Religion, K. on,81,256Revolt of Islam,48 note*Reynolds, Jane,xii.,8,27,33,43;as St. Jane,39;a translator,24*Reynolds, John Hamilton,xi.,2,5,6,17,18,27,33,34,35,36,46,48,54,57,62,71,130,142,162,164,179,198,218,223,245,311,324,335,352,354,376(sometimes as John);anecdote of,308;two articles by,72;his character,344;defends K.,171;writes for theEdinburgh Review,60,190,198;poetical epistle by K. to,91;his farce,295;hisGarden of Florence,67 and note;his illness,76,90,97,100,111,113;he takes up law,323,325;his quarrel with Haydon,55,61;hisPeter Bell,240,248,249;his sonnets,3 note,67 and note,69;his Spenserian,103,104*Reynolds, Mariane,xii.,26,27,33,43;her attitude towards Bailey,225Reynolds, the Misses,6,9,44,102,135,172,173,190,218,225(sometimes as sisters of J. H. R.)*Reynolds, Mrs.,36,44,102,114,135,172,225,264,348(mother of J. H. R.)Reynoldses, the,19,44,49,97,111,142,164,165 note,198,225,322(sometimes as Little Britain)“Reynolds’s Cove,” a spot so called by K.,28,31Rhyme, Essays in, by Miss Taylor,23*Rice, James,xii.,9,31,36,50,52,64,84,102,104,111,135,164,166,177,198,219,223,225,249,282,292,345,354,373;(once as Master Jemmy) and the barmaids,90;his character,344;his ill health,33,44,58,273,276,277Richards,3,72,219,241,344Richardson,301,330Rimini, The Story of, by Hunt,10,58Ritchie,50,198Robertson’sAmerica,254Robin Hood,125;sonnets to, by Reynolds,67 note;J. K. answers above,68,69 and noteRobinson, Crabb,72 and noteRobinson, Miss,196Rodwell,53Rogers,218,232Romance, a fine thing,88;projected by K.,32Rome visited,376,377Romeo,25Rondeau, K.’s notion of,207Ronsard translated by K.,165,166Ross, Captain,189Round Table, by Hazlitt,31 and noteRuth,125Salmasius,88,89Salmon, Mr.,212Sam [Brawne],373Sancho,67Sandt,300Sannazaro,313Sappho,29Saturn,184Saunders,293Sawrey, Dr.,49,166Sawrey, Mrs.,238,239Scenery,80Schoolmaster of K.,xviii.Scotch, the,118,124,126Scotland visited,110,118-158Scott, John (editor of theChampion),8 note,50,167 noteScott, Mrs.,72Scott, Sir W.,76,198;author of “Cockney” articles,60and note; compared to Smollett,51,52Sea, a sonnet on the,8Serjeant, the, of Fielding or Smollett,52*Severn, Joseph,xix.,3,49,186,231,293,306;orders for drawing from Emperor of Russia,52;his illness,171;his “Hermia and Helena,”265;draws a head of K.,274;his “Cave of Despair,”334 and note,335;is with K. during his last illness and death,373,375,377 noteShakspeare,xvi.,xviii.,1 note,5 note,7 note,8,9,16,17,25,47,48,72,77,80,81,84,95 note,101,106,107,131,177,189,201,221,226,228,229,263,281,337,343,355;his Christianity,11;a presiding genius to K.,14;his seal,85;his sonnets,45Shandy, Tristram,344Shanklin described,6seq.;visited,275-280Sheil’s play,231,232*Shelley,12 and note,33,35,76,365;captious aboutEndymion,58;hisLaon and CythnaandQueen Mabobjected to,48;as a letter-writer,xv.;his sonnet on the Nile,72Shelley, Mrs.,12,366Shipton, Mother,232Sibylline Leaves,18,40Sidney, Algernon,174,175Sidney, Sir Philip,10Silenus,223Simon Pure,248,249Simple (inMerry Wives),95 noteSister or sister-in-law (in K.’s American letters).SeeWylie, GeorgianaSkinner,245Slang of the Rice set,50Sleep, sonnet on,259Slips of the pen, not preserved in this edition,xiv.Smith, Horace,33,47,72,75Smith, Sidney,309Smith, William, Southey’s letter to,10 noteSmithfield, the burnings at,108Smollett compared to Scott,51,52Snook,26,195 and note,219,317,371 note;visited by K.,217Socrates,255;and Jesus,236Solitude, K.’s pleasure in,181Solomon,100“Solomon,” by Haydon,214Songs, many written by K.,72Sonnet to Keats, a,199Sonnets by K.,2,8,59,66,81,117,139,158,238,246,258,259;a new form,261;many written,72;one on the Nile,72 and noteSophocles,142“Souls of Poets dead and gone,” etc.,70Southampton, road to, described,4seq.Southcote, Joanna,220Southey,232,244,361;Hazlitt on,10 and note,16Spectator, The,293Speed’s edition of K.,xiii. and noteSpelling tricks, K.’s, not followed in this edition,xiv.Spenser, 9;hisCave of Despairsubject of a picture by Severn,334 note,335Staffa described,150Stark (the artist),76“Star of high promise!—not to this dark age,” etc. (sonnet to K.),199Stephens,49Stevenson (Rice’s nickname for Thornton),345Susan Gale,249Swift,76,344T., Mr., 18.SeeTaylorTam o’ Shanter,130,133Tarpeian Rock,38Tasso,95 noteTaste, Hazlitt’s depth of,53,54*Taylor,xi.,18,44,53,56,76,97,111,135,168,177,199,221,236,238,248,250,292,324,340;he helps K.,290;he is pleased withEndymion,57;and suggests changes,77Taylor, Jeremy,225Taylor, Miss (author ofEssays in RhymeandOriginal Poems),23Taylors, the (as Fleet Street),54Teignmouth visited,78-109Tempestquoted,5 note,7 note,9,245Tertullian,10Text of this edition,xiv.Theatricals, private, described,59Theocritus,180“There is a charm in footing slow across a silent plain,” etc.,146“There was a naughty Boy,” etc.,121“The sun from meridian height,” etc.,25“The Town, the churchyard, and the setting sun,” etc.,117Thomson,72,234Thornton,163,345Thought, the centre of the intellectual world,82Tighe, Mrs.,201Timotheus,25Tintern Abbey, by Wordsworth,108“’Tis the witching time of night,” etc.,175Tom.SeeKeats, TomTom Cribb’s Memorial to Congress, by Moore,228,344Tootts,373Tournament, suggested by mountains,116Towers, Mr.,218Tragedy.SeeOtho the GreatTrimmer, Mr.,192Troilus,180Trojan horse,96Turton, Dr.,101Twelfth Night, quoted11Twisse, Horace,198“Two or three Posies,” etc.,269Unreserve of K.’s letters,xiv.“Upon a Sabbath-day it fell,” etc.,303“Upon my Life Sir Nevis I am pique’d,”156Urganda,18“Uriel,” by Alston,76Vandyck,361Vathek, Caliph,134Velocipede,233Venery, the philosophy of,106Venus and Adonis, quoted,45Verse and other quotations in letters given in full in this edition,xiii.Virgil,18Voltaire,76,231,254,362Waldegrave, Miss,170,191,219,248,292,315Wallace,329Walpole’s Letters,208Walton,290Warder,181Warner Street,3Washington,175Way,221Webb, Cornelius,39Webb, Mrs.,218Wellington, Duke of,17,345Well Walk (where the brothers K. lodged),152,183Wells, Charles,47 and note,48 note,49,50,52,55,58,59;his treatment of George K.,239,245Wells, Mrs.,52Wentworth Place (occupied by Dilke and Brown),142,163, (K. moves to),187Wentworthians, the,223“Were they unhappy then?—It cannot be,” etc.,102West,87;his “Death on the Pale Horse,”47“When I have fears that I may cease to be,” etc.,66“When they were come into the Faery’s Court,” etc.,241“Where be ye going, you Devon Maid?” etc.,66“Wherein lies Happiness! In that which becks,” etc.,64Whitehead,63,82“Why did I laugh to-night? No voice will tell,” etc.,238Wight, Isle of, “the Primrose Island,”7;visited,6-9,275-279,370Wilkie,76,111Wilkinson,6William of Wickham,284Williams, Dominie,218Williams, Mrs.,34Winchester described,283seq.,302,320;visited,280-328Winkine (author of treatise on garden-rollers),20Winter, Miss,231Women, the influence of,143;