Chapter 18

Rome,376;Scotland,118-123,125-158Auchen-cairn,119,123;Ballantrae,127;Cairndow,136;Dumfries,118;Girvan,129;Glasgow,131;Inverness,158;Inverary,138,142;Island of Mull,144-147;Kilmelfort,139;Kingswells,130,133;Kirkcudbright,120;Kirkoswald,129;Letter Findlay,153;Maybole,130;Newton-Stewart,122,123;Oban,141,148;Stranraer,125;Shanklin,275-277;Southampton,4;Teignmouth,78-103;Wentworth Place (Mrs. Brawne’s),364-370;Wesleyan Place, Kentish Town,360-362;Winchester,280-328.To Bailey, Benjamin,33,36,39,40,61,78,109,111,142,280;Brawne, Mrs.,372;Brown, Charles,325,327,360,368,370,374,376;Clarke, Charles Cowden,1,2;Dilke, Charles Wentworth,40,163,277,322,328,354,359;Elmes, James,272;Haydon, Benjamin Robert,1,2,13,32,53,85,94,211,213,214,215,267,274,328,363,367;Hessey, James Augustus,167;Hunt, Leigh,10;Keats, Fanny,21,118,161,162,166,182,183,185,187,213,215,216,262,263,264,265,268,270,271,272,273,275,283,331,334,335,337,347,348,350,352,353,355,356,357,358,362,363,364,368;Keats, George and Georgiana,168,187,217,290;Keats, George and Thomas,4,46,48,54,57,71,75;Keats, Georgiana,338;Keats, Thomas,114,123,127,136,147,153;Reynolds, Jane,24,162;Reynolds, John Hamilton,3,4,6,28,44,65,67,73,82,90,96,98,100,103,132,165,276,282,319,352;Reynolds, Mariane and Jane,19;Reynolds, Mrs.,211;Rice, James,88,186,335,350;Severn, Joseph,265,332,334;Shelley, Percy Bysshe,365;Taylor, John,53,58,64,71,77,99,114,212,281,286,333,360,367;Messrs. Taylor and Hessey,17,19,78,88;Woodhouse, Richard,210;Wylie, Mrs.,158Lewis,177,189,197,219,222Lewis, David,349Life, a palace with chambers,107,109;a pleasant life,73;that projected by J. K.,94;of a man worth anything is an allegory,226Lisle,286Listen,198Little,106Little Britain.SeeReynoldses, theLlanos, Señor,xix.“Lloyd, Lacy Vaughan,”i.e.J. K.,362 and noteLord of the Isles,136Lover, the, a ridiculous person,293Lucifer,25Lucius, Sir,210Ludolph (inOtho the Great),319,335Lyceum,295Lycidas,89Lydia Languish,83Macbeth,288Machiavelli,313Mackenzie,201Macmillan’s Magazine,xii. noteMacready,335Magdalen Hall visited,19 note,22;a beautiful name,84Mahomet,159Maiden-Thought, the second chamber of life,107Maid’s Tragedy, by Beaumont and Fletcher,228Man is like a hawk,236;is a poor forked creature,254-257Mancur or Manker,208,245Mandeville, by Godwin,51,286Margate visited,10-17Maria Crowther(the ship in which K. went to Naples),370,371 noteMariane.SeeReynolds, MarianeMark, St., Eve of,221;quoted,302,303Marlowe,247 noteMartin,31,44,53,194,245,249,292,293,354Martin, Miss,225,293Mary Queen of Scots,6,32Massinger,324Mathew, Caroline,208Mathew, Mrs.,208Matthew(Wordsworth’s),68Matthews, the comedian,297Matrimony, K. declaims against,180Maw the apostate,219Measure for Measurequoted,11Medicine, the study of,104Meg Merrilies’s country,119,123Mercury,75,344Mermaid lines,70,71 and noteMerry Wives of Windsorquoted,104 and noteMethodists exposed by Horace Smith,72Millar,339Millar, Mary,191,218,219,248,308,339;her suitors,189,210Millar, Mrs.,170,176,178,248Milman,87Milton,101,106,142,174,175,263,355;anecdote of,88,89,90;his Hierarchies,283;his influence shown inHyperion,321;his Latinised language,313,314;a picture of him,6;his philosophy,108;quoted,42,237;K.’s verses on his hair,62;compared to Wordsworth,105Minerva,344;her Ægis,2Monkhouse,50,229,274Montague, Lady M. W.,29Moore, Thomas,109,193,202,232;hisTom Cribb’s Memorial to Congress,228Moore’s Almanack,21,80,346Morbidity of temperament,15Morley, John,xi.“Mother, your” (in K.’s American letters).SeeWylie, Mrs.“Mother of Hermes! and still youthful Maia!” etc.,105Mountains, effect of,144Mozart,193,194Muggs, Nehemiah, by Horace Smith,72Mulgrave, Lord,330 and noteMurray,312Naples Harbour,372seq.Napoleon,174“Nature withheld Cassandra in the skies,” etc.,166Negative capability needed by men of achievement,48Nelson,98Neville, Henry,192,193Nevis, Ben, described,153Newport visited,7,8Newton, Rev. John,xv.Nicolini, the singer,20Niece.SeeKeats, EmilyNightingale, Ode to,91 note,272 note,342Nile, sonnets on,72Nimrod,26Niobe,38Northcote,240Norval,337“No! those days are gone away,” etc.,69“Not Aladdin magian,”150“Not as a swordsman would I pardon crave,” etc.,319Novello,191,193,195Novello, Mrs.,197Nymphs, The, by Leigh Hunt,11Odes, the,362 note“Of late two dainties were before me placed,” etc.,139“O Goddess! hear these tuneless numbers, wrung,” etc.,259“O golden-tongued Romance with serene Lute!” etc.,59“Old Meg she was a gipsy,” etc.,120Ollier,1,87,179,197,219;published K.’sPoems,72;hisAltam and his Wife,197One, Two, Three, Four, by Reynolds,295“Opening on Neptune with fair blessed beams,” etc.,25Ophelia,80Opie, Mrs.,72Ops,184Original Poems, by Miss Taylor,23Orinda, the matchless.SeePhilips, Mrs.Orpheus,214“O soft embalmer of the still midnight,” etc.,259Othello,329Otho the Great,277,279,280,281,284,285,323,325,335,336,340(sometimes referred to as the, or our, tragedy)“O those whose face hath felt the winter’s wind,” etc.,74“Over the hill and over the dale,” etc.,90“O what can ail thee knight-at-arms,” etc.,250Oxford described,20,22;visited,19-32Oxford Herald, The,112 and notePaine, Tom,299Paolo,246Paradise Lost,42,89,108,281,282,313Park, Mungo,50Parsons,221seq.,233,268Patmore,106Payne, Howard,191Peachey,192,217,226Peachey family,49Peacock,87“Pensive they sit, and roll their languid eyes,” etc.,293Peona,38Pepin, King, the History of,21Percy Street (i.e.the Hesseys),54,78,88,100,114,282Peter Bell, by Wordsworth, and the parody by Reynolds,240,248,249Petzelians,10Phaethon,12Philips, Mrs., her verses to Mrs. M[ary] A[ubrey],29Phillips, old,26Philosopher’s stone,32Philosopher’s back-garden,89Physician, K.’s thoughts of becoming a,233Pilgrim’s Progress,21Pindar, Peter,49,72,348Pistol (inHenry IV.),84 and notePizarro,254Pliny,233Plutarch’s Lives,14Pocket-book, The Literary, by Leigh Hunt,190,197Poems of 1817,2 notePoems, original, by Miss Taylor,23“Poet, he is quite the little,” said of K.,219Poet, the Northern,i.e.Wordsworth,28“Poet, why I should be a,”12Poets, advertisement to, in theChronicle,46Poets, the English, K. expects to be among, after death,171Poets, the vices of,211,212Poetry, axioms of,77;genius of,167,168;effect of writing on K.,18;K. cannot exist without,9,165;K. cannot write when “fevered in a contrary direction,”14;invention the Polar Star of,34;a Jack o’Lantern,81;other things necessary,101;not written under the shadow of public thought,96;should be retiring, unobtrusive,68Politics,298Pope’sHomer,13,14Popularity,281Porter, Jane,219Porter, the Misses,192,193Pot of Basil,101,113Present, an anonymous,192,199Primrose Island, the Isle of Wight,7Proserpine,142Prose writing, genius of K. in,xi.Protector of Fanny K.,216Protestantism discussed,108Psyche, Ode to,115 note,259Public, the, an enemy to K.,96Punctuation peculiar, preserved,xiv.Pythagoras,89Quarterly Review, the,37,113,167,171,224,302Queen Mab,48R.’s, the Miss.SeeReynolds, MissesRabelais,76Radcliffe, Mrs.,83,221Rakehell,44Raleigh, Sir W.,20Raphael,17,201“Read me a lesson, Muse, and speak it loud,” etc.,158Red Riding Hood,177Redhall,52,195,202Reformation, effects of,108


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