1836–1889), Poet and Editor of the Aldine Edition of Coleridge’s Poems and other works,
    • Preface, xix; ii, 232, 238;
    • his opinion of Coleridge’s Poetry, 294.
  • Athenæum, quoted, Preface, xi; ii, 36–7.
  • Atonement, Coleridge’s Theory of, ii, 279.
  • Aynard, Joseph, La Vie d’un Poète, Preface, xix.
  • Ball, Sir Alexander, governor of Malta, appoints Coleridge his Secretary, ii, 3.
  • Banks, Sir Joseph (1744–1820), i, 268.
  • Barbauld, Mrs. (1743–1825), i, 76.
  • Barr, Mr., of Worcester, entertains Coleridge, i, 58.
  • Barrister’s Hints, A, Coleridge’s Notes on, ii, 305.
  • Baxter, Coleridge’s Notes on, ii, 305.
  • Beaumont, Sir George, and Lady, Coleridge’s opinion of, i, 300; ii, 33, 36, 136, 146.
  • Beaumont and Fletcher, Coleridge’s Notes on, ii, 305.
  • Beddoes, Dr. (1760–1808), acquaintance of Coleridge, i, 52, 66, 72, 76, 83, 84, 155, 206, 245; ii, 28, 30; death of, 45.
  • Bedell, Coleridge’s Notes on, ii, 305.
  • Bell, Dr. Andrew (1753–1832), Founder of the Madras System of Education, ii, 34, 74.
  • Berdmore, Mr., a friend of Southey, i, 35, 37.
  • Berengarius, Lines suggested by the last words of, a poem by Coleridge, ii, 113, 292.
  • Berkeley, Bishop (1685–1753), ii, 146.
  • Bernard, Sir Thomas, ii, 41.
  • Bertram, Coleridge’s Critique on, ii, 82, 220.
  • Betham, Matilda, Portrait Painter, Coleridge writes letters to, ii, 38.
  • Bethell, Mr., of Yorkshire, stands along with Coleridge for the Craven Scholarship, i, 30.
  • Bibliographies of Coleridge, Preface, xviii.
  • Biggs, Mr. Cottle’s partner, i, 286.
  • Bijou, The, annual, ii, 292.
  • Biographia Literaria, by S. T. Coleridge, Preface, xvi, ii, 86, 93, 104;
  • origin of, 146, 169.
  • Biographia Literaria, Supplement of.
  • See Preface and Appendix.
  • Blackwood, William (1776–1834), Publisher, Coleridge’s Letters to, ii, 232, 293.
  • Blackwood’s Magazine, Coleridge contributes to, Preface, vii, viii; ii, 213, 232, 238, 268, 293.
  • Blackwood, William, and his Sons, by Mrs. Oliphant, Letters of Coleridge contained in.
    • See Preface and Appendix.
  • Blossoming of the Solitary Date Tree, poem by Coleridge, ii, 112.
  • Blumenbach, Professor J. H., Naturalist (1752–1840), i, 196.
  • Bookman, The, Preface, xi;
    • quoted, i, 51.
  • Borderers, The, drama by Wordsworth, i, 137, 141, 154, 155, 157.
  • Bowden, Ann, mother of S. T. Coleridge, i, 3;
    • ancestry of, 5;
    • anecdotes of, 19–20.
  • Bowles, William Lisle, Poet (1762–1850), i, 139.
  • Bowyer (or Boyer), Rev. James, Teacher of Coleridge at Christ’s Hospital, i, 23; ii, 301.
  • Brabant, Dr., of Devizes, Coleridge writes to, ii, 141, 148.
  • Brandl, Professor Alois, of Prague, biographer of Coleridge, his Life of Coleridge, Preface, x, xix; ii, 302.
  • Brazil, History of, Southey’s, ii, 41.
  • Brent, Charlotte, sister of Mrs. Morgan, ii, 102, 140, 148.
  • British Critic, The, i, 246.
  • Britton, Mr., Coleridge writes letters to, ii, 165–9.
  • Brooke, Stopford A., his Introduction to the Golden Book of Coleridge, Preface, xx.
  • Brookes, Mr., a College acquaintance of Southey, i, 35, 37.
  • Brothers, The, a poem by Wordsworth, i, 200, 229, 240.
  • Browne, Wilfred, his From Ottery to Highgate, Preface, xx.
  • Browne, Sir Thomas (1605–1682), Coleridge on, i, 293;
    • Notes on, ii, 305.
  • Bruno Giordano, Philosopher (died 1600), Coleridge’s philosophy influenced by, ii, 146.
  • Buller, Sir Francis, procures for Coleridge a presentation to Christ’s Hospital, i, 19.
  • Burgess, Sir James Bland (1752–1824), his Richard the First, i, 243.
  • Burke and Pitt, Coleridge on, ii, 55.
  • Burnett, George, one of the Pantisocrats, i, 45, 49, 65, 132, 133–4.
  • Butler, Samuel (1774–1839), gains the Craven Scholarship, i, 30.
  • Byron, Lord, i, 235;
    • attends Coleridge’s Lectures, ii, 73;
    • on Zapolya, 107;
    • Coleridge’s description of, 157, 220.
  • Caine, Mr. Hall, his Life of Coleridge, Preface, xix;
    • on Coleridge and Southey, ii, 131.
  • “Caius Gracchus,” Letter to, i, 69.
  • Calvert, William, i, 222–4.
  • Cambridge Intelligencer, i, 67, 68.
  • Cambridge, Coleridge at, i, 29, 51.
  • Campbell, J. Dykes, Life of Coleridge, Preface, x, xix; i, 140, 163.
  • Campbell, Thomas, Poet (1774–1844), his Pleasures of Hope, i, 229.
  • Canova, Antonio, Italian Sculptor (1757–1822), Coleridge meets in Rome, ii, 6.
  • “Cantab,” Letter to, in the Friend, ii, 63.
  • Cary, H. F., Memoir of, Preface, x.
  • Carlisle, Sir Antony, i, 220.
  • Carlyle, Thomas, visits Coleridge in 1824, ii, 279, 296.
  • Carlyon, Clement (1777–1864), his Early Years and Late Reflections, Preface, xvi;
    • meets Coleridge in Germany, i, 162;
    • describes Coleridge at the University of Göttingen and his ascent of the Brocken, 167; ii, 279, 296.
  • Caroline, Queen, ii, 202.
  • Casimir, Latin Poet, Coleridge’s Ode after, i, 34.
  • Catcott, George, of the Bristol Library, Coleridge sends a letter to, i, 128.
  • Catullian Hendecasyllables, poem by Coleridge, ii, 111.
  • Chalmers, Dr. Thomas (1780–1847), Free Churchman, pays a visit to Coleridge, ii, 279, 299.
  • Chateaubriand, F. R. (1768–1848), quoted, ii, 139.
  • Chatterton, Monody on the death of, first published, i, 68, 73, 144, 154;
    • revision of, 1829, ii, 133, 297.
  • Christabel, running up to 1,300 lines, i, 206–7;
    • Coleridge unable to finish, 208;
    • how Coleridge wrote the Second Part, 212–13, 221;
    • read to Sir Walter Scott, 228;
    • Southey on, 240;
    • Coleridge’s recitation of, 251, 275;
    • published in 1816, ii, 104–5, 111, 112, 146;
    • Coleridge hopes to complete, 188, 211, 214–15;
    • estimate of, 293–4.
    • See also Preface, xi, xviii.
  • Christianity considered as Philosophy and the only Philosophy, Coleridge’s projected magnum opus, ii, 142.
  • Christ’s Hospital, Coleridge at, i, 19–22; ii, 250, 301.
  • Chubb, Mr., of Bridgwater, Coleridge pays a visit to, ii, 27.
  • Church and State, On the Constitution of, by Coleridge, ii, 284, 298.
  • Clarkson, Thomas, the Abolitionist (1760–1846), ii, 36, 38.
  • Clarkson, Mrs., Preface, xii; ii, 38.
  • Clevedon, Coleridge resides at, i, 49, 50, 60.
  • Cobbett, William (1762–1835), Coleridge on, ii, 43, 173, 198.
  • Coleorton, Memorials of, Preface, x, xvii; ii, 233;
    • see Appendix.
  • Coleridge, Ann (Nancy), sister of Coleridge, death of, at twenty-one, 8;
    • letter to, from her brother Francis, 10.
  • Coleridge, Berkeley (second child), born, i, 162;
    • died, 163.
  • Coleridge, David Hartley, Poet (eldest son), (1796–1849), born, i, 90, 131, 185;
    • described by his father, 201, 215, 220;
    • and the moon, 221;
    • ii, at Oxford, 189, 190, 200, 257.
  • Coleridge, Derwent (third son), (1800–1883), Preface, xix;
    • birth, i, 207, 216; ii, 178, 201, 257.
  • Coleridge, Ernest Hartley (grandson), authority on S. T. Coleridge and his works, see Preface, xiv-xv, xviii.
  • Coleridge, Rev. George (brother), i, 29.
  • Coleridge, Henry Nelson (1798–1843) (nephew and son-in-law), author of the Table Talk of S. T. C., meets Sara Coleridge, ii, 268;
    • origin of Table Talk, 278–9;
    • see also Preface, v–vi.
  • Coleridge, Rev. John (father), i, 3;
    • his publications, 4–7;
    • his marriage and children, 6–8;
    • death of, 18.
  • Coleridge, Mrs. John (mother), i, 3, 6, 8, 9, 12, 14, 15, 16–18, 19.
  • Coleridge, Samuel Taylor: his five autobiographical letters to Thomas Poole, i, 3–22;
    • born 21st October 1772, 3;
    • ancestry and parentage, 3–6;
    • writes autobiographical letters to Thomas Poole, 5;
    • baptised, 9;
    • child life of, 9–22;
    • at the reading school, 11;
    • early reading, 12;
    • admitted to the Grammar School, 13;
    • anecdotes of, 15;
    • his father resolves to make him a parson, 17;
    • recollections of the Vast, 17;
    • sent to Christ’s Hospital, 19;
    • sent to Hertford, 20;
    • entered at Jesus College, Cambridge, 29;
    • gains Sir William Browne’s gold medal for the Greek Ode, 30;
    • stands for the Craven Scholarship, 30;
    • writes a Greek Ode on Astronomy, 31;
    • account of, by a fellow student (C. V. Le Grice) at college, 31;
    • at Frend’s trial, 31;
    • at Ottery St. Mary in 1793, 32;
    • returns to Cambridge and enlists in the 15th Light
    • Dragoons, 32;
    • comes back to Cambridge, 33;
    • espouses Unitarianism, 33;
    • goes to Oxford and makes the acquaintance of Southey, 34;
    • leaves Oxford in company with John Hucks and makes a tour in Wales, 35;
    • tells an anecdote about his walking stick, 39;
    • goes to Bristol to meet Southey and is introduced to Sarah Fricker, 41;
    • along with Southey projects a scheme of Platonic Republicanism named Pantisocracy, 41–9;
    • delivers lectures in Bristol, 48;
    • marries Sarah Fricker on 4th October 1795, 49;
    • resides at Clevedon, 49–50;
    • projects a political journal called the Watchman, 50;
    • proposes to start a school, 51;
    • becomes acquainted with Joseph Cottle, publisher and poet, Bristol, 51;
    • and John James Morgan, 52;
    • and Dr. Beddoes and the Wedgwoods, 53;
    • preaches with remarkable effect, 54;
    • goes on a tour to the North to canvass for subscribers for the Watchman, 54–61;
    • meets Erasmus Darwin, 57;
    • meets James Montgomery, the poet, 59;
    • returns to Bristol and resides at Redcliffe Hill, 61;
    • gets ready for publication his first volume of poems, 61;
    • publishes the Watchman, 64;
    • removes to Kingsdown, Bristol, 64;
    • attacks William Godwin in the Watchman, 69;
    • projects various literary, etc., schemes, 74–5, 78–9;
    • Tom Poole collects an annuity for, 80;
    • proposes to settle at Nottingham, 83;
    • proposes to take to teaching, 85–6;
    • goes to Darley to see Mrs. Evans, 85–6;
    • returns to Bristol, 88;
    • goes to Birmingham to see the father of Charles Lloyd, 89;
    • his first child is born, 90;
    • quarrels with and is reconciled to Southey, 92;
    • writes his Ode to the Departing Year, and dedicates it to Thomas Poole, 112;
    • removes early in January 1797 to Stowey, Somersetshire, 121;
    • engages to publish a revised edition of his Poems, 122;
    • and sends poems to Cottle for his criticisms, 125;
    • invited by Sheridan to write a Tragedy, 127;
    • writes a curious letter to George Catcott of the Bristol Library, 128;
    • commences his tragedy Osorio, 129;
    • has a droll dialogue with a countrywoman, 132;
    • writes a humorous letter to Cottle about mice, 133;
    • meets Dorothy Wordsworth, and describes her to Cottle, 136;
    • meets John Thelwall, the democrat, 138–9;
    • goes to London with Osorio, 140;
    • meets W. Linley, Sheridan’s brother-in-law and secretary, 141;
    • his Osorio rejected by Sheridan, 142;
    • is offered but declines £100 from Thomas Wedgwood, 143;
    • has conferred on him a pension of £150 a year from Thomas and Josiah Wedgwood, 144;
    • his omnivorous reading, 146;
    • along with Wordsworth projects and publishes the volume of the Lyrical Ballads, 147;
    • anecdote of how the three bards were taught a lesson by a servant wench, 148;
    • projects a Third Edition of his Poems, 153–4;
    • has an estrangement with Charles Lamb
    • and Charles Lloyd, 161;
    • his second child born, 162;
    • visits Germany, 162;
    • ascends the Brocken, 167;
    • projects to write a life of Lessing, 180;
    • returns to England, 182;
    • works along with Southey and publishes The Devil’s Thoughts, 182;
    • visits Ottery and Stowey and Sockburn, and meets Sarah Hutchinson, 182;
    • contributes to the Morning Post, 185;
    • meets Godwin, 185;
    • translates Schiller’s Wallenstein, 185;
    • meets Horne Tooke, 188;
    • leaves London for Stowey, 193;
    • settles at Greta Hall, Keswick, 197;
    • adventure of, among the mountains, 210;
    • projects a work on the Rise and Condition of the German Boors, 216;
    • makes pedestrian tours with the Wordsworths, 219;
    • proposes to study chemistry, 222;
    • proposes to write an essay Concerning Poetry and the Nature of the Pleasure derived from it, 223;
    • meets John Stoddart and gives him a copy of Christabel, 228;
    • laments the loss of his Poetic Faculty, 229;
    • his ideal of The Permanent, 233–6;
    • in ill health, 243;
    • thinks of emigrating, 248;
    • visited by Samuel Rogers, 249;
    • goes again to London, 251;
    • his projected Epic, The Siege of Jerusalem, 254;
    • caught in a tempest among the hills, 258–9;
    • translates Gessner’s Erste Schiffer, 269;
    • publishes a Third Edition of his Poems, 270;
    • goes on a tour to Wales with Tom Wedgwood, 270;
    • goes on a tour to Scotland with William and Dorothy Wordsworth, 270;
    • projects a work on Logic, 271;
    • writes again for the Morning Post, 275;
    • projects a Bibliotheca Britannica, 279;
    • lives with the Wordsworths (1803), 288;
    • back to London, 289;
    • invited by John Stoddart to Malta, 295;
    • sails for Malta, ii, 1;
    • reaches Valetta, 18th May 1804, 3;
    • becomes acquainted with Sir Alexander Ball, 3;
    • made interim-government secretary of Malta, 3;
    • visits Sicily and ascends Etna, 4;
    • goes to Rome and meets Baron Von Humboldt, Ludwig Ticck, Washington Allston, Canova and Washington Irving, 6;
    • returns to England, August 1806, 6–8;
    • goes to Coleorton and hears Wordsworth’s Prelude read, 8;
    • visits Poole at Stowey in 1807, 9;
    • writes a long Theological Letter to Joseph Cottle, 13;
    • offered £300 by Thomas De Quincey, 27;
    • delivers Lectures in 1808 at the Royal Institution on Poetry, Shakespeare, etc., 33;
    • meets Dr. Andrew Bell, founder of the Madras system of Education, and injudiciously attacks Lancaster, 34;
    • meets Mary Evans (Mrs. Todd) his early sweetheart (1804–8), 36–7;
    • projects and publishes the Friend, 38–65;
    • writes Letters to the Courier in support of the Spaniards, 65;
    • has a quarrel with Wordsworth, 66–73;
    • his translation of Gessner’s First Mariner, 68–70;
    • drifts away from his wife, 100–3;
    • leaves the
    • Country in the Spring of 1812, 103;
    • delivers Lectures 12th May to 3rd June, at Willis’s Rooms, 116;
    • gives a fourth course of Lectures between 3rd November 1812 and 29th January 1813, 116;
    • meets Madame de Staël, 117;
    • goes to Bristol and delivers his fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth courses of Lectures, October 1813-April 1814, 117;
    • corresponds with Cottle about his Opium habit, 117–30;
    • projects a translation of Goethe’s Faust, 136;
    • contributes Essays on the Fine Arts to Felix Farley’s Bristol Journal, 136;
    • physical cause of his inability to carry out his many projects, 137–9;
    • his political change from Radicals to temperate Conservatism, 141;
    • advocates at Calne the abolition of the corn duties, 141;
    • proposes to start a school in Bristol, 145;
    • compiles Sibylline Leaves, and writes his Biographia Literaria, 146;
    • writes Zapolya, 147;
    • goes to Highgate and settles down in the house of James Gillman, 149;
    • again delivers Lectures on Shakespeare, 27th January to 13th March 1818, 152;
    • gives an account of Lord Byron, 157;
    • meets and forms a friendship with Thomas Allsop, 158;
    • delivers his tenth course of Lectures, December 1818-April 1819, 163;
    • his eleventh course at the same time, 163;
    • publishes his Essay on Method, 165;
    • loses through the bankruptcy of Rest and Fenner, publishers, 171–2;
    • meets Sir Walter Scott in London in 1820, 178–81;
    • goes to Oxford, 201–2;
    • meets Cottle for the last time in 1821, 232;
    • visits Ramsgate, 238;
    • dines at Monkhouse’s with Wordsworth, Rogers, and Moore, 272;
    • gives a paper before the Royal Society of Literature on the Prometheus of Aeschylus, 286;
    • goes with Wordsworth on a Tour to the Rhine, 296;
    • meets Thomas Colley Grattan and Julian Charles Young on the Continent, 296;
    • collects his Poems in 1828, 1829, and 1834, 297;
    • visited by Henry Blake McLellan, a young American, in 1832, 298–300;
    • last letters of, 300–4;
    • death of, on 25th July 1834, 305.
  • Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, on Acting and Playwriting, i, 208.
    • on The Aesthetic, ii, 69, 237.
    • on Atheism, i, 57.
    • on Bacon and Plato, i, 272.
    • on Baptism, i, 202, 207.
    • on the Bible, ii, 15.
    • on Books, i, 128.
    • on Sir Thomas Browne, i, 293–5.
    • on the Catholic Question, ii, 90–1.
    • on Chaucer, i, 276–7.
    • on Christianity, i, 93; ii, 10–13, 156, 175, 230–31.
    • on Democrats, i, 138.
    • on Epic Poem, Ideal of an, i, 130.
    • on Eternal Punishment, ii, 11.
    • on Chemistry, i, 245; ii, 44, 47.
    • on Children, i, 55, 58, 165–6, 176, 201, 203, 218; ii, 259, 273, 289, 302–4.
    • on the Cid, ii, 41.
    • on Genius, i, 64; ii, 258.
    • on German, i, 142, 180.
    • on William Hazlitt, i, 283.
    • on Himself, i, 5–22, 25, 74, 80–81, 88, 89, 90, 95, 96, 99–101, 106, 107–8, 110, 129, 152, 181, 186, 193, 198, 213–14, 220, 224, 228–9, 236, 244, 248, 252, 265, 275, 284, 289, 299; ii, 29, 31, 39, 49, 133, 135, 150–51, 159, 164, 167, 205, 207, 211–13, 253, 286.
    • on Homer’s Banging Lie, i, 269.
    • on Mrs. Inchbald, i, 195.
    • on Journals, ii, 42, 52, 54–5, 60, 64, 79, 92, 232–6.
    • on the Joys of Journalism, i, 190.
    • on Keswick and the Lake Country, i, 198, 214, 215, 237–8.
    • on Logic and Philosophy, i, 271–2, 274; ii, 161–2, 165, 206, 267.
    • on his Magnum Opus, ii, 209.
    • on Maternal Love, ii, 239.
    • on Metaphysics, i, 197, 202, 203–4, 210, 224.
    • on Mice, i, 133.
    • on Miracles, ii, 23–4.
    • on Money, i, 191, 225.
    • on Mountain-Climbing, i, 260–61.
    • on Nature-God, ii, 224.
    • on Natural Scenery, i, 51, 198, 200–1, 210–11, 221, 248, 262.
    • on Novel reading, ii, 184, 206.
    • on Omnipresent, The, i, 171, 174, 261.
    • On Playwriting, i, 208.
    • On Permanent, The, i, 233, 234; ii, 57–63.
    • on the Ideal of a Poem, ii, 25–6.
    • on Poetry, ii, 32, 153, 206.
    • on Poetic Diction, i, 113, 142, 223, 269.
    • on Population Question, i, 179, 187.
    • on Prayer, ii, 132.
    • on his Projects, i, 51, 52, 75, 78, 79, 86–7, 109, 127, 130, 180, 187, 196, 199, 216, 223, 254–5, 271–3, 279–81; ii, 32, 68, 69, 70, 142, 165, 188, 193, 203, 208;
      • his Magnum Opus, 209, 211, 230, 248, 267–8, 285, 287–9.
    • on the Quantocks, ii, 31.
    • on Reason and Imagination, i, 29–30; ii, 224.
    • on Review writing, ii, 72.
    • on Rich and Poor, ii, 225.
    • on the Sabbath, ii, 23.
    • on Skating, i, 163–4.
    • on Style, i, 187, 190, 205, 254; ii, 53, 59.
    • on the Sublime and Beautiful, ii, 223.
    • on Sympathy with the Ill in health, ii, 2.
    • on the Trinity, ii, 14–22.
    • on Unitarianism, ii, 13, 119.
    • on the Vast, i, 17.
    • on Woman, ii, 241–43.
    • on Wordsworth, Dorothy, i, 136.
    • on Wordsworth, William, i, 129, 135, 152, 157, 158, 199; ii, 164, 194–5.
    • on his Wallenstein, i, 199, 213, 218.
  • Coleridge, Mrs. S.T. (née Sarah Fricker, called “Sara”), meets Coleridge, i, 41, 43;
    • married to Coleridge, 4th October 1795, 49, 60, 65, 73, 81, 83, 85, 86, 88;
    • at Stowey, 123, 140, 153, 155, 162, 185, 195, 201, 203, 207, 218, 255, 263, 273, 288;
    • ii, estrangement with Coleridge, 100–103;
    • Coleridge’s solicitude about, 127;
    • comes to London and visits her husband and the Gillmans, 267, 268.
  • Coleridge, Sara (daughter), afterwards Mrs. Henry Nelson Coleridge, born, i, 270;
    • on Daniel Stuart and her Father, chapter xvii, ii, 76, 267, 268;
    • see also Preface, v;
    • her Memoirs, Preface, x.
  • Complaint and Reply, ii, 112.
  • Concert Room, Lines composed in a, ii, 111.
  • Conciones ad Populum, i, 48; ii, 113.
  • Confessions of an Enquiring Spirit, ii, 279, 307–10.
  • Connubial Rupture in High Life, On a late, ii, 202.
  • Conspiracy of Gowrie, by William Rough, i, 243.
  • Copleston, Dr., ii, 200, 201.
  • Cottle, Amos, i, 137.
  • Cottle, Joseph, Bookseller and Poet, Bristol (1770–1853), Preface, v, vi, ix, xvi;
    • becomes acquainted with Coleridge, i, 51–2;
    • purchases the copyright of the First volume of Poems by Coleridge, 61;
    • receives many letters from Coleridge, 62–4, etc., 74, 76, 83, 94, 136, 140;
    • treats with Coleridge and Wordsworth about the publication of Lyrical Ballads, 147, 154–5, 159, 242, 285; ii, 6, 9–10;
    • acts as intermediary between De Quincey and Coleridge on the former offering £300 to Coleridge, 27;
    • Sara Coleridge on, 94;
    • reproves Coleridge for his opium habit, 121–9, 130–31;
    • publishes his Early Recollections (1837), 137;
    • misrepresents Coleridge, 143 n;
    • relieves Coleridge’s necessities, 145;
    • visits Coleridge in London in 1821, 232;
    • see also Appendix regarding Cottle’s Text of the Letters published by him; see “Letters.”
  • Courier Newspaper, ii, 65, 73, 78, 79, 80–82;
    • Coleridge on, 90–93, 136, 140, 212.
  • Cowper, William (1731–1800), his Letters, Preface, xii.
  • Cox, John Thomas, Memoir of Coleridge, Preface, xviii.
  • Crashaw, ii, 221
  • Critical Review, i, 110.
  • Croft, Herbert, i, 139.
  • Cruikshank, Ellen, of Nether Stowey, i, 82;
    • letter by Coleridge to, 285.
  • Cruikshank, John, a Nether Stowey acquaintance of Coleridge, preface, xii; i, 123.
  • Crompton, Dr., of Liverpool, i, 60, 97, 106, 288.
  • Danvers, Charles, i, 84; ii, 28.
  • Dark Ladye, The Ballad of the, ii, 111, 294.
  • Darwin, Erasmus, (1731–1802), Coleridge meets, 57;
    • Coleridge’s opinion of, ii, 15, 47.
  • Davison, Coleridge’s Notes on, ii, 305.
  • Davy, Sir Humphry (1778–1829), Preface, x, xvi;
    • becomes acquainted with Coleridge, i, 53, 188, 194, 195;
    • corresponds with (see “Letters”), 204, 219–20, 230;
    • describes Coleridge, 251;
    • writes to Coleridge, 297;
    • urges him to commence lectures at the Royal Institution, ii, 30;
    • informs Coleridge of the death of Beddoes, 45.
  • Dawes, Rev. John, Ambleside, ii, 257–8.
  • Dejection, an Ode, i, 252, 270, 295; ii, 112, 294.
  • De Quincey, Thomas (1785–1859), on Coleridge, i, 116–7; ii, 27–9, 34;
    • Sara Coleridge on, 94–8, 152, 279.
  • De Quincey Memorials, Preface, xvii.
  • De Quincey, Works of, Preface, xvii.
  • Dermody, Thomas, an Anthology poet, i, 242.
  • Descartes quoted, i, 224; ii, 18.
  • Destiny of Nations, (Joan of Arc) lines), compared with Religious Musings, i, 77, 97, 122, 124, 134, 138, 150; ii, 110.
  • De Vere, Aubrey, on Coleridge, ii, 312.
  • Devil’s Thoughts, The, i, 182; ii, 83, 112.
  • Dialogue between Demosius and Mystes, ii, 284.
  • Dobrizhoffer on the Abiponenses, ii, 196.
  • Donne, Coleridge’s Notes on, ii, 305.
  • Dowden, Professor Edward, his Poems of Coleridge, Preface, xx.
  • Drury Lane Theatre, i, 140.
  • Duty surviving Self-Love, ii, 112.
  • Dyer, George (1755–1841), on Pantisocracy, i, 42;
    • a letter by Coleridge to, 51..
  • Edinburgh Review, ii, 40, 42, 114, 163.
  • Elliot, Ebenezer (1781–1849), ii, 221.
  • Emerson, Ralph Waldo (1803–1882), visits Coleridge, ii, 279.
  • English Divines, Coleridge’s Notes on, ii, 305.
  • Epigrams contributed to the Morning Post by Coleridge, i, 253.
  • Epitaph, Coleridge’s, on Himself, i, 285.
  • Essays on his own Times, Coleridge’s, Preface, xvi.
  • Estlin, Dr. J. P., Unitarian Minister, Coleridge acquainted with, i, 49, 84; ii, 119, 154.
  • Etna, Coleridge’s ascents of, ii, 4, 16.
  • Evans, Mary (Coleridge’s early love), Coleridge meets at Wrexham, i, 37; ii, 36–7, 147, 250.
  • Evans, Mrs., of Darley, i, 85, 86.
  • Excursion, Wordsworth’s, published, ii, 146.
  • Farley, Felix, His Bristol Journal, ii, 136.
  • Fall of Robespierre, Preface, viii; i, 45–6;
    • printed in the Literary Remains, ii, 109, 305.
  • Fancy in Nubibus, contributed to Blackwood’s Magazine, ii, 232.
  • Faust, Goethe’s, proposed translation of, ii, 136.
  • Fears in Solitude, ii, 111.
  • Ferrier, Professor (1808–1864), on Coleridge’s plagiarisms from Schelling, ii, 146.
  • Field, Coleridge’s Notes on, ii, 305.
  • Fielding, Henry (1707–1754), ii, 184, 207.
  • Fine Arts, Essays on, ii, 136.
  • Fire, Famine, and Slaughter, ii, 110, 112, 113.
  • Flagg’s Life of Washington Allston, Preface, x, xvii;
    • quoted, ii, 6, 102.
  • Flower, Benjamin (1755–1829), Coleridge writes to, i, 67, 68.
  • Forget-me-Not, The, an annual, ii, 292.
  • Foster Mother’s Tale, The, a Dramatic Fragment, ii, 104.
  • Foster, John (1770–1843), ii, 137.
  • Fox and Statesman subtle wiles ensure, The, lines by Coleridge, i, 61.
  • Fox, Caroline (1819–1871), Preface, x, xvii;
    • her Journals quoted, ii, 6.
  • Fox, Charles James (1749–1806), i, 190;
    • Coleridge’s letters to, in the Morning Post, 251, 286; ii, 79.
  • Fox, Dr., of Bristol, ii, 127.
  • France, an Ode, ii, 77, 111.
  • Frazer’s Magazine, Preface, x; ii, 38.
  • Freiligrath, F., his Memoir of Coleridge, Preface, xviii.
  • Frend, an acquaintance of Coleridge at Cambridge, trial of, i, 31.
  • Frere, J. Hookham (1769–1846), Preface, xi; i, 205; ii, 175, 180, 193, 268, 279.
  • Fricker, George, brother-in-law of Coleridge, letter to, ii, 22.
  • Fricker, Mrs., mother-in-law of Coleridge, i, 61.
  • Fricker, Sarah, see Mrs. S. T. Coleridge.
  • Friend, The, Journal started and published by Coleridge in 1809, ii, 38–65;
    • Prospectus of, 48–52;
    • references to, 86;
    • recast and republished in 1818, 114, 144;
    • addition to, given to Thomas Allsop, 176–8.
  • Friend, To a young, on his proposing to domesticate with the author, i, 91; ii, 111.
  • Friend, To a, who asked me how I felt, etc., Sonnet by Coleridge, i, 91–2.
  • Friend, Lines on a, who died in a Frenzy Fever, by Coleridge, ii, 260.
  • Friendship’s Offering, an annual, ii, 292.
  • Frost at Midnight, ii, 111.
  • Fuller, Andrew, English Theologian (1754–1815); Coleridge’s Notes on, ii, 305.
  • Garden of Boccaccio, The, poem by Coleridge, ii, 113, 292, 294.
  • Garnett, Richard, Bell’s Miniature Series of Great Writers, Preface, xix;
    • The Poetry of S. T. Coleridge, Preface, xx.
  • Gem, The, an annual, ii, 292.
  • Gentleman’s Magazine, The, quoted, i, 31; ii, 77, 86, 102–3.
  • George, A. J., Coleridge’s Select Poems, Preface, xx.
  • Germany, i, 158; Coleridge in, 162–82;
    • Coleridge on, 225–8.
  • Gessner, Salomon, German Idyllic Poet (1730–1788);
    • Coleridge translates his Erste Schiffer (First Mariner), 269;
    • paraphrases one of his idylls in the Picture, or the Lover’s Resolution, 270; ii, 68.
  • Gillman, James, Physician, Highgate, quoted, i, 31;
    • his Life of Coleridge, Preface, ix, xviii; ii, 137;
    • receives Coleridge into his house, 149–50, 152, 190, 193, 204, 238, 239, 246, 248, 249, 257–77, 258, 270, 272, 273, 276, 278, 294.
  • Gillman, Mrs. James, wife of Dr. Gillman, 179, 190, 201, 204, 239;
    • Coleridge on, 243, 244, 247, 248, 250, 257–77, 259, 269, 270, 272;
    • on Coleridge, 277, 278, 284, 294.
  • Gillman, Rev. James (son of James Gillman), Coleridge recommends him to the Living of Leiston, ii, 301.
  • Godwin, William, Philosopher, Novelist, and Dramatist (1756–1836);
    • Preface, x, xvii;
    • Coleridge attacks him in the Watchman, i, 68–71;
    • intends to controvert him, 130;
    • meets in London, and characterizes him in 1800, 185, 188, 200;
    • writes letters to, 201, 208, 209;
    • Coleridge on his Political Justice, 247, 275;
    • on his character, ii, 70–71, 136–7.
    • See “Letters.”
  • Grattan, T. Colley, Novelist and Miscellaneous Writer (1792–1864), Preface, xvii, ii, 279;
    • meets Coleridge and Wordsworth on their Rhine Tour, 296–7.
  • Gray, Thomas (1716–1771), his Letters, Preface, xiii.
  • Greek Lexicon, ii, 44.
  • Green, Joseph Henry, ii, 193, 252; meets Coleridge in 1817, 279.
  • Greta, the River, i, 207.
  • Greta Hall, Keswick, described by Coleridge, i, 198–9, 237–8.
  • Groscollias (or Groscollius), origin of, i, 151–2.
  • Grotius, Hugo, (1583–1645), referred to, ii, 23.
  • Hacket, Coleridge’s Notes on, ii, 305.
  • Hamlet, Shakespeare’s, i, 236.
  • Haney, John Louis, Bibliography of S. T. Coleridge, Preface, xviii;
  • The German Influence on Coleridge, Preface, xviii.
  • Happy Husband, The, ii, 112.
  • Hare, Archdeacon Julius Charles (1795–1855); on Coleridge, ii, 306.
  • Hawkes, Thomas, of Moseley, ii, 85, 87.
  • Hazlitt, William, Essayist (1778–1830), on Coleridge, i, 117–19, 274;
    • described by Coleridge, 283; ii, 279.
  • Heath, Charles, one of the Pantisocrats, Letter by Coleridge to, i, 44.
  • Heinrichs, Coleridge’s Notes on, ii, 305.
  • Herder, Johann Gottfried (1744–1803), ii, 146.
  • Herschel, Sir William (1738–1822), i, 245.
  • Hexameters written during a temporary blindness, ii, 111.
  • Higginbotham Sonnets, The, i, 142.
  • Hood, William, of Bristol, a friend of Coleridge, ii, 144.
  • Hooker, Richard, Coleridge’s Notes on, ii, 305.
  • Hort, W. J., Unitarian Minister, acquainted with Coleridge, i, 49.
  • Hort, Professor, Oxford and Cambridge Essays, xvi.
  • Hour when we shall meet again, The, i, 73.
  • Hucks, John, Coleridge’s fellow pedestrian in the Welsh Tour, i, 35, 36, 39.
  • Humboldt, Karl Wilhelm von (1767–1835), Coleridge meets in Rome, ii, 6.
  • Hume, David (1711–1776), i, 194.
  • Hurwitz Hyman, ii, 285.
  • Hutchinson, Sarah (sister of Mrs. Wordsworth), meets Coleridge at Stockton, i, 183, 262, 292;
    • the “Lady” of Dejection, an Ode, 295;
    • acts as Coleridge’s amanuensis for the Friend, ii, 64, 261, 262.
  • Hymn before Sunrise in the Vale of Chamouni, i, 167, 270; ii, 111;
    • Coleridge on, 153, 294.
  • Hymns entitled Spirit, Sun, Earth, Air, Water, Fire, and Man, ii, 211.
  • Ilam, i, 86.
  • Illustrated London News, Preface, x, xvii.
  • Inchbald, Mrs. (1753–1821), Coleridge on, i, 195.
  • Irving, Edward (1792–1834), ii, 279.
  • Irving, Washington (1783–1859), Coleridge meets in Rome, ii, 6, 136.
  • Jackson, Mr., owner of Greta Hall, i, 215, 238.
  • Jeffrey, Francis, Edinburgh Reviewer (1773–1850), ii, 40.
  • Jerusalem, Siege of, a projected Epic by Coleridge, ii, 211.
  • Joan of Arc, Southey’s, ii, 94.
  • Joan of Arc, Coleridge’s contributions to, see Destiny of Nations.
  • Jonson, Ben (1573–1637), ii, 305.
  • Kames, Lord Henry Home (1696–1782), his Sketches of Man, i, 271.
  • Kant, Immanuel (1724–1804), i, 78; ii, 146.
  • Keate, Dr., competes for the Craven Scholarship, i, 30.
  • Keepsake, The, an annual, ii, 113, 292.
  • Kemble, John Philip (1757–1823), i, 208.
  • Kenyon, John, ii, 136.
  • Klopstock, F. G., German Poet (1724–1803), i, 226.
  • Knight, Professor W., ii, 296;
    • on the quarrel between Wordsworth and Coleridge, ii, 67.
  • Knight, Professor W., Poems of S. T. Coleridge, Preface, xx.
  • Knight’s Tomb, The, ii, 112.
  • Kubla Khan, i, 116, 233; ii, 105, 111, 294.
  • Lamb, Charles (1775–1834), at Christ’s Hospital, i, 23–7, 23 n., 76;
    • letter by Coleridge to, 92–3, 115, 122–3 n., 124;
    • to visit Stowey, 136, 142;
    • estrangement with Coleridge, 161, 193, 194, 270;
    • on Coleridge’s Lectures, ii, 33, 158, 176, 216, 218–56;
    • his Epistola Porcina, 251, 254, 256, 258, 272, 279.
  • Lamb, Mary, ii, 176, 219, 247, 256, 258, 279.
  • Lamb, Letters of Charles, by Canon Ainger, Preface, xvii.
  • Lancaster, Joseph (1778–1838), Coleridge attacks, ii, 34.
  • Lane’s Edition of Coleridge’s Poems, edited by E. H. Coleridge, Preface, xx.
  • Lang, Andrew, Mr., his Introduction to Poems of Coleridge, Preface, xx.
  • “Landscape” Edition of Coleridge’s Poems, Preface, xix.
  • “Lansdown” Edition of Coleridge’s Poems, Preface, xix.
  • Lardner, Dr. Nathaniel (1684–1729), on the Logos, i, 66.
  • Latin Poets, Imitations from Modern, a projected work by Coleridge, i, 34, 51.
  • Lawson, Sir Guilfred, i, 199, 215, 238.
  • Lay Sermons, Coleridge’s, ii, 114.
  • Le Breton, Mr., of Bristol, ii, 119.
  • Lectures by Coleridge, Early Political, and Religious Lectures in 1795, i, 47–8;
    • First Lectures on Shakespeare and Poetry at the Royal Institution, 12th January-June 1808, ii, 30–34;
    • Second Course, November 1811-January 1812, 73;
    • Third Course, May-June 1812, at Willis’s Rooms, 116;
    • Fourth Course, November 1812-January 1813, 116;
    • Fifth Course at Bristol, October-November 1813, 117;
    • Sixth Course, 117;
    • Seventh Course, 5th-14th April 1814, 117;
    • Eighth Course, on Homer, Spring 1814, 117;
    • Ninth Course at Flower de Luce Court, January-March 1818, 152;
    • Tenth and Eleventh Courses, December 1818-April 1819, 163;
    • Coleridge on his own Lectures, 165–9, 212;
    • Sara Coleridge on, 310.
  • Lee, Nathaniel (1653–1692), ii, 295.
  • Legouis, Emile, his Early Life of William Wordsworth, Preface, xviii.
  • Leibnitz, G. W. (1646–1716), i, 197.
  • Leighton, Archbishop (1611–1684), ii, 13–15, 279-84.
  • Leslie, Sir John (1766–1832), a friend of the Wedgwoods, i, 253, 266; ii, 136.
  • Leslie, C. R., Autobiography of, Preface x, xvii.
  • Lessing, Life of, an unfinished work by Coleridge, partly written in 1799–1800, i, 180, 187, 207.
  • Letters of Samuel Taylor Coleridge:
    • to Allsop, Thomas (28 January 1818), ii, 158;
      • (20 Sept. 1818), 160;
      • (26 Nov. 1818), 160;
      • (2 Dec. 1818), 163;
      • (30 Sept. 1819), 169;
      • (13 Dec. 1819), 172;
      • (20 Mch. 1820), 174;
      • (10 Apl. 1820), 178;
      • (8 or 18 April 1820), 182;
      • (31 July 1820), 190;
      • (8 August 1820), 192;
      • (22 October 1820), 198;
      • (20 October 1820), 201;
      • (25 October 1820), 202;
      • (27 Nov. 1820), 203;
      • (January 1821), 204;
      • (1 March 1821), 218;
      • (4 May 1821), 219;
      • (23 June 1821), 226;
      • (—1821), 227;
      • (15 Sept. 1821), 227;
      • (24 Sept. 1821), 229;
      • (20 October 1821), 238;
      • (2 Nov. 1821), 240;
      • (17 Nov. 1821), 244;
      • (—1821), 245;
      • (25 January 1822), 247;
      • (4 March 1822), 249;
      • (22 Mch. 1822), 251;
      • (18 April 1822), 255;
      • (30 May 1822), 257;
      • (29 June 1822), 259;
      • (8 October 1822), 261;
      • (28 October 1822), 265;
      • (26 December 1822), 266;
      • (10 December 1823), 269;
      • (24 December 1823), 270;
      • (8 April 1824), 272;
      • (14 April 1824), 274;
      • (27 April 1824), 274;
      • (20 March, 1825), 284;
      • (30 April 1825), 286;
      • (2 May 1825), 287;
      • (10 May 1825), 287;
      • (—— 1825), 290.
    • to Allsop, Mrs. (—— 1823), ii, 270.
    • to Bell, Dr. Andrew (15 April 1808), ii, 35;
      • (30 Nov. 1811), 74.
    • to Blackwood, William (—October 1821), ii, 232.
    • to Britton, Mr.(28 Feby. 1819), ii, 166;
      • (Feby.-Mch. 1819), 168.
    • to “Cantab” (21 Decr. 1809), ii, 63.
    • to “Caius Gracchus” (1 April 1796), i, 68.
    • to Coleridge, George (31 March 1791), i, 29.
    • to Coleridge, Mrs. S. T. (14 January 1799), i, 163;
      • (23 April 1799), 165;
      • (17 May 1799), 168.
    • to Cottle, Joseph (—December 1795), i, 52;
      • (1 January 1796), 52;
      • (Feby. 1796), 62;
      • (Feby. 1796), 62;
      • (22 Feby. 1796), 63;
      • (15 April 1796), 74;
      • (April 1796), 74;
      • (April 1796), 76;
      • (18 October 1796), 95;
      • (January 1797), 121;
      • (3 January 1797), 122;
      • (10 January 1797), 124;
      • (January 1797), 124;
      • (January 1797), 125;
      • (January 1797), 126;
      • (Feby. or March, 1797), 127;
      • (May 1797), 128;
      • (May 1797), 129;
      • (May 1797), 131;
      • (May, 1797), 133;
      • (June, 1797), 134;
      • (8 June, 1797), 135;
      • (29 June, 1797), 136;
      • (3–17 July, 1797), 136;
      • (Sept., 1797), 139;
      • (3 Sept., 1797), 140;
      • (10–15 Sept., 1797), 140;
      • (28 Nov., 1797), 141;
      • (2 Dec., 1797), 142;
      • (January, 1798), 143;
      • (24 January, 1798), 144;
      • (18 Feby. 1798), 150;
      • (8 March, 1798), 152;
      • (Mch. or April, 1798), 153;
      • (14 April, 1798), 155;
      • (April, 1798), 157;
      • (May, 1798), 159;
      • (—1807), ii, 9;
      • (—1807), 10;
      • (June, 1807), 13;
      • (—1807), 25;
      • (7 October 1807), 28;
      • (5–14 April 1814), 118;
      • (—1814), 119;
      • (—1814), 120;
      • (—1814), 121;
      • (26 April 1814), 126;
      • (26 April 1814), 129;
      • (April 1814), 130;
      • (27 May 1814), 132;
      • (7 March 1815), 142;
      • (10 March 1815), 144.
    • to Cottle, Miss (13 May 1814), ii, 131.
    • to Cruikshank, Ellen (—1803), i, 285.
    • to Davy, Sir Humphry (June 1800), i, 196;
      • (25 July 1800), 200;
      • (9 October 1800), 204;
      • (18 October 1800), 210;
      • (2 December 1800), 219;
      • (3 Feby. 1801), 222;
      • (4 May 1801), 244;
      • (20 May 1801), 246;
      • (31 October 1801), 249;
      • (6 March 1804), 291;
      • (25 March 1804), 298;
      • (11 Sept., 1807), ii, 30;
      • (December 1808), 40;
      • (14 December 1808), 41;
      • (30 January 1809), 45.
    • to Editor of The Monthly Review (18th November 1800), i, 218.
    • to Editor of The Monthly Magazine (January 1798), i, 145.
    • to Editor of The Morning Post (10 March 1798), i, 151;
      • (21 December 1799), 183;
      • (10 January 1800), 184.
    • to Flower, Benjamin (1 April 1796), i, 67.
    • to Fricker, George (—1807), ii, 22.
    • to Gillman, James (13 April 1816), ii, 150;
      • (28 October 1822), 265.
    • to Godwin, William (21 May 1800), i, 193;
      • (22 September 1800), 201;
      • (13 October 1800), 208;
      • (25 March 1801), 228;
      • (23 June 1801), 247;
      • (4 June 1803), 270;
      • (10 July 1803), 275;
      • (26 March 1811), ii, 68;
      • (29 March 1811), 70.
    • to Heath, Charles (—1794), i, 44.
    • to Hutchinson, Sarah (10 March 1804), i, 293.
    • to Kennard, Adam Steinmetz (13 July 1834), ii, 302,
    • to Lamb, Charles (29 September 1796), i, 93.
    • to Lloyd, Senr., Charles (15 October 1796), i, 106;
      • (14 Nov. 1796), 107;
      • (4 December 1796), 110.
    • to R. L. (26 October 1809), ii, 57.
    • to Martin, Henry (22 July 1794), i, 35;
      • (22 Sept. 1794), 46.
    • to Poole, Thomas (— Feby. 1797), i, 5;
      • (Mch. 1797), 7;
      • (9 October 1797), 11;
      • (16 October 1797), 15;
      • (19 Feby. 1789) 19;
      • (7 October 1795), 50;
      • (30 March 1796), 65;
      • (11 April 1796), 71;
      • (6 May 1796), 77;
      • (12 May 1796), 80;
      • (29 May 1796), 82;
      • (4 July 1796), 83;
      • (—August, 1796), 85;
      • (24 Sept. 1796), 89;
      • (1 Nov. 1796), 96;
      • (5 Nov. 1796), 99;
      • (26 December 1796), 112;
      • (—March 1800), 191;
      • (13 Feby. 1813), ii, 105.
    • to Southey, Robert (6 July 1794), i, 34;
      • (6 Sept. 1794), 42;
      • (18 Sept. 1794), 43;
      • (—Dec. 1794), 47;
      • (13 April 1801), 237;
      • (July 1803), 279;
      • (20 October 1809), ii, 52.
    • to Stuart, Daniel (4 June 1811), ii, 79;
      • 8 May 1816), 90.
    • to Tobin J. (10 April 1804), ii, 1.
    • to Wade, Josiah (January 1796), i, 55;
      • (January 1796), 55;
      • (January 1796), 56;
      • (January 1796), 58;
      • (7 January 1796), 59;
      • (January 1796), 60;
      • (September 1796), 88;
      • (May 1797), 132;
      • (17–20 July 1797), 138;
      • (21 March 1798), 153;
      • (6 March 1801), 225;
      • (—1807–8), ii, 38;
      • (8 Dec. 1813), 117;
      • (26 June 1814), 135.
    • to Wedgwood, Josiah, (21 May 1799), i, 178;
      • (4 Feby. 1800), 188
      • (24 July, 1800), 197
      • (1 Nov. 1800), 212
      • (12 Nov. 1800), 217.
    • to Wedgwood, Thomas (—January 1798), i, 143;
      • January 1800), 186;
      • (20 October 1802), 251;
      • (3 Nov. 1802), 255;
      • (9 January 1803), 257;
      • (14 January 1803), 260;
      • (10 Feby. 1803), 263;
      • (10 Feby. 1803), 265;
      • (17 Feby. 1803), 266;
      • (17 Feby. 1803), 268;
      • (16 Sept. 1803), 283;
      • (—Jany. 1804), 287;
      • (28 January 1804), 290;
      • (24 March 1804), 295.
    • to—(unknown), (1 June 1809), ii, 48;
      • (1816?), 153
      • (1816?), 154
      • (1816?), 157.
  • Lewis, Matthew Gregory (1775–1818), ii, 293.
  • Lewti, ii, 110.
  • Limbo, ii, 295.
  • Lime-Tree Bower, The, i, 167; ii, 111, 294.
  • Lines to a Friend who had declared his Intention, etc., ii, 111.
  • Lines to the Rev. George Coleridge (Dedication of Poems, 1797), ii, 111.
  • Lines to W. Wordsworth on hearing the Prelude, ii, 8, 111, 294.
  • Linley, W., Sheridan’s Brother-in-law, meets Coleridge, who writes a sonnet to him, i, 141.
  • Lippincott’s Magazine, Preface, x.
  • Litchfield, Thomas, his Tom Wedgwood, Preface, xiv.
  • Literary Remains of Coleridge, ii, 113, 305–6.
  • Literary Souvenir, ii, 292.
  • Lloyd, Senr., Charles, i, 88, 89, 106–111.
  • Lloyd, Charles (1775–1839), meets Coleridge, i, 88, 89, 90–91, 98;
    • Sara Coleridge on, 102–5n.; 106–111, 121, 131, 142, 152;
    • quarrels with Coleridge, 153, 155, 161; ii, 288.
  • Lloyd, Robert, brother of Charles Lloyd, ii, 57.
  • Lockhart’s Life of Scott, Preface, x.
  • Logos, The, ii, 14, 24, 279.
  • Logic, Coleridge’s unpublished work on, i, 271, 277–8; ii, 203, 230, 268.
  • Longman, Mr., Publisher, i, 247.
  • Longman’s Edition of Coleridge’s Poems, Preface, xx.
  • Love, first published, i, 183;
    • Introductory Letter to, 183;
    • Southey on, 242; ii, 111, 294.
  • Love’s Apparition and Evanishment, ii, 112.
  • Love, Hope, and Patience in Education, ii, 113.
  • Lovell, Robert, one of the Pantisocrats, i, 41, 45, 81.
  • Lovell (née Fricker), Mrs., i, 41, 81.
  • Lucas, Mr. E. V., author of Charles Lamb and the Lloyds, Preface, xiv, xviii; i, 89, 106;
    • note by, quoted, 111.
  • Luff, Mr. and Mrs., i, 258.
  • Lycidas, Milton’s quoted, ii, 209.
  • Lyrical Ballads, origin and publication of, i, 147–61;
    • Second Edition, 206, 208, 213, 216;
    • proofs corrected by Davy, 220, 221, 229, 242, 243; ii, 104.
  • Maas, ii, 146.
  • Mackintosh, Sir James (1765–1832), i, 189, 209, 247, 286; ii, 79, 89.
  • McLellan, Henry Blake, a young American, visits Coleridge, ii, 298.
  • Macmillan’s Magazine, Preface x.
  • Macmillan’s Edition of Coleridge’s Poems, x, xix.
  • Madoc, by Southey, i, 243.
  • “Maiden that with sullen brow,” lines by Coleridge, i, 125; ii, 111.
  • Malta, Coleridge’s visit to, i, 295; ii, 1–7.
  • Man of Ross, Lines on the, i, 36;
    • a proposed correction on, 134.
  • Martin, Henry, Coleridge writes to, i, 35. 46.
  • Mathematical Problem, juvenile poem of Coleridge, Preface, viii; i, 29.
  • Mathews, Charles, Comedian (1776–1835), Preface, x; ii, 136, 178, 180, 183, 219.
  • Matthisson’s Milesisches Märchen, ii, 111.
  • Meteyard, Miss Eliza (1816–1879), her Group of Englishmen, Preface, x, xvii; ii, 140.
  • Method, Essay on, ii, 165.
  • Meynell, Mrs. Alice, Coleridge’s Poems, Preface, xx.
  • Michael, poem by Wordsworth, i, 229.
  • Middleton, Bishop (Thomas Fanshaw), 1769–1822, at College with Coleridge, ii, 301.
  • Mill, John Stuart, Dissertations and Discussions, Preface, xvii.
  • Milner and Sowerby’s Edition of Coleridge’s Poems, Preface, xviii.
  • Milton, ii, 119, 153, 209, 222.
  • Miracles, Coleridge on, ii, 23–4.
  • Mirror, The, Preface, x.
  • Molière, ii, 147.
  • Monkhouse, Thomas, ii, 272.
  • Montagu, Basil (1770–1851), Coleridge on, i, 189;
    • causes the quarrel between Coleridge and Wordsworth, ii, 66–7;
    • afterwards on good terms with Coleridge, 246, 262, 279, 288.
  • Montgomery James, Poet, 1771–1854, meets Coleridge, i, 59.
  • Monthly Magazine, i, 142, 145.
  • Monthly Review, Preface, viii; i, 218.
  • Moore, Dr. (1729–1802), author of Zeluco, ii, 83.
  • Moore, Thomas, 1779–1852, ii, 272.
  • Moore’s Lallah Rookh, Coleridge on, ii, 217.
  • Morgan, John James, Bristol Merchant, befriends Coleridge, i, 52–3; ii, 130, 140-48, 143, 146, 147, 148.
  • Morgan, Mrs. Mary (Brent), ii, 130, 140.
  • Morning Chronicle, Preface, viii;
    • Coleridge negotiates to write for, i, 83, 85.
  • Morning Post, Preface, viii;
    • Coleridge writes for, i, 183, 187, 191, 200, 205, 234, 251, 253, 270, 275, 286; ii, 77, 78, 79, 80-90, 212.
  • Murray, John, Publisher, Preface, x;
    • Coleridge treats with, for a translation of Faust, ii, 136, 218, 267, 279.
  • “Myrtle Leaf, that, ill besped,” i, 126; ii, 111.
  • Nation, The, American Literary Journal, quoted, ii, 298.
  • Nativity, The, the original of Religious Musings, ii, 10.
  • Nature’s Lady, by Wordsworth, i, 206.
  • New Monthly Magazine, i, 110.
  • New Testament, Commentary on, ii, 298.
  • New Thoughts on Old Subjects, ii, 113.
  • Nicholson’s Journal, i, 246.
  • Nightingale, The, ii, 104, 111.
  • Night Scene, The, a Dramatic Fragment, by Coleridge, i, 270; ii, 29, 111.
  • Noble, Coleridge’s Note on, ii, 305.
  • North British Review, 1865, Biographical Appreciation of Coleridge, Preface, xx.
  • Northcote, J., Portrait Painter, i, 298.
  • Norton, E. H., Coleridge’s Poetical and Dramatic Works, Preface, xviii.
  • Nottingham, Coleridge proposes to settle at, i, 83.
  • Oberon of Wieland, i, 142.
  • Ode to the Departing Year, written and dedicated to Poole, Preface, viii, i, 112;
    • not obscure, 124, 134; ii, 111.
  • Ode to the Rain, i, 253.
  • Omniana, Southey’s, Coleridge’s contributions to, ii, 305.
  • Opium, Coleridge takes, i, 100, 101, 233; ii, 102, 121;
    • exaggerations regarding, 131, 139, 143, 145, 151.
  • Osorio, a Tragedy; begun, i, 129, 137, 140, 142, 154, 155, 157, 160, 202; ii, 29, 108, 279.
    • See also “Sheridan,” “Linley,” “Remorse.”
  • Oxlee, Coleridge’s Notes on, ii, 305.
  • Pains of Sleep, The, ii, 112, 294.
  • Paley, William (1743–1805); Preface, xiii;
    • Coleridge on, ii, 24, 175.
  • Pang more sharp than all, The, ii, 112.
  • Parr, Dr. Samuel (1747–1825), i, 76, 247.
  • Pedlar, Wordsworth’s (The Excursion), i, 206.
  • Percival, Lady E., i, 286.
  • Permanent, The, Coleridge and, i, 233–6.
  • Perry, James, of the Morning Chronicle, i, 83.
  • Peter Bell, by Wordsworth, i, 159.
  • Philosophy, Coleridge’s, ii, 146, 161–2.
  • Picture, The, or the Lover’s Resolution, imitated from Gessner, i, 270; ii, 111, 133.
  • Pilgrim’s Progress, Bunyan’s, Coleridge’s notes on, ii, 305.
  • Pinney, John, i, 48, 189.
  • Pitt, William (1759–1806), i, 190, 286; ii, 55;
    • Coleridge’s Character of Pitt, 78, 83.
  • Pixies, Songs of the, written in 1793, i, 32, 154.
  • Plato, i, 272; ii, 146.
  • Plotinus, ii, 146.
  • Plot Discovered, The, i, 48; ii, 113.
  • Poems, First Edition, 1796;
    • published, i, 74, 76;
    • reviewed, 84;
    • Second Edition, 1797, 94, 97, 99, 122–3, 124, 125–7, 131, 134, 141;
    • the motto, 151;
    • Third Edition, proposed, 153, 242(?);
    • published in 1803, 270; ii, 104–5;
    • Fourth Edition, contemplated, i, 275;
    • Christabel volume, ii, 105;
    • Sibylline Leaves, 109;
    • Collected Editions of 1828, 1829, and 1834, 297.
  • Poetic Diction, Coleridge on, i, 269.
  • Poetry, Coleridge on, ii, 25.
  • Pole, Dr., on infant schools, ii, 120.
  • Pollen, George Augustus, i, 76.
  • Poole, Penelope, cousin of Tom Poole, i, 285, 287.
  • Poole, Thomas, Tanner, of Nether Stowey (1765–1837), Coleridge writes five autobiographical letters to, in 1797–8, i, 5;
    • becomes acquainted with Coleridge (in September 1794, Thomas Poole and his Friends, i, 95;
    • not in 1795 as in Henry Nelson Coleridge’s Text), 50;
    • Coleridge writes him of his marriage and settlement at Clevedon, 50–51, 65, 71, 80, 82;
    • the Ode to the Departing Year, dedicated to, 112, 123, 136, 191, 197, 198;
    • Coleridge on, 214, 234, 253;
    • Coleridge visits at Nether Stowey, 263;
    • his character, 266;
    • in London, 287, 289; ii, 2, 9;
    • DeQuincey introduced to, 27;
    • on Coleridge proposing to give Lectures, 30–31, 33, 65, 105.
    • See also “Letters.”
  • Poole, Thomas, and his Friends, by Mrs. Sandford, Preface, x, xvii; ii, 30, 33.
  • Poole, William, Uncle of Thomas Poole, i, 101.
  • Portraits of Coleridge, i, 114, 119–20.
  • Preaching, Coleridge’s, i, 54, 55–6, 58.
  • Prelude, Wordsworth’s, ii, 8.
  • Prentiss, Dr., America, ii, 277.
  • Priestley, Joseph (1733–1804), Coleridge’s early admiration of, i, 36, 42.
  • Prometheus of Aeschylus, disquisition on, ii, 286, 305.
  • Prose Works of Coleridge; Harper and Brothers, New York, Preface, xvi;
    • Bohn Library, xvii.
  • Puffendorf, Samuel (1632–1694), Coleridge on, ii, 300.
  • Purkis, Samuel, of Brentford, i, 268; ii, 33.
  • Pye, Henry James, Poet Laureate; his Alfred, i, 242.
  • Quantocks, Coleridge on the, ii, 31.
  • Quarterly Review, ii, 212.
  • Quiller-Couch, T., The Poems of Coleridge, Preface, xx.
  • Rambler, The, ii, 53.
  • Ramsgate, Coleridge at, ii, 238.
  • Raven, The, poem by Coleridge, i, 151.
  • Reason, Coleridge on, ii, 224.
  • Recollections of Love, ii, 112.
  • Reflections on having left a Place of Retirement (Clevedon), i, 167; ii, 110.
  • Religion, Assertion of, a projected work, ii, 203.
  • Religious Musings (The Nativity), poem by Coleridge, composed, i, 63, 73;
    • compared with Destiny of Nations, 77; obscure, 124, 134;
    • how revised in 1796, ii, 10, 11, 110.
  • Remorse (see Osorio), ii, 104, 105–7, 111, 157, 279.
  • Renny, Mr., i, 291.
  • Rest and Fenner, Publishers, ii, 172, 257, 262.
  • Reynolds, F. M., ii, 292.
  • Rhine Tour in 1828; ii, 296–7.
  • Richardson, Samuel (1689–1761), compared with Scott, ii, 184, 207.
  • Robertson, J. M., on Coleridge, ii, 136.
  • Robinson, Henry Crabb (1775–1867), Preface, x, xvii;
    • tries to reconcile Wordsworth and Coleridge, ii, 67;
    • attends Coleridge’s
    • lectures, 152, 216–17;
    • describes Coleridge’s talk, 216.
  • Robinson, Mrs. (Perdita), i, 195.
  • Rogers, Samuel (1763–1855), visits Coleridge, i, 249;
    • at a lecture by Coleridge, ii, 73;
    • dines at Monkhouse’s with Coleridge, 272..
  • Roscoe, William (1753–1831), admires Coleridge, i, 88.
  • Rose, William Stewart (1775–1843), a friend of Sir Walter Scott, ii, 180.
  • Rossetti, W. M., Critical Memoir to S. T. Coleridge’s Poems, Preface, xix.
  • Royal Society of Literature, ii, 286.
  • Ruined Cottage, The, a poem by Wordsworth, i, 137, 152.
  • Rumford, Count (1753–1814), i, 66, 73, 74–5.
  • Ruth, Wordsworth’s, i, 206, 229.
  • Sabbath, The, Coleridge on, ii, 23.
  • Saint Theresa, Coleridge’s notes on, ii, 305.
  • Salisbury Plain, poem by Wordsworth, i, 154, 157, 159.
  • Sancti Dominici Pallium, poem by Coleridge, ii, 113.
  • Sandford, Mrs., her Thomas Poole and his Friends, Preface, x, xvii.
  • Satyrane Letters of, by Coleridge, i, 162, 167.
  • Savage, Mr., Printer, ii, 41–4, 47.
  • Schelling, F. W. J. (1775–1854), Coleridge’s indebtedness to, ii, 146.
  • Schiller, J. C. F. (1759–1805), Coleridge proposes to translate his works, i, 78;
    • sonnet to, 97, 99;
    • Coleridge on his Robbers, 135;
    • an echo of, ii, 187..
  • Scott, Sir Walter (1771–1832), and Christabel, i, 228;
    • Coleridge compared with, 235, 281; ii, 178, 180, 181–215;
    • his novels criticised by Coleridge, 206, 220;
    • his poetry compared with Coleridge’s, 215, 292.
  • Scott, William Bell, Introduction to Coleridge’s Poems, Preface, xix.
  • Scotland, Coleridge’s Tour in, 1803, i, 270, 284; ii, 138.
  • Shakespeare, i, 135; ii, 188, 208;
    • proposed edition of his works, 295.
  • Shakespeare Lectures (see “Lectures”), ii, 268, 305.
  • Sharp, Richard (1759–1835), visits Coleridge at Keswick, i, 249, 257;
    • on Hazlitt, 283, 296.
  • Shelton, Coleridge’s notes on, ii, 305.
  • Shepherd, R. Herne, Bibliography of S. T. Coleridge (and Colonel Prideaux), Preface, xviii;
    • Life of Coleridge, xix.
  • Sheridan, R. B. (1751–1816), desires Coleridge to write a Tragedy, i, 127;
    • rejects Osorio, 140–41, 202, 216;
    • Sara Coleridge on, ii, 106–7.
  • Sherlock, Coleridge’s notes on, ii, 305.
  • Sibylline Leaves, published, ii, 109, 112, 144, 146, 297.
  • Skipsey, Joseph, Prefatory Notice to the Canterbury Edition of S. T. Coleridge’s Poems, Preface, xix.
  • Smith, John, Coleridge’s notes on, ii, 305.
  • Sonnets, i, 76, 98.
  • Sotheby, William, Poet (1757–1833), Coleridge becomes acquainted with, i, 269.
  • Southey, Edith May (see Selections from the Letters of Robert Southey, iii, 399), in London with Sara Coleridge, ii, 272.
  • Southey, Robert (1774–1843), his Life of Dr. Andrew Bell, Preface, x;
    • meets Coleridge in 1794, i, 34–5;
    • hatches with Coleridge the Scheme of Pantisocracy, 41–5;
    • composes along with Coleridge, The Fall of Robespierre, 45–6;
    • lectures in Bristol, 48;
    • married to Edith Fricker, 49;
    • quarrel with Coleridge over Pantisocracy and reconciliation, 92, 98;
    • Coleridge on his Poems, 123;
    • Coleridge on, 127, 129, 136, 161;
    • collaborates with Coleridge in writing the Devil’s Thoughts, 182;
    • invited by Coleridge to Keswick, 237;
    • writes to Coleridge, 239, 241, 244, 245, 246, 250;
    • settles at Greta Hall, 251, 267;
    • Coleridge proposes to compile a Bibliotheca Britannica in conjunction with, 279;
      • his reply, 282; ii, 30, 41;
    • on the Friend, 52–7;
    • on Christabel, 56, 117;
    • and Cottle on Coleridge’s Opium habit, 125, 131, 137, 212, 290.
  • Southey, R., Life and Correspondence of, Preface, x, xvi.
  • Southey, Robert, Selections from the Letters of, Preface, xvi.
  • Spaniards, Coleridge’s Letters on, ii, 65.
  • Spectator, The, ii, 65.
  • Spenser, Edmund, i, 151;
    • quoted, ii, 205, 206, 208.
  • Spinoza, i, 197; ii, 18, 175.
  • Staël, Madame De, Coleridge meets in 1813, ii, 117.
  • Stanhope, Sonnet to Lord, i, 286.
  • Sterne, Lawrence (1713–1768), ii, 184, 207.
  • Stoddart, Sir John, obtains a copy of Christabel and reads it to Sir Walter Scott, i, 228;
    • invites Coleridge to Malta, 295; ii, 3.
  • Stowey, Nether, Coleridge settles at, i, 121;
    • revisits, 269; ii, 9.
  • Street, Mr., joint proprietor with Daniel Stuart and editor of the Courier, ii, 81;
    • Coleridge on, 90–93.
  • Stuart, Daniel, proprietor and editor of the Morning Post and Courier, Preface, xi; i, 191, 193, 202, 205, 253, 275, 288;
    • Coleridge writes from Malta to, ii, 4;
    • Sara Coleridge on, 76–93;
    • Letter from Coleridge to, 79;
    • on Coleridge, 80;
    • on Coleridge and his wife, 102, 136.
  • Stutfield, Mr., ii, 248–9, 267.
  • Style, Coleridge on, ii, 65.
  • Sublime and Beautiful, The, ii, 223.
  • Sutton, Mr., ii, 219.
  • Swinburne, A. C., Christabel, and the Lyrical and Imaginative Poems of S. T. Coleridge, Preface, xix.
  • Symons, Arthur, The Poems of Coleridge, selected and arranged, Preface, xx.
  • Table Talk, Coleridge’s, origin of, ii, 278, 219–225.
  • Talfourd, J. Noon (1795–1854), Preface, xvi;
    • on Coleridge, i, 115; ii, 278, 279.
  • Talleyrand to Lord Grenville, i, 184.
  • Taylor’s History of Enthusiasm, Notes on, ii, 284.
  • Taylor, Jeremy, Coleridge’s Notes on, ii, 305.
  • Taylor, Sir Henry, described by Coleridge, ii, 290.
  • Thalaba, by Southey, i, 240, 243.
  • Thelwall, John, described by Coleridge, i, 138, 139, 146.
  • Thomson, James (1700–1748), ii, 153.
  • Three Graves, The, i, 150;
    • extant in 1801, 240;
    • probably composed in 1797–8, ii, 112;
    • one of Coleridge’s best poems, 293–4.
  • Tieck, J. Ludwig (1773–1853), Coleridge meets in Rome, ii, 6;
    • visits Highgate in 1817, 216.
  • Time, Real and Imaginary, written early, ii, 110.
  • Tintern Abbey, by Wordsworth, i, 167.
  • “Titania Puckinella,” ii, 259, 261, 289, 302.
  • To an Unfortunate Woman, “Maiden, that with sullen brow,” i, 125.
  • Tobin, J., i, 244, 245, 245, 291, 296; Letter to, ii, 1.
  • Todd, Mr. (husband of Mary Evans), ii, 36.
  • Tombless Epitaph, The, i, 167; ii, 294.
  • Tooke, J. Horne (1736–1812), i, 188, 203.
  • Traill, H. D., Life of Coleridge, Preface, xix.
  • Tranquillity, Ode to, ii 112.
  • Transcendentalism, ii, 152.
  • Trinity, Coleridge on the doctrine of the, i, 33; ii, 14–22.
  • Triumph of Loyalty, a projected Drama by Coleridge, ii, 29.
  • Tucker, Abraham (1705–1774); his Light of Nature abridged by William Hazlitt, i 274, 277.
  • Tuffin, Mr., i, 291.
  • Two Founts, The, ii, 113.
  • Unitarianism, Coleridge and, i, 33, 143; ii, 13, 23, 119.
  • Universities, Coleridge proposes to lecture on, ii, 288.
  • Valley of Stones, Linton, i, 159.
  • Vico, Giovanni Battista (1668–1744), ii, 146.
  • Visionary Hope, The, ii, 112.
  • Wade, Josiah, of Bristol, early friend of Coleridge, receives letters from Coleridge while on the Watchman Tour, i, 54–61, 87, 114, 131, 138;
    • receives a letter from Coleridge on travelling in Germany, 255; ii, 38–39, 119, 134–5.
    • See “Letters.”
  • Waggoner, Wordsworth’s, i, 238.
  • Wakefield, Gilbert (1756–1801), author and the most learned editor of Gray’s Poems, i, 76.
  • Wallenstein, Coleridge’s translation of, i, 185, 193;
    • the language of, 199, 204, 213;
    • Letter to the Monthly Review regarding, 218; ii, 104–105, 112;
    • quoted 187.
  • Wanderer’s Farewell, The, ii, 140.
  • Wanderings of Cain, ii, 111.
  • Watchman, The, i, 50–64;
    • Prospectus of 53, 64, 65, 66, 72, 74, 76, 78, 80, 81, 88; ii, 93, 113.
  • Waterland, Coleridge’s Notes on, ii, 305.
  • Watson, Seth, a friend of Coleridge, ii, 248–9, 267, 268.
  • Watson, Mrs. Lucy E., ii, 138.
  • Watts, Alaric Alexander, and Mrs. Watts, friendship with Coleridge, ii, 292–5.
  • Wedgwood, John, i, 256, 266.
  • Wedgwood, Josiah, i, 53, 143;
    • confers a pension on Coleridge; 144, 160, 178, 182, 257; ii, 9;
    • see also “Letters.”
  • Wedgwood, Thomas, i, 53, 143, 144, 160, 221, 251, 256–7, 265, 270, 289, 290, 295–7; ii, 9, 46;
    • see also “Letters.”
  • Welsh Tour, Coleridge’s, i, 35–41;
    • second tour, 270.
  • Westminster Review, Letters to Dr. Brabant, Preface, x; ii, 142, 148, 157.
  • Whitaker, Coleridge’s Notes on, ii, 305.
  • Wieland’s Oberon, i, 142.
  • Willett, Miss, i, 86.
  • Williams, Sheriff, ii, 198, 201.
  • Wilton, Esmond, ii, 252.
  • Winter’s Wreath, The, an annual, ii, 292.
  • Woman, Coleridge on, ii, 241–3.
  • Wordsworth, Dorothy, described by Coleridge, i, 136;
    • describes Coleridge, 137, 141;
    • goes to Germany with William Wordsworth and Coleridge, 162, 219; 245, 249, 270, 288;
    • on Coleridge’s estrangement from his wife, ii, 100–1;
    • (272, perhaps Dora Wordsworth).
  • Wordsworth, Dorothy, the Journals of, Preface, xviii.
  • Wordsworth, Captain John, i, 182, 264; his death, ii, 5.
  • Wordsworth, William (1770–1850), i, 76;
    • first meeting with Coleridge, 122, 129;
    • Coleridge visits him at Racedown, 135, 140;
    • The Borderers, 141;
    • the Lyrical Ballads, 147;
    • the Giant Wordsworth, 152;
    • adds to his stock of poetry, 156, 161;
    • goes to Germany with Dorothy and Coleridge, 162;
    • Coleridge visits him at Sockburn, and goes with him to the Lakes, 182, 193, 194, 199, 200, 202;
    • his Pedlar, Ruth, and Nature’s Lady, 206;
    • second edition of the Lyrical Ballads, 213, 216, 219, 221, 222;
    • his Brothers, Ruth, and Michael, 229;
    • his Waggoner, 238;
    • the Brothers, 240, 243, 245, 249, 258;
    • his theory of Poetic Diction, 269; 270, 276, 288;
    • goes to town to see Coleridge, ii, 33, 38, 45;
    • quarrels with Coleridge, ii, 66–73, 116;
    • Coleridge on his Excursion, 146;
    • on Coleridge’s Hymn before Sunrise, 153, 163;
    • Coleridge on his Nature worship, etc., 194–5; 258;
    • at Monkhouse’s in 1823, 272;
    • his translations from Virgil, 272–3;
    • goes on a Tour to the Rhine with Coleridge, 296.
  • Wordsworth, Mrs., i, 288.
  • Wordsworth, Memoirs of W., Preface, x, xvi.
  • Wordsworth, Professor Knight’s Life of, Preface, x, xvii.
  • Works, Coleridge’s, Account of, by Sara Coleridge, ii, 104–5, 110-15, 305–7.
  • Work without Hope, ii, 112, 292, 294.
  • Wrangham, Francis, i, 76.
  • Wynn, C. W. W., a friend of Southey, i, 239.
  • Young, Julian Charles, meets Coleridge on the Continent, ii, 296.
  • Young Lady, Letter to, on the choice of a Husband, ii, 250.
  • Youth and Age, ii, 109, 112, 277, 292, 294.
  • Zapolya, ii, 104, 107, 113;
    • written at Calne, 147.