Chapter 23

Salernitanus, 566 and note.Salisbury,53-55.Samuel, C.’s dislike of the name, 470, 471.Sandford, Mrs. Henry,183n.;herThomas Poole and his Friends,158n.,165n.,170n.,183n.,232n.,234n.,258,267n.,282n.,319n.,335n., 456 n., 533 n., 553 n., 673 n., 676 n.Saturday Club, the, at Göttingen,281.Satyrane’s Letters,257,274n., 558.Savage, Mr., 534.Savory, Mr.,316.Scafell,393,394;in a thunderstorm on,400and note;view from the summit of,400,401;suggests theHymn before Sunrise in the Vale of Chamouni,404and note,405and note.Scale Force,375.Scarborough,361-363.Schelling, Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von, the philosophy of, 683, 735.Schiller, hisRobbers,96and note,97,221;C. translates manuscript plays of,331;C.’s translation of hisWallenstein,403, 608.Scholarship examinations,24,43,45and note,46.Schöning, Maria Eleanora, the story of, 555 and note, 556.Scoope, Emanuel, second Viscount Howe,262n.Scotland, C.’s tour in,431-441;the four most wonderful sights in,439,440.Scott, an attorney, his manner of revenging himself on C.,310,311.Scott, Sir Walter, hisLife of Napoleon Bonaparte,174n.;his house in Edinburgh,439;takes Hartley C. to the Tower, 511 n.;his offer to use his influence to get a place for Southey on the staff of theEdinburgh Review, 522 and note, 522;hisLay of the Last Minstrel, 523;605, 694;hisAntiquary, 736 and note.Sea-bathing,361n.,362and note.Seasickness, no sympathy for, 743, 744.Sermoni propriora, 606 and note.Shad,82,89,96.Shaftesbury, Lord, 689 n.Shakespeare, Lectures on, 557 n.Shakespeare and other Dramatists, Lectures on, 756 n.Sharp, Richard, 447 n.;letter from C., 447.Shepherds, German,293.Sheridan, R. B., Esq., To,116n.,118.Shrewsbury, C. offered the Unitarian pastorate at,235and note,236.Sibylline Leaves,178n.,378n.,379n.,404n.;C. ill-used by the printer of, 673, 674;678, 770.Sicily, C. plans to visit, 457, 458;C.’s first tour in, 485 and note, 486 and note, 487;523.Siddons, Mrs.,50.Sieyès, Abbé,329and note.Sigh, The,100and note.Simplicity, Sonnet to,251and note.Sin, original, C. a believer in,242.Sincerity, regarded by Dr. Darwin as vicious,161.Sixteen Sonnets, by Bampfylde,369n.Skiddaw,335,336;sunset over,384.Skiddaw Forest,376n.Slavery, question of its introduction into the proposed pantisocratic colony,89,90,95,96.Slave Trade, History of the Abolition of the, by Thomas Clarkson, C.’s review of, 527 and note, 528-530, 535, 536.Slave Trade, On the,43and note.Slee, Miss,362,363.Sleep, C.’s sufferings in,435,440, 441, 447.Smerdon, Mrs.,21,22.Smerdon, Rev. Mr., Vicar of Ottery,22,106and note.Smith, Charlotte,326.Smith, Horace and James, theirRejected Addresses, 606.Smith, James, 704.Smith, Raphael, 701 n.Smith, Robert Percy (Bobus),43and note.Smith, William, M. P., 506 n., 507 and note.Snuff, 691, 692 and note.Social Life at the English Universities, by Christopher Wordsworth,225n.Something Childish, but Very Natural, quoted,294.Song,100.Songs of the Pixies,222.Sonnet, an anonymous,177,178.Sonnet composed on a journey homeward, the author having received intelligence of the birth of a son,194and note,195.Sonnets,111,112, and note;to Priestley,116and note;to Kosciusko,116n.,117;to Godwin,116n.,117;to Sheridan,116n.,117,118;to Burke,116n.,118;to Southey,116n.,120;a selection of, privately printed by C.,177,206and note;by “Nehemiah Higginbottom,”251n.Sonnets, Sixteen, by Bampfylde,309n.Sonnet to Simplicity,251and note.Sonnet to the Author of the Robbers,96n.Sorrel, James,21.Sotheby, William, C. translates Gesner’sErste Schifferat his instance,369,371,372,376-378,397,402,403;his translation of the Georgics of Virgil,375;hisPoems,375;hisNetley Abbey,396;hisWelsh Tour,396;hisOrestes,402,409,410;proposes a fine edition ofChristabel,421,422;492, 579, 595 n., 604, 605;letters from C.,369,376,396-408.Sotheby, Mrs. William,369,375,378.Soul and body, 708, 709.South Devon,305n.Southey, Lieutenant, 563.Southey, Bertha, daughter of Robert S., born, 546, 547 and note, 578.Southey, Catharine, daughter of Robert S., 578.Southey, Rev. Charles Cuthbert, hisLife and Correspondence of Robert Southey,308n.,309n.,327n.,329n.,384n.,395n.,400n.,425n., 488 n., 521 n., 584 n., 748 n.;on the date of composition ofThe Doctor, 583 n.Southey, Edith, daughter of Robert S., 578.Southey, Dr. Henry, 615 and note.Southey, Herbert, son of Robert S., 578;his nicknames, 583 n.Southey, Margaret, daughter of Robert S., born,394n.,395n.;dies,435n.Southey, Mrs. Margaret, mother of Robert S.,138,147.Southey, Robert, his and C.’sOmniana,9n., 554 n., 718 n.;hisBotany Bay Eclogues,76n.,116;proposed emigration to America with a colony of pantisocrats,81,82,89-91,95,96,98,101-103;his sonnets,82,83,92,108;his connection with C.’s engagement to Miss Sarah Fricker,84-86,126;hisRace of Banquo,92and note;97n.;hisRetrospect,107and note;hisOde to Romance,107and note;hisOde to Lycon,107n.,108;hisDeath of Mattathias,108and note;his sonnets,To Valentine,The Fire,The Rainbow,108and notes;hisRosamund to Henry,108and notes;hisPauper’s Funeral,108and note,109;hisChapel Bell,110and note;C. prophesies fame for,110;hisElegy,115;C.’s sonnet to,116n.,120;lines to Godwin,120;suggestion that the proposed colony of pantisocrats be founded in Wales,121,122;his sonnet,Hold your mad hands!,127and note;his abandonment of pantisocracy causes a serious rupture with C.,134-151;marries Edith Fricker,137n.;hisJoan of Arc,141,149,178and note,210,319;163n.;the poet for the patriot,178;198and note;his verses to a college cat,207;C. compares his poetry with his own,210;personal relations with C. after the partial reconciliation,210,211;his exertions in aid of Chatterton’s sister,221,222;hisMary the Maid of the Inn,223;C.’sSonnet to Simplicitynot written with reference to,251and note;a more complete reconciliation with C.,303,304;visits C. at Stowey with his wife,304;C., with his wife and child, visits him at Exeter,305and note;accompanies C. on a walking tour in Dartmoor,305and note;hisSpecimens of the Later English Poets,309n.;hisMadoc,314,357,388, 463 and note, 467, 489, 490;hisThalaba the Destroyer,314,319,324,357, 684;out of health,314;C. suggests his removing to London,315;George Dyer’s article on,317and note;The Devil’s Thoughts, written in collaboration with C.,318;320n.;thinks of going abroad for his health,326,329,360,361;an advocate of the establishment of Protestant orders of Sisters of Mercy,327n.;proposes the establishment of a magazine with signed articles,328n.;extract from a letter to C. on the condition of France,329n.;C. begs him to make his home at Greta Hall,354-356,362,391,392,394,395;367,379n.;his proposed history of Portugal,387,388,423;secretary to the Chancellor of the Exchequer for Ireland for a short time,390and note;birth of his first child, Margaret,394n.,395n.;his admiration of Bowles and its effect on his poems,396;400n.;his prose style,423;his proposed bibliographical work,428-430;makes a visit to Greta Hall which proves permanent,435;death of his little daughter, Margaret,435and note,437;his first impressions of Edinburgh,438n.;442;on Hartley and Derwent Coleridge,443;460, 463, 468, 484, 488 n.;poverty, 490;hisWat Tyler, 507 n.;declines an offer from Scott to secure him a place on the staff of theEdinburgh Review, 521 and note;542 n.;extract from a letter to J. N. White, 545 n.;on the mumps, 545 n.;546;birth of his daughter Bertha, 546, 547 and note;548;corrects proofs ofThe Friend, 551 and note;575;C.’s love and esteem for, 578;his family in 1812, 578;C.’s estimate of, 581;on the authorship ofThe Doctor, 583 n., 584 n.;585;C. states his side of the quarrel with Wordsworth in conversation with, 592;604, 609 n., 615, 617 n.;writes of his friend John Kenyon, 639 n.;his protection of C.’s family, 657;C.’s letter introducing Mr. Ludwig Tieck, 670;hisCurse of Kehama, 684;694, 718, 724;hisBook of the Church, 724;726;his acquaintance with George Dyer, 748 n.;letters from C.,72-101,106-121,125,134,137,221,251n.,303,307-332,354-361,365,384,393,415,422-430,434,437, 464, 469, 487, 520, 554, 597, 605, 670;letter to Miss Sarah Fricker,107n.SeeAnnual Anthology, the, edited by Southey.Southey, Robert, Life and Correspondence of, by Rev. Charles Cuthbert Southey,108n.,308n.,309n.,327n.,329n.,384n.,395n.,400n.,425n., 488 n., 521 n., 584 n., 736 n., 748 n.Southey, Robert, Selections from Letters of,305n.,438n., 447 n., 543 n., 545 n., 583 n., 584 n., 736 n.Southey, Robert, of Balliol College, Bath, Poems by Robert Lovell and,107n.Southey, Mrs. Robert (Edith Fricker), Southey’s sonnet to,127and note;384,385,390-392;birth of her first child, Margaret,394n.,395n.;484;birth of her daughter Bertha, 546, 547 and note;592.Southey, Thomas,108n.,109n.,147;a midshipman on the Sylph at the time of her capture,308and note.South Molton,5.Spade of a Friend (an Agriculturist), To the, by Wordsworth, in honor of Thomas Wilkinson, 538 n.Spaniards, C.’s opinion of, 478.Spaniards, Letters on the, 629 and note.Sparrow, Mr., head-master of Newcome’s Academy,24,25n.Specimens of the Later English Poets, by Southey,309n.Spectator, Addison’s, studied by C. in connection withThe Friend, 557, 558.Speedwell, the brig, 467;on board, 469-481.Spenser, Edmund, hisView of the State of Ireland, 638 and note;quotation from, 694.Spillekins, 462, 468.Spinoza, Benedict, 632.Spirit of Navigation and Discovery, The, by William Lisle Bowles,403and note.Spiritual Philosophy, founded on the Teaching of S. T. Coleridge, by J. H. Green, with memoir of the author’s life, by Sir John Simon, 680 n.Spurzheim, Johann Kaspar, his life-mask and bust of C., 570 n.Stage, illusion of the, 663.Stamford News, 567 n.Stanger, Mrs. Joshua (Mary Calvert),345n.Stanzas written in my Pocket Copy of Thomson’s Castle of Indolence, by Wordsworth,345n.Steam vessels, 730 and note, 743.Steffens, Heinrich, 683.Steinburg, Baron,279.Steinmetz, Adam, C.’s letter to his friend, John Peirse Kennard, after his death, 762;his character and amiable qualities, 763, 764, 775.Steinmetz, John Henry, 762 n.Stephen, Leslie, on C.’s study of Kant,351n.Stephens (Stevens), Launcelot Pepys,25and note.Sterling, Life of, by Carlyle, 771 n., 772 n.Sterling, John, his admiration for C., 771 n., 772 n.;letter from C., 771.Sternbald’s Wanderungen, by Ludwig Tieck, 683 and note.Stevens (Stephens), Launcelot Pepys,25and note.Stoddart, Dr. (afterwards Sir) John, 477 and note, 481, 508;detains C.’s books and MSS., 523;524.Stoke House, C. visits the Wedgwoods at, 673 n.Storm, on a mountain-top,339,340;with lightning in December,365,366;on Scafell,400and note;in Kirkstone Pass,418-420.Stowey,seeNether Stowey.Stowey Benefit Club,233.Stowey Castle,225n.Street, Mr., editor of theCourier, 506, 533, 567, 568, 570, 616, 629, 634;his unsatisfactory conduct of theCourier, 661, 662.Strutt, Mr.,152,153.Strutt, Edward (Lord Belper),215n.Strutt, Joseph,215n.,216,367.Strutt, Mrs. Joseph,216.Strutt, William,215and note.Stuart, Miss, a personal reminiscence of C. by, 705 n.Stuart, Daniel, proprietor and editor of theMorning PostandCourier,311,315;engages C. for theMorning Post,319,320;321,329;engages lodgings in Covent Garden for C.,366n.;on C.’s dislike of Sir James Mackintosh, 454 n., 455 n.;458, 468, 474, 486 n., 507, 508, 519, 520, 542, 543 n.;a friend of Dr. Henry Southey, 615 n.;his steadiness and independence of character, 660;his public services, 660;his knowledge of men, 660;letters from C., 475, 485, 493, 501, 505, 533, 545, 547, 566, 595, 615, 627, 634, 660, 663, 740.SeeCourierandPost, Morning.Stutfield, Mr., amanuensis and disciple of C., 753 and note.Sugar, beet,299and note.Sun, The, 633.Sunset in the Lake Country, a,384.Supernatural, C.’s essay on the, 684.Superstitions of the German bauers,291,292,294.Suwarrow, Alexander Vasilievitch,307and note.Swedenborg, Emanuel, hisDe Cultu et Amore Dei, 684 n.;hisDe Cœlo et Inferno, 684 n.;688, 729, 730.Swedenborgianism, C. and, 684 n.Swift, Jonathan, hisDrapierLetters, 638 and note.Sylph, the gun-brig, capture of,308n.Sympathy, C.’s craving for, 696, 697.Synesius, by Canterus,67and note,68.Syracuse, Sicily, 458;C.’s visit to, 485 n., 486 n.Table Talk,81n.,440n., 624 n., 633 n., 684 n., 699 n., 756 n., 763 n., 764 n.Table Talk and Omniana,9n., 554 n., 571 n., 718 n., 764 n.Tatum,53,54.Taunton,220n.;C. preaches for Dr. Toulmin in,247.Taxation, C.’s Essay on, 629 and note.Taxes, 757.Taylor, Sir Henry, hisPhilip Van Artevelde, 774 and note.Taylor, Jeremy, hisDissuasion from Popery, 639;hisLetter on Original Sin, 640;a complete man, 640, 641.Taylor, Samuel,9.Taylor, William,310;on double rhymes in English,332;488, 489.Tea,412,413,417.Temperance, suggestions as to the furtherance of the cause of, 767-769.Temple, The, by George Herbert, 694.Teneriffe,414,417.Terminology, C. wishes to form a better, 755.Thalaba the Destroyer, by Southey,414;C.’s advice as to publishing,319;324,357, 684.The Hour when we shall meet again,157.Thelwall, John, his radicalism,159,160;his criticisms of C.’s poetry,163,164,194-197,218;on Burke,166;hisPeripatetic, or Sketches of the Heart, of Nature, and of Society,166and note;hisEssay on Animal Vitality,179,212;hisPoems,179,197;his contemptuous attitude towards the Christian Religion,198-205;two odes by,218;C. criticises a poem and a so-called sonnet by,230;C. advises him not to settle at Stowey,232-234;letter to Dr. Crompton on the Wedgwood annuity,234n.;extract from a letter from C. on the Wedgwood annuity,235n.;letters from C.,159,166,178,193,210,214,228-232.Thelwall, Mrs. John (Stella, first wife of preceding),181,205,206n.,207,214.Theology, C.’s great interest in,406;


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