Clement, Mr., a bookseller, 548.Clergyman, an earnest young, 691.Clevedon, C.’s honeymoon at,136.Clock, a motto for a market, 553 and note, 554 n.Coates, Matthew,441n.;his belief in the impersonality of the deity,444;letter from C.,441.Coates, Mrs. Matthew,442,443.Cobham, 673 n.Cole, Mrs.,271.Coleorton, Memorials of,369n.,440.Coleorton Farmhouse, C.’s visit to the Wordsworths at, 509-514.Coleridge, Anne (sister—usually called “Nancy”),8and note,21,26.Coleridge, Berkeley (son), birth of,247and note,248,249;taken with smallpox,259n.,260n.;262,267,272;death of,247n.,282-287,289.Coleridge, David Hartley (son—usually called “Hartley”), birth of,169;176,205,213,220,231,245,260-262,267n.,289,296,305,318;his talkativeness and boisterousness at the age of three,321;his theologico-astronomical hypothesis as to stars,323;a pompous remark by,332;illness,342,343;early astronomical observations,342,343;an extraordinary creature,343,344;345n.,355,356n.,359;a poet in spite of his low forehead,395;408,413,416,421;at seven years,443;plans for his education, 461, 462;468, 508;visits the Wordsworths at Coleorton Farmhouse with his father, 509-514;as a traveller, 509;his character at ten years, 510, 512;511;under his father’s sole care for four or five months, 511 n.;spends five or six weeks with his father and the Wordsworths at Basil Montagu’s house in London, 511 n.;portraits of, 511 n.;521;his appearance, behavior, and mental acuteness at the age of thirteen, 564;at fifteen, 576, 577;at Mr. Dawes’s school, 576 and note, 577;583 n.;friendly relations with his cousins, 675 and note;C. asks Poole to invite him to Stowey, 675;visits Stowey, 675 n.;684, 721, 726;letter of advice from S. T. C., 511.Coleridge, Derwent (son of S. T. C. and father of the editor), birth baptism of,338and note;344, and355,359;learns his letters,393,395;408,413,416;at three years,443;462, 468, 521;at nine years, 564;at eleven years, 576, 577;at Mr. Dawes’s school, 576 and note, 577;580, 605 n., 671 n.;John Hookham Frere’s assistance in sending him to Cambridge, 675 and note;707, 711.Coleridge, Miss Edith, 670 n.Coleridge, Edward (brother),7,53-55, 699 n.Coleridge, Rev. Edward (nephew), 724 n.;letters from C., 724, 738, 744.Coleridge, Frances Duke (niece), 726 and note, 740.Coleridge, Francis Syndercombe (brother),8,9,11,12,13;his boyish quarrel with S. T. C.,13,14;becomes a midshipman,17;dies,53and note.Coleridge, Frederick (nephew),56.Coleridge, Rev. George (brother),7,8;his character and ability,8;12,21n.,25n.;his lines to Genius,Ibi Hæc Incondita Solus,43n.;59;his self-forgetting economy,65;extract from a letter from J. Plampin,70n.;95,97n.,98and note,261;visit from S. T. C. and his wife,305n.,306;467, 498 n., 512;disapproves of S. T. C.’s intended separation from his wife and refuses to receive him and his family into his house, 523 and note;699 n.;approaching death of, 746-748;S. T. C.’s relations with, 747, 748;letters from S. T. C.,22,23,42,53,55,59,60,62-70,103,239.Coleridge, the Rev. George, To, a dedication,223and note.Coleridge, Rev. George May (nephew), his friendly relations with Hartley C., 675 and note;letter from C., 746.Coleridge, Hartley, Poems of, 511 n.Coleridge, Henry Nelson (nephew and son-in-law),3, 553 n., 570 n., 579 n., 744-746;sketch of his life, 756 n.;letter from S. T. C., 756.Coleridge, Mrs. Henry Nelson (Sara Coleridge),9n.,163n.;extract from a letter from Mrs. Wordsworth,220n.;320n.,327n., 572 n.Coleridge, James, the younger, (nephew), his narrow escape,56.Coleridge, Colonel James (brother),7,54,56,61,306, 724 n., 726 n.;letter from S. T. C.,61.Coleridge, Mrs. James (sister-in-law), 740.Coleridge, John (brother),7.Coleridge, John (grandfather),4,5.Coleridge, Mrs. John (mother),5n.,7,13-17,21n.,25,56;letter from S. T. C.,21.Coleridge, Rev. John (father),5and note,6,7,10-12,15,16;dies,17,18;his character,18.Coleridge, John Duke, Lord Chief-Justice (great-nephew), 572 n., 699 n., 745 n.Coleridge, Sir John Taylor (nephew), his friendly relations with Hartley C., 675 and note;editor ofThe Quarterly Review, 736 and note, 737;his judgment and knowledge of the world, 739;delighted withAids to Reflection, 739;740 n., 744, 745;letter from S. T. C., 734.Coleridge, Luke Herman (brother),8,21,22.Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, his autobiographical letters to Thomas Poole,3-18;ancestry and parentage,4-7;birth,6,9and note;his brothers and sister,7-9;christened,9;infancy and childhood,9-12;learns to read,10;early taste in books,11and note,12;his dreaminess and indisposition to bodily activity in childhood,12;boyhood,12-21;has a dangerous fever,12-13;quarrels with his brother Frank, runs away, and is found and brought back,13-15;his imagination developed early by the reading of fairy tales,16;a Christ’s Hospital Presentation procured for him by Judge Buller,18;visits his maternal uncle, Mr. John Bowdon, in London,18,19;becomes a Blue-Coat boy,19;his life at Christ’s Hospital,20-22;enters Jesus College, Cambridge,22,23;becomes acquainted with the Evans family,23and note,24;writes a Greek Ode, for which he obtains the Browne gold medal for 1792,43and note;is matriculated as pensioner,44and note;his examination for the Craven Scholarship,45and note,46;his temperament,47;takes violin lessons,49;enlists in the army,57and note;nurses a comrade who is ill of smallpox in the Henley workhouse,58and note;his enlistment disclosed to his family,57n.,58,59;remorse,59-61,64,65;arrangements resulting in his discharge,61-70;his religious beliefs at twenty-one,68,69;returns to the university and is punished,70,71;drops his gay acquaintances and settles down to hard work,71;makes a tour of North Wales with Mr. J. Hucks,72-81;falls in love with Miss Sarah Fricker,81;proposes to go to America with a colony of pantisocrats,81,88-91,101-103;his interest in Miss Fricker cools and his old love for Mary Evans revives,89;his indolence,103,104;on his own poetry,112;considers going to Wales with Southey and others to found a colony of pantisocrats,121,122;his love for Mary Evans proves hopeless,122-126;in lodgings in Bristol after having left Cambridge without taking his degree,133-135;marries Miss Sarah Fricker and spends the honeymoon in a cottage at Clevedon,136;breaks with Southey,136-151;happiness in early married life,139;his tour to procure subscribers for theWatchman,151and note,152-154;poverty,154,155;receives a communication from Mr. Thomas Poole that seven or eight friends have undertaken to subscribe a certain sum to be paid annually to him as the author of the monody on Chatterton,158n.;discontinues theWatchman,158;takes Charles Lloyd into his home,168-170;birth of his first child, David Hartley,169;considers starting a day school at Derby,170and note;has a severe attack of neuralgia for which he takes laudanum,173-176;early use of opium and beginning of the habit,173n.,174n.;selects twenty-eight sonnets by himself, Southey, Lloyd, Lamb, and others and has them privately printed, to be bound up with Bowles’s sonnets,177,206and note;his description of himself in 1796,180,181;his personal appearance as described by another,180n.,181n.;anxious to take a cottage at Nether Stowey and support himself by gardening,184-194;makes arrangements to carry out this plan,209;his partial reconciliation with Southey,210,211;in the cottage at Nether Stowey,213;his engagement as tutor to the children of Mrs. Evans of Darley Hall breaks down,215n.;his visit at Mrs. Evans’s house,216;daily life at Nether Stowey,219,220;visits Wordsworth at Racedown,220and note,221;secures a house (Alfoxden) for Wordsworth near Stowey,224;visits him there,227;finishes his tragedy,Osorio,231;suspected of conspiracy with Wordsworth and Thelwall against the government,232n.;accepts an annuity of £150 for life from Josiah and Thomas Wedgwood,234and note,235and note;declines an offer of the Unitarian pastorate at Shrewsbury,235and note,236;writes Joseph Cottle in regard to a third edition of his poems,239;rupture with Lloyd,238,245n.,246;first recourse to opium to relieve distress of mind,245n.;birth of a second child, Berkeley,247;temporary estrangement from Lamb caused by Lloyd,249-253;goes to Germany with William Wordsworth, Dorothy Wordsworth, and John Chester, for the purpose of study and observation,258-262;lifeen pensionwith Chester in the family of a German pastor at Ratzeburg, after parting from the Wordsworths at Hamburg,262-278;learning the German language,262,263,267,268;writes a poem in German,263;proposes to proceed to Göttingen,268-270;proposes to write a life of Lessing,270;travels by coach from Ratzeburg to Göttingen, passing through Hanover,278-280;enters the University,281;receives word of the death of his little son, Berkeley,282-287;learns the Gothic and Theotuscan languages,298;reconciliation with Southey, after the return from Germany,303,304;with his wife and child he visits the Southeys at Exeter,305and note;accompanies Southey on a walking-tour in Dartmoor,305and note;makes a tour of the Lake Country,312n.,313;in London, writing for theMorning Post,315-332;life at Greta Hall, near Keswick,335-444;proposes to write an essay on the elements of poetry,338,347;proposes to study chemistry with William Calvert as a fellow-student,345-347;proposes to write a book on the originality and merits of Locke, Hobbes, and Hume,349,350;spends a week at Scarborough, riding and bathing for his health,361-363;divides the winter of 1801-1802 between London and Nether Stowey,365-368;domestic unhappiness,366;writes theOde to Dejection, addressing it to Wordsworth,378-384;discouraged about his poetic faculty,388;a separation from his wife considered and harmony restored,389,390;makes a walking-tour of the Lake Country,393and note,394;makes a tour of South Wales with Thomas and Sarah Wedgwood,410-414;his regimen at this time,412,413,416,417;birth of his daughter Sara,416;with Charles and Mary Lamb in London,421,422;takes Mary Lamb to the private madhouse at Hugsden,422;his tour in Scotland,431-441;love for and delight in his children,443;visits Wordsworth at Grasmere and is taken ill there, 447, 448;his rapid recovery, 451;plans and preparations for going abroad, 447-469;his mental attitude towards his wife, 468;voyage to Malta, 469-481;dislike of his own first name, 470, 471;life in Malta, 481-484;a Sicilian tour, 485 and note, 486 and note, 487;in Malta again, 487-497;his duties as Acting Public Secretary at Malta, 487, 491, 493, 494 and note, 495-497;his grief at Captain John Wordsworth’s death, 494 and note, 495 and note, 497;in Italy, 498-502;returns to England, 501;remains in and about London, writing political articles for theCourier, 505-509;invited to deliver a course of lectures at the Royal Institution, 507;visits the Wordsworths at Coleorton Farmhouse with his son Hartley, 509-514;spends five or six weeks with Hartley in the company of the Wordsworths at Basil Montagu’s house in London, 511 n.;outlines his course of lectures at the Royal Institution, 515, 516, 522;begins his lectures, 525;a change for the better in health, habits, and spirits, the result of his placing himself under the care of a physician, 533 and note, 543 n.;with the Wordsworths at Grasmere, devoting himself to the publication ofThe Friend, 533-559;in London, 564;determines to place himself under the care of Dr. John Abernethy, 564, 565;visits the Morgans in Portland Place, Hammersmith, 566-575;life-masks, death-mask, busts, and portraits, 570 and note, 572 and notes;last visit to Greta Hall and the Lake Country, 575-578;misunderstanding with Wordsworth, 576 n., 577, 578, 586-588;visits the Morgans at No. 71 Berners Street, 579-612;preparations for another course of lectures, 579, 580, 582, 585;writes Wordsworth letters of explanation, 588-595;his Lectures on the Drama at Willis’s Rooms, 595 and notes, 596, 597, 599;reconciled with Wordsworth, 596, 597, 599;second rupture with Wordsworth, 599 n., 600 n.;Josiah’s half of the Wedgwood annuity withdrawn on account of C.’s abuse of opium, 602, 611 and note;successful production of his tragedy,Remorse(Osoriorewritten), at Drury Lane Theatre, 602-611;sells a part of his library, 616 and note;anguish and remorse from the abuse of opium, 616-621, 623, 624;at Bristol, 621-626;proposes to translateFaustfor John Murray, 624 and note, 625, 626;convalescent, 631;with the Morgans at Ashley, near Box, 631;writing at his projected great work,Christianity, the one true Philosophy, 632 and note, 633;with the Morgans at Mr. Page’s, Calne, Wilts, 641-653;resolves to free himself from his opium habit and arranges to enter the house of James Gillman, Esq., a surgeon, in Highgate (an arrangement which ends only with his life), 657-659;submits his dramaZapolyato the Drury Lane Committee, and, after its rejection, publishes it in book form, 666 and note, 667-669;publishesSibylline LeavesandBiographia Literaria, 673;disputes with his publishers, Fenner and Curtis, 673, 674 and note;proposes a new Encyclopædia, 674;his reputation as a critic, 677 n.;visits Joseph Henry Green, Esq., at St. Lawrence, near Maldon, 690-693;his snuff-taking habits, 691, 692 and note;his friendship and correspondence with Thomas Allsop, 695, 696;delivers a course of Lectures on the History of Philosophy at the Crown and Anchor, Strand, 698 and note;criticises his portrait by Thomas Phillips, 699, 700;at the seashore, 700, 701;a candidate for associateship in the Royal Society of Literature, 726, 727;elected as a Royal Associate, 728;at Ramsgate, 729-731;prepares and publishesAids to Reflection, 734 n., 738;reads anEssay on the Prometheus of Æschylusbefore the Royal Society of Literature, 739, 740;another visit to Ramsgate, 742-744;takes a seven weeks’ continental tour with Wordsworth and his daughter, 751;illness, 754-756, 758;convalescence, 760, 761;begins to see a new edition of his poetical works through the press, 769 n.;writes a letter to his godchild from his deathbed, 775, 776.Coleridge, Early Recollections of, by Joseph Cottle,139n.,140n.,151n.,219n.,232n.,251n., 616 n., 617 n., 633 n.Coleridge, Life of, by James Gillman,3,20n.,23n.,24n.,45n.,46n.,171n.,257, 680 n., 761 n.Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, by James Dykes Campbell,269n., 527 n., 572 n., 600 n., 631 n., 653 n., 666 n., 667 n., 674 n., 681 n., 684 n., 698 n., 752 n., 753 n., 772 n.Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, and the English Romantic School, by Alois Brandl,258, 674 n., 740 n.Coleridge, S. T., Letters, Conversations, and Recollections of, by Thomas Allsop,41n., 527 n., 675 n.;the publication of, regarded by C.’s friends as an act of bad faith, 696 and note, 721 n.;698 n.Coleridge, S. T., Spiritual Philosophy, founded on the Teaching of, by J. H. Green, 680 n.Coleridge’s Logic, article inThe Athenæum, 753 n.Coleridge and Southey, Reminiscences of, by Joseph Cottle,268n.,269n.,417, 456 n., 617 n.Coleridge, Mrs. Samuel Taylor (Sarah Fricker, afterwards called “Sara”), edits the second edition ofBiographia Literaria,3;136,145,146,150,151;illness and recovery of,155,156;168;birth of her first child, David Hartley,169;174n.,181,188-190,205,213,214,216,224,245;birth of her second child, Berkeley,247-249;257,258,259n.;extract from a letter to S. T. C.,263n.;extract from a letter to Mrs. Lovell,267n.;271,297,312n.,313,318,321,325,326,332;birth and baptism of her third child, Derwent,338and note;her devotion saves his life,338n.;387;fears of a separation from her husband operate to restore harmony,389,390;her faults as detailed by S. T. C.,389,390;392,393n.,395,396;birth of a daughter, Sara,416;418,443, 457, 467, 490, 491, 521;extract from a letter to Poole, 576 n.;578;John Kenyon a kind friend to, 639 n.;letters from S. T. C.,259-266,271,277,284,288,367,410,420,431, 460, 467, 480, 496, 507, 509, 563, 579, 583, 602;letter to S. T. C. after her little Berkeley’s death,282n.Coleridge, Sara (daughter), her birth,416;in infancy,443;at the age of nine, 575, 576;580, 724;marries her cousin, Henry Nelson C., 756 n.SeeColeridge, Mrs. Henry Nelson.Coleridge, Sara, Memoir and Letters of, 461 n., 758 n.Coleridge, the Hundred of, in North Devon,4and note.Coleridge, the Parish of,4n.Coleridge, William (brother),7.Coleridge, William Hart (nephew, afterwards Bishop of Barbadoes), befriends Hartley C., 675 n.;707;his portrait by Thomas Phillips, R. A., 740 and note.Coleridge, William Rennell, 699 n.Coleridge family, origin of,4n.Collier, John Payne, 575 n.Collins, William, hisOde on the Poetical Character,196;hisOdes,318.Collins, William, A. R. A. (afterward, R. A.), letter from C., 693.Colman, George, the younger, genius of, 621;hisWho wants a Guinea?, 621 n.Columbus, the, a vessel, 730.Combe Florey,308n.