Abbey, Miss,122Abbey, Mr.,52 and note,58,119,123,161,162,182,185,216,218,232,268,271,273,274,284,290,294,297,311,313,315,318,331,336,347,350,354,356,359.Referred to as “my guardian,”267Abbey, Mrs.,51,123,197,262,271,359Abbeys, the,363Abbot,231Abelard, Sandt, like a young,300Academy, the Royal,329Achievement, a man of, needs negative capability,48Achilles,21,80,180Adam’s dream (Paradise Lost, Bk. viii.), compared to imagination,41,42Adonais,xix.Adonis,263Adonis, Venus and, quoted,45Agnes, St., Eve of,217,221,280,288,333,362 note;an alteration in it censured,360Agriculture, influence of,287seq.“A haunting Music sole perhaps and lone,” etc.,289“Ah, ken ye what I met the day,” etc.,127Aladdin,223Alcibiades,95Alexander, the emperor,174Alfred (Exeter Paper), the,171Alfred, King,15,80Alice Fell,249“All gentle folks who owe a grudge,” etc.,137All’s Well that ends Well, quoted,33 and noteAlston’s “Uriel,”76Altam and his Wife, by Ollier,197Amena (and Wells),239,245America, George K. goes to,109Americans distrusted,312Anatomy of Melancholy, quoted,296,297Andrew, Sir [Aguecheek], misquoted,103 and noteAndrews, Miss,341Annals of Fine Arts, contributed to,272, noteAnn or Anne, the maid,209,310Anthony, St.,309Anthony, Mark, compared to Buonaparte,17Anthony and Cleopatra,95;quoted,16,17Apollo,74,82Apuleius, the Platonist,259Archer,190,208Archimage,249Archimago,18Archimedes,20Aretino,313Ariadne,223Ariosto,95 note,289,313,333Art, the excellence of, its intensity,47Arthur’s Seat,136“As Hermes once took to his feathers light,”246Athenæum, Dilke connected with,xviii.A[ubrey], Mrs. M[ary], verses to, by Mrs. Philips,29Audubon,291,312,341Audubon, Mrs.,341,344Augustan age,259Aunt, J. K.’s, 274.SeeMrs. JenningsAutograph originals of J. K.’s letters,xii.xiii.Autumn, Ode to,320 and noteAyr described,133B., Miss.SeeBrown, MissBabel, the tower of,23,29Bacchus,223Bacon, Lord,174Bagpipe, effect of,138*Bailey, Benjamin,xii.,26,32,44,52,53,84,97,102,109,132,135,146,164,190,355;his character,27,54;his curacy,36;his appreciation ofEndymion,31;his love affairs,224seq.;K.’s visit to him at Oxford,19 and noteBailey, Mrs.,281Barbara Lewthwaite,249“Bards of passion and of mirth,”206Barley, Rigs of, by Burns,133Barnes,111Barnes, Miss,231Bartolozzi,195,196Basil, Pot of,113,166,171,221,280;few stanzas of, written in folio Shakspeare,101“Bathsheba,” by Wilkie,76Beattie,201Beaumont, Sir George,329,330 noteBeaumont and Fletcher,228Bedhampton, visit to,216,219,221Beggar of Cumberland,31Bellaston, Lady,302Benjamin, Mr.,317Bensley,10Bentley (J. K.’s landlord),33 note,153,194,219,337Bentley, Mrs.,33,153,194,219,239,337,365Bentley children, the,33,103 note,188Bertrand, General,17 noteBetty Foy,249Bewick [J.],56,58,96,240Bible, the,177,225,226Birkbeck,175,188,194,217,226,238,257,268,342Birkbeck, the Misses,247Blackwood,60,164,167,171,194,234,323Boccaccio,101;tales from,280Bonchurch described,276,279“Book, my” (the vol. containingLamia,Isabella,The Eve of St. Agnes,Hyperion, and theOdes),362,363,368,370Boxer (Mrs. Dilke’s dog),26Box Hill ascended,45Boys, the.SeeBrown’s brothersBradshaw, Richard,119Braggadochio,340Brawne, Fanny,191 and note,218,244;described,196;K.’s feelings towards,371,372,373,374;letters to,xii. note;reasons for their being omitted,xvii.*Brawne, Mrs.,191,202,219,224,239,244,349,365[Brawne], Sam,373Briggs,341Brigs of Ayr,133Britain, Little.SeeReynoldses, theBritish Gallery seen,76British Museum,329Brothers.SeeKeats,GeorgeandTom*Brown, Charles Armitage,xviii.,26,33,35,48,56,58,76,82,98,119,123,128,133,136,138,139,141,145,148,165,177,191,194,195 note,196,198,200,209,218,219,221,240,243,244,245,264,272,273,279,281,284,286,289,292,301,306,307,309,314,319,323,325,328,332,333 note,334,336,344,345,347 and note,348,352,356,357,358,359,360 note,363,369;anecdote of,295,296;as a draughtsman,274,351;and Jenny Jacobs,279;a joke on,316,320;his kindness,234;lends K. money,274,290;lives with K.,187 note,188,331 note;his odd dislikes,324;a story by,219,220,224;tour to Scotland with K.,110[114-161];writes a tragedy with K.SeeOtho the GreatBrown’s brothers,239 note,245Brown, John,245Brown, Mrs. Septimus,218B[rown], Miss,196Bucke, Mr. (dramatic author),241Buffon,233,346Bunyan’sPilgrim’s Progress,21;hisEmblems,309Buonaparte,20,173,219;compared to Mark Anthony,17Burdett, Sir F.,174Burford Bridge visited,40-45Burleigh, Lord,361Burns,130,131,132,234;spoilt by the Kirk,124;lines after visiting his country,146;after visiting his tomb,117;his misery,134;his native place described,133Burns, Mrs.,118Burton’sAnatomy of Melancholyquoted,296,297Butler,76,102,202Butler, Sarah,102Byron,33,106,163,173,198,221,226,231,240;hisDon Juan,297;Fourth canto ofChilde Haroldexpected,76;Don Giovanniexpected,218Cæsar, Julius,80Caleb Williams,205Caliban,7 note,58,245 noteCameron, Mrs.,155seq.Canning,345Canterbury, a visit to, projected,18Cap and Bells,331 note,333 and note,362 noteCapital letters, peculiar use of,xiv.Capper,178,181,294Carisbrooke visited,6seq.Carlisle, Deist bookseller,220,299Carlisle visited,117Cary’sDante,113“Castle, The Enchanted,” by Claude,91 and noteCastlereagh,90,345;An Ode to,335Cave of Despair, Spenser’s, a picture by Severn,334 and note,355Ceres,142Chambers of Life—the infant or thoughtless Chamber, and the Chamber of Maiden thought,107,108;the third Chamber,109Champion, The, a number written by K.,47,49,52;a sonnet by K. printed in,8Chapman’sHomer,363 and noteCharlemagne,118Charles.SeeWylie, CharlesCharles I.,7Charles II.,90Charles Stuart, a “Jacobin” song on,148Charlotte, Princess,192“Charmian,”165 note,172,173.SeeCox, Miss CharlotteChatterton,Endymion, dedicated to,97;Hazlitt on,76;writes the purest English,313,321Chaucer,18,103,228,333;his Gallicisms,313,321Chesterfield, Lord,355Chichester visited,212,217,218“Chief of Organic Numbers!” etc.,62Christ Rejected (Haydon’s picture),47,94Christianity v.The Examiner,10;Shakspeare’s,11Christians, a query concerning,10Christie,44Chronicle, The,46,171,247;John Scott’s defence of K. in,167Cinderella,21,232Circe (inEndymion),99Claret, a rhapsody concerning,222,223Clark, Dr.,370,376*Clarke, C. C.,xvii.,10,219;his influence on K.,xviii.Claude’s “Enchanted Castle,”91 and noteCleopatra,125,173Clinker, Humphrey,52Cobbett,208,218,222,355Cockney school,39,60 and noteCockney, the young,xvi.Coleridge,38,72;his limitations,48;his talk,244Collins, Hazlitt on,76Colnaghi,300Colvin, S., allowed H. Buxton Forman to use autographs in his possession,xii. note;his life of K. inMen of Letters,xi.,331 note,347 noteCommonplace people, Hazlitt on,37Comus,89,108Constable, the bookseller,60Continent, K.’s thoughts of visiting the,18Cook, Captain,346Cordelia,