182;extract from a letter to C.,197n.;206n.;hisGrandame,206n.;C.’s poem on Burns addressed to,206and note,207;extract from a letter to C.,223n.;visits C. at Nether Stowey,224and note,225-227;temporary estrangement from C.,249-253;his relations to the quarrel between C. and Southey,304,312,320n.;visits C. at Greta Hall with his sister,396n.;a Latin letter from,400n.;405n.,421,422, 460 n., 474;hisRecollections of a Late Royal Academician, 572 n.;his connection with the reconciliation of C. and Wordsworth, 586-588, 594;on William Blake’s paintings, engravings, and poems, 686 n.;704;hisSuperannuated Man, 740;744;his acquaintance with George Dyer, 748 n.;751 n., 760;letter of condolence from C., 171;other letters from C.,249, 586.Lamb, Charles, Letters of,164n.,171n.,197n.,396n.,400n., 465 n., 466 n., 686 n., 748 n.Lamb’s Prose Works,4n.,20n.,25n.,41n.Lamb, Mary,127,128,226n.;visits the Coleridges at Greta Hall with her brother Charles,396n.;becomes worse and is taken to a private madhouse,422;465;learns from C. of his quarrel with Wordsworth, 590, 591;endeavors to bring about a reconciliation between C. and Wordsworth, 594;704.Lampedusa, island, essay on, 495 and note.Landlord at Keswick, C.’s,335.SeeJackson, Mr.Lardner, Nathaniel, D. D., hisLetter on the Logos,157;hisHistory of the Heretics of the first two Centuries after Christ,330;on a passage in Josephus,407.Latin essay by C.,29n.Laudanum, used by C. in an attack of neuralgia,173and note,174and note,175-177;193,240, 617, 659.SeeOpium.Lauderdale, James Maitland, Earl of, 689 and note.Law, human as distinguished from divine, 635, 636.Lawrence, Miss, governess in the family of Dr. Peter Crompton, 758 n.;letter from C., 758.Lawrence, William, 711 n.Lawson, Sir Gilford,270;C. has free access to his library,336;392.Lay of the Last Minstrel, The, by Scott, 523.Lay Sermon, the second, 669.Leach, William Elford, C. meets, 711 and note.Lecky, G. F., British Consul at Syracuse, 458;C. entertained by, 485 n.Lectures, C.’s at the Royal Institution, 506 n., 507, 508, 511, 515, 516, 522, 525;at the rooms of the London Philosophical Society, 574 and note, 575 and note;a proposed course at Liverpool, 578;preparations for another course in London, 579, 580, 582, 585;at Willis’s Rooms on the Drama, 595 and note, 596, 597, 599;602, 604;an extempore lectureOn the Growth of the Individual Mind, at the rooms of the London Philosophical Society, 680 and note, 681;regarded as a means of livelihood, 694;on the History of Philosophy, delivered at the Crown and Anchor, Strand, 698 and note.Lectures on Shakespeare, 575 n.Lectures on Shakespeare and Other Dramatists, 756 n.Leghorn, 498, 499 and note, 500.Le Grice, Charles Valentine,23,24;hisTineum,111and note;225and note,325.Leibnitz, Gottfried Wilhelm, Baron von,280,360, 735.Leighton, Robert, Archbishop of Glasgow, his genius and character, 717, 718;his orthodoxy, 719;C. proposes to compile a volume of selections from his writings, 719, 720;C. at work on the compilation, which, together with his own comment and corollaries, is finally published asAids to Reflection, 734 and note.Leslie, Charles Robert, 695 and note;his pencil sketch of C., 695 n.;introduces a portrait of C. into an illustration forThe Antiquary, 736 and note.Lessing, Life of, C. proposes to write,270;321,323,338.Letters, C.’s reluctance to open and answer, 534.Letters from the Lake Poets,25n.,86n.,267n.,366n.,369n., 527 n., 534 n., 542 n., 543 n., 705 n.Letter smuggling, 459.Letters on the Spaniards, 629 and note.Letter to a Noble Lord, by Edmund Burke,157and note.Leviathan, the man-of-war, 467;a majestic and beautiful creature, 471, 472;477.Lewis Monk, his play,Castle Spectre,236and note,237,238, 626.Liberty, the Progress of,206.Life and death, meditations on,283-287.Life-masks of C., 570 and note.Lime-Tree Bower my Prison, this,225and note,226and notes,227,228n.Lines on a Friend who died of a Frenzy Fever,98and note,103n.,106and note.Lines to a Friend,8n.Lippincott’s Magazine, 674 n.Lisbon, the Rock of, 473.Literary Life.SeeBiographia Literaria.Literary Remains, 684 n., 740 n., 756 n., 761 n.Literature, a proposed History of British,425-427,429,430.Literature as a profession, C.’s opinion of,191,192.Live nits,360.Liverpool, 578.Liverpool, Lord, 665, 674.Llandovery,411.Llanfyllin,79.Llangollen,80.Llangunnog,79.Lloyd, Mr., father of Charles,168,186.Lloyd, Charles, and Woolman’s Journal,4n.;goes to live with C.,168-170;character and genius of,169,170;184,189,190,192,205,206;hisPoems on the Death of Priscilla Farmer,206n.;207n.,208n.;with C. at Nether Stowey,213;238;a serious quarrel with C.,238,245n.,246,249-253;hisEdmund Oliverdrawn from C.’s life,252and note;his relations to the quarrel between C. and Southey,304;reading Greek with Christopher Wordsworth,311;unworthy of confidence,311,312;hisEdmund Oliver,311;his moral sense warped,322,323;settles at Ambleside,344;C. spends a night with him at Bratha,394;563;hisHistory of Highgate, 572 n., 578.Llyswen,234n.,235n.Loch Katrine,431,432and note,433.Loch Lomond,431,432n.,433,440.Locke, John, C.’s opinion of his philosophy,349-351, 648;713.Lockhart, Mr., 756.Lodore, the waterfall of,335,408.Lodore mountains, the,370.Logic, The Elements of, 753 n.Logic, The History of, 753 n.Logos, Letter on the, by Dr. Nathaniel Lardner,157.London, Bishop of, 739;his favourable opinion ofAids to Reflection, 741.London Philosophical Society, C.’s lectures at the rooms of, 574 and note, 575 and note, 680 n.Longman, Mr., the publisher,319,321;on anonymous publications,324,325;328,329,341,349,357;loses money on C.’s translation ofWallenstein,403;593.Lonsdale, Lord, 538 n., 550, 733 n.Losh, James,219and note.Louis XVI., the death of,219and note.Love, George Dawe engaged on a picture to illustrate C.’s poem, 573.Love and the Female Character, C.’s lecture, 574 n., 575 and note.Lovell, Robert,75;C.’s opinion of his poems,110;114;hisFarmhouse,115,121,122,139,147,150;dies,159n.;317n.Lovell, Robert, and Robert Southey of Balliol College, Bath, Poems by,107n.Lovell, Mrs. Robert (Mary Fricker),122,159and note, 485.Lover’s Complaint to his Mistress, A,36.Low was our pretty Cot, C.’s opinion of,224.Lubec,274,275.Lucretius, his philosophy and his poetry, 648.Luff, Captain,369and note, 547.Luise, ein ländliches Gedicht in drei Idyllen, by Johann Heinrich Voss, quotation from,203n.;an emphatically original poem, 625;627.Lüneburg,278.Lushington, Mr.,101.Luss,431.Lycon, Ode to, by Robert Southey,107n.,108.Lyrical Ballads, by Coleridge and Wordsworth,336,337,341,350and note,387, 607, 678.Macaulay, Alexander, death of, 491.Mackintosh, Sir James, his rejected offer to procure a place for C. under himself in India, 454, 455;C.’s dislike and distrust of, 454 n., 455 n.;596.Macklin, Harriet, 751 and note, 764.Madeira,442, 451, 452.Madoc, by Southey, C. urges its completion and publication,314, 467;357;C.’s enthusiasm for,388, 489, 490;a divine passage of, 463 and note.Mad Ox, The,219n.,327.Magee, William, D. D., 761 n.Magnum Opus.SeeChristianity, the one true Philosophy.Maid of Orleans,239.Malta, C. plans a trip to, 457, 458;the voyage to, 469-481;sojourn at, 481-484, 487-497;army affairs at, 554, 555.Maltese, the, 483 and note, 484 and note.Maltese, Regiment, the, 554, 555.Malvern Hills, by Joseph Cottle,358.Manchester Massacre, the, 702 n.Manchineel,223n.Marburg,291.Margarot,166,167n.Markes, Rev. Mr.,310.Marriage as a means of ensuring the nature and education of children,216,217.Marsh, Herbert, Bishop of Peterborough, his lecture on the authenticity and credibility of the books collected in the New Testament, 707, 708.Martin, Rev. H.,74n.,81n.Mary, the Maid of the Inn, by Southey,223.Massena, Marshal, defeats the Russians at Zurich,308and note.Masy, Mr.,40.Mathews, Charles, C. hears and sees his entertainment,At Home, 704, 705;letter from C., 621.Mattathias, The Death of, by Robert Southey,108and note.Maurice, Rev. John Frederick Dennison, 771 n.Maxwell, Captain, of the Royal Artillery, 493, 495, 496.McKinnon, General,309n.Medea, a subject for a tragedy,399.Meditation, C.’s habits of, 658.Medwin, Capt. Thomas, hisConversations of Lord Byron, 735 and note.Meerschaum pipes,277.Melancholy, a Fragment,396and note,397.Memory of childhood in old age,428.Mendelssohn, Moses,203n.,204n.Men of the Time,317n.Merry, Robert,86n.Messina, 485, 486.Metaphysics,102,347-352;C. proposes to write a book on Locke, Hobbes, and Hume,349,350;in poetry,372;effect of the study of,388;C.’s projected great work on, 632 and note, 633;of the German philosophers, 681-683, 735;712, 713.SeeChristianity, the One True Philosophy,Philosophy,Religion.Meteyard, Eliza, herGroup of Englishmen,269n.,308n.Method, Essay on the Science of, 681 and note.Methuen, Rev. T. A., 652 and note.Microcosm,43and note.Middleton, H. F. (afterwards Bishop of Calcutta),23,25,32,33.Milman, Henry Hart, 737 and note.Milton, John,164,197and note;a sublimer poet than Homer or Virgil,199,200;the imagery inParadise Lostborrowed from the Scriptures,199,200;hisAccidence,331;on poetry,387;his platonizing spirit,406,407;678, 734.Milton, Lord, 567 and note.MindversusNature, in youth and later life, 742, 743.Minor Poems,317n.Miscellanies, Æsthetic and Literary, 711 n.Miss Rosamond, by Southey,108and note.Mitford, Mary Russell,63n.Molly,11.Monarchy likened to a cockatrice,73.Monday’s Beard, On Mrs.,9n.Money, Rev. William, 651 n.;letter from C., 651.Monody on the Death of Chatterton,110n.,158n., 620 n.Monologue to a Young Jackass in Jesus Piece,119n.Monopolists,335n.Montagu, Basil,363n., 511 n.;causes a misunderstanding between C. and Wordsworth, 578, 586-591, 593, 599, 612;endeavours to have an associateship of the Royal Society of Literature conferred on C., 726, 727;his efforts successful, 728;749.Montagu, Mrs. Basil, her connection with the quarrel between C. and Wordsworth, 588, 589, 591, 599.Monthly Magazine, the,179and note,185,197,215,251n.,310,317.Moore, Thomas, hisLalla Rookh, 672;his misuse of the possessive case, 672.Moors, C.’s opinion of, 478.Morality and religion, 676.Moreau, Jean Victor, 449 and note.Morgan, Mrs.,145,148.Morgan, John James, 524, 526;a faithful and zealous friend, 580;C. confides the news of his quarrel with Wordsworth to, 591, 592;596, 650, 665;letter from C., 575.Morgan, Mrs. John James, C.’s affection for, 565;578, 600, 618, 650, 722 n.;letter from C., 524.Morgan family, the (J. J. Morgan, his wife, and his wife’s sister, Miss Charlotte Brent), C.’s feelings of affection, esteem, and gratitude towards, 519, 520, 524-526, 565;C. visits, 566-575 and note, 579-622;585;C. confides the news of his quarrel with Wordsworth to, 591, 592;C. regards as his saviours, 592;600 n.;with C. at Calne, 641-653;their faithful devotion to C., 657, 722 n.;letters from C., 519, 524, 564.Mortimer, John Hamilton,373and note.Motion of Contentment, by Archdeacon Paley,47.Motley, J. C., 467-469, 475.Mountains, of Portugal, 470, 473;about Gibraltar, 478.Mumps, the, 545 and note.Murray, John, 581;proposes to publish a translation ofFaust, 624-626;his connection with the publication ofZapolya, 666 and note, 667-669;offers C. two hundred guineas for a volume of specimens of Rabbinical wisdom, 667 n.;699 n.;proposal from C. to compile a volume of selections from Archbishop Leighton, 717-720;723;his proposal to publish an edition of C.’s poems, 787;letters from C., 624, 665, 717.Murray, John, Memoirs of, 624 n., 666 n.Music,49.Myrtle, praise of the, 745, 746.Mythology, Greek and Roman, contrasted with Christianity,199,200.Nanny,260,295.Naples, 486, 502.Napoleon,308,327n.,329and note;his animosity against C., 498 n.;530 n.;C.’s cartoon and lines on, 642.Napoleon Bonaparte, Life of, by Sir Walter Scott,174n.Natural Theology, by William Paley,424n.,425n.Nature, her influence on the passions,243,244;Mind and, two rival artists, 742, 743.Natur-philosophen, C. on the, 682, 683.Navigation and Discovery, The Spirit of, by William Lisle Bowles,403and note.Necessitarianism, the sophistry of, 454.Neighbours,186.Nelson, Lady, 637.Nelson, Lord, 637 and note.Nesbitt, Fanny, C.’s poem to,56,57.Netherlands, the, 751.Nether Stowey,165and note;C. proposes to move to,184-194;arrangements for moving to,209;settled at,213;C.’s description of his place at,213;Thelwall urged not to settle at,232-234;the curate-in-charge of,267n.;297,325,366;C.’s last visit to,405n.;497 n.Neuralgia, a severe attack of,173-177.Newcome’s (Mr.) School,7,25n.Newlands,393and note,411, 725.New Monthly Magazine,257.Newspapers, freshness necessary for, 568.New Testament, the, Bishop March’s lecture on the authenticity and credibility of the books collected in, 707, 708.Newton, Mr.,48.Newton, Mrs., sister of Thomas Chatterton,221,222.Newton, Sir Isaac,352.Nightingale, The, a Conversational Poem,296n.Ninathoma, The Complaint of,51.Nixon, Miss Eliza, unpublished lines of C. to, 773 n., 774 n.;letter from C., 773.Nobs, Dr. Daniel Dove’s horse, inThe Doctor, 583 and note, 584.No more the visionary soul shall dwell,109and note,208n.Nordhausen,273.Northcote, Sir Stafford,15and note.Northmore, Thomas, C. dines with,306,307;an offensive character to the aristocrats,310.North Wales, C.’s tour of,72-81.Notes on Hamlet, 684 n.Notes on Noble’s Appeal, 684 n.Notes Theological and Political, 684 n., 761 n.Nottingham,153,154,216.Novi, Suwarrow’s victory at,307and note.Nuremberg, 555.Objective, different meanings of the term, 755.Observations on Egypt, 486 n.Ocean, the, by night,260.Ode in the manner of Anacreon, An,35.Ode on the Poetical Character, by William Collins,196.Odes to Great People, by Thomas Hood,250n.Ode to Dejection,378and note,379and note,380-384,405n.Ode to Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire,320and note,330.Ode to Lycon, by Robert Southey,107n.,108.Ode to Romance, by Robert Southey,107and note.Ode to the Departing Year,212n.;C.’s reply to Thelwall’s criticisms on,218and note;221.Ode to the Duchess,320and note,330.O gentle look, that didst my soul beguile, a sonnet,111,112and note.Ogle, Captain,63and note.Ogle, Lieutenant,374n.Ogle, Dr. Newton, Dean of Westminster, his Latin Iambics,374and note.Oken, Lorenz, hisNatural History, 736.Old Man in the Snow,110and note.Omniana, by C. and Southey,9n., 554 n., 718 n.On a Discovery made too late,92and note,