80Coriolanus, Hazlitt on,229Corneille,95 and noteC[ornwall] B[arry], Mr.,353,354Country, the, K.’s opinion of,209;K. thinks of settling in,4Covent Garden Tragedy [Retribution, or the Chieftain’s Daughter], an article on,49 and noteCowes visited,7Cowper,72;as a letter-writer,xiv.Cox, Miss Charlotte,165 and note,172 and note,173.See“Charmian”Crabbe,72,232Cripps,32,37,40,41,44,52,56,62,71;introductions to Haydon,32,53Criticism, K.’s independence of,167Croft, Dr.,72Cromwell,174Crusoe, Robinson,26,338“Crystalline Brother of the belt of Heaven,” etc.,46Cumberland Beggar, the,31Dance, a Highland, described,116Dante,95 note,113,145,214,246,313Davenports, the,220,231,239,348David,25,325“Dear Reynolds! as last night I lay in bed,” etc.,91Death, K.’s thoughts of, when alone,112Deist, The,299Dennet, Miss, a Columbine,51“Dentatus,” Haydon’s picture,87Devereux,362Devon, Duke of,72Devonshire described,75,79,80,83,85,91,95,97,98,101;like Lydia Languish,83Dewint,114Dewint, Mrs.,114*Dilke, Charles Wentworth,xii. note,9,26,31,47,48,56,59,76,81,128,146,158,195 note,200,202,203,208,239,245,266,269,292,296,327,340,343,372,374;a capital friend,51;takes theChampion,51,58;his character,314;his devotion to his son,222,240,241,295;editor follows his dates,xiii.;a “Godwin Methodist,”314;a “Godwin perfectibility Man,”175;ill,170,348;neighbour to K.,187 noteDilke, Charley,222,224,240,241,264,279,292,295,314,360Dilke, Mrs.,4,8,9,26,31,51,164,170,183,189,198,202,209,210,213,217,223,224,240,262,264,269,274,292,325,328,332,336,340,349,354,357,359,360,365,374;her brother,359Dilke, William,26 and noteDinah, Aunt,6Diocletian,174Diomed,80Dolabella (inAnthony and Cleopatra),16Don Juan,297Drawing of K., a,2 and noteDrewe family, the,197Drewe, George,198Drury Lane Pantomime [Don Giovanni],49 and note,55Dryope (inEndymion),78Du Bois,47,198Dunghill, Duchess of,126Duns, besieged by,19,28Dürer, Albert,330Edinburgh Review, the,37,39,40,113,190,301,302,326Edmund Ironside,80Elements, the, regarded as comforters,25Elizabeth, Queen, Holinshed’s,333;her Latin exercises,355Elizabethans, compared with moderns,68Ellenborough, Lord,47Ellipsis, recommended by Haydon,2Elliston,335,336Elmes, James,272 note,274Emblems, the, of Bunyan,309Endymion[“I stood tiptoe upon a little hill”],3 noteEndymion,27,34,35,161,302,366.First bookbegun,17;prospects of,57;in the press,63;readings in,64:second bookcopied,71;proofs of,72:third book, progressing,31;finished,33:third and fourth books, copied,78:fourth book, quoted,84;finished,88.Alterations suggested by Taylor,77;anxiety to get it printed,78;appreciated by Bailey,31;dedicated to Chatterton,97;described,168;cheque sent to author of it,192,199;engravings by Haydon for it,57;referred to by K. as a pioneer,77;admired by the Miss Porters,192,193;the preface to it,88,96,97,98;readings in,99;called slipshod,167 and note;the story of it told to Fanny K.,22Enfield, school at,xviii.English, Chatterton’s is the purest,313Enobarb (inAnthony and Cleopatra),16Erasmus,10,17Esau,68Euclid,29,177Eustace,163Evadné, by Sheil,231,232Evans, Sir Hugh (inMerry Wives),104 and noteEve,103,255“Ever let the Fancy roam,” etc.,203Examiner, The,17,40,44,47,51,194,208,219,234,328;its defence of K.,171;K.’s notice of Reynolds’Peter Bellin it,248,249;v. Christianity,10Excursion, Wordsworth’s, one of the three good things of the age,53,54Fagging at schools,178Fairies, Chorus of,251Falstaff,77,351Fame, sonnets on,258“Fame like a wayward girl will still be coy,” etc.,258Family letters,xi.Fanny.SeeKeats, Fanny“Far, far around shall those dark-crested trees,” etc.,115Fazio,72Fenbank, Mr. P.,199Fielding,52,200Fingal’s Cave described,150Fitzgerald, Miss,193Fladgate, Frank,133Flageolet, not admired,161,162Fleet Street household (i.e.Taylor’s.Seep.286),54Fletcher, Mrs. Philips, compared to,31Fletcher and Beaumont,228Flirting,173Florence, A Garden of, by Reynolds,67 and noteFlorimel,248,249Foliage, by Leigh Hunt,11 note;reviewed in the Quarterly,113Forman, H. Buxton, his edition,xii.;letters to Fanny K. printed in this volume by his permission,xii. noteFortunatus’s purse,32“Four Seasons fill the measure of the year,” etc.,81Framptons, the,238Francesca,58,246Franklin, Benjamin,175French dramatists,95 and noteFrench language inferior to English,23Frogley, Miss,192Fry,290Fuseli,306,330G. minor (seeWylie, Georgiana),192Gaelic talked,140Gattie,197Gay,106Genesis,26Genius, of K. in prose writing,xi.;men of, have not individuality,41George.SeeKeats, GeorgeGeorge, little (seeWylie, Georgiana),200,201George II.,362Gertrude of Wyoming,342Ghosts,44Gibbon,76Gifford,220,226seq.,229;his attack on K.,192Giovanni, Don, by Byron, expected,218Gipsies,37Gipsy, The, of Wordsworth,37Glasgow visited,131,132Glaucus (inEndymion),99Gleig,xix.,35,36,44,63,82,113;described,35 noteGleig, Miss,225Gliddon,290Godwin,175,205,206,314;hisMandeville,51,286;hisCaleb WilliamsandSt. Leon,205Gray,106;as a letter writer,xiv.;Hazlitt on,76“Great spirits now on earth are sojourning,” etc.,2Greek, K. determines to learn,101Green, Mr.,244Griselda,245Grover, Miss,339Guido,201Gyges’s ring,32H., Miss,231,232Hamlet,80,106Hammond,309Handwriting of K.,xiv.Happiness not expected,38“Happy happy glowing fire,” etc.,251Harold, Childe,68Harris, Bob,51,58Hart,340Haslam,51,56,159,178,181,187,188,189,195,197,200,202,209,210,219,224,228,235,264,270,284,307,342,344,369,373,375;his father’s death,238,266;a kind friend,269,339;his “lady and family,”340;in love,293;“is very Beadle to an amorous sigh,”333;a message to,377Hastings, Lady, met at,179,223*Haydon,xii. note,2 and note,5,8,9,39,41,47,54,58,195,197,198,201,240,272,340,343,355,356,361;his autobiography,50 and note;his “Christ” contained a portrait of K.,16;and is “tinted into immortality,”94;his “Dentatus,”87;on Elgin marbles,75;his eyes weak,219;on French dramatists, etc.,95 and note;his “Life and Love,”330 and note;loved as a brother,15;his pictures one of the three glories of the age,53,54;his portrait,6;quarrels with Hunt,33,34,35,56,61;and with Reynolds,55,56;discovers a seal of Shakspeare,85;“this glorious Haydon and all his creation,”1;his “Solomon,”214Hazlewood,178,181,294Hazlitt,3,96,101,106,107,109,111,179,191,197,205,218,326;his prosecution of Blackwood,164;his essay on commonplace people,37;the only good damner,87;his lectures,64,72,76,332;his letter to Gifford quoted,226seq.,229;on Shakspeare,16,56,58;his review of Southey,10 and note,16;his depth of taste,53,54;hisRound Table,31 and noteHazlitt, Mrs.,218Heart of Midlothian(an opera),249Heart’s affections and beauty of Imagination the only certain things,41Hebrew, the study of, advised,24“He is to weet a melancholy Carle,” etc.,244Helen,125“Hence Burgundy, Claret, and Port,” etc.,65Hengist,90Henrietta Street.See