Chapter 24

C.’s projected great work on, 632 and note, 633.Theory of Life, 711 n.The piteous sobs which choke the virgin’s breast, a sonnet by C.,206n.This Lime-Tree Bower my Prison,225and note,226and notes,227,228n.Thompson, James,343and note.Thornycroft, Hamo, R. A., 570 n.;his bust of C., 695 n.Thou gentle look, that didst my soul beguile, seeO gentle look, etc.Though king-bred rage with lawless tumult rude, a sonnet,116and note.Thought, a rule for the regulation of,244,245.Three Graves, The,412and note, 551, 606.Thunder-storm, in December,365,366;on Scafell,400and note.Tieck, Ludwig, a letter of introduction from C. to Southey, 670;two letters to C. from, 670 n.;671, 672, 680;hisSternbald’s Wanderungen, 663 and note;699.Times, The,327n.;its notice of C.’s tragedyRemorse, 603 and note.Tineum, by C. Valentine Le Grice,111and note.Tiverton,56.To a Friend, together with an Unfinished Poem,128n., 454 n.To a friend who had declared his intention of writing no more poetry,206n.To a Gentleman, 647 n.SeeTo William Wordsworth.To a Highland Girl, by Wordsworth, 459.To a Young Ass; its mother being tethered near it,119and note,120, 606 and note.To a Young Lady, with a Poem on the French Revolution,94and note.To a Young Man of Fortune who had abandoned himself to an indolent and causeless melancholy,207and note,208and note.Tobin, Mr., his habit of advising 474, 475.Tobin, James, 460 n.Tobin, John, 460 n.To Bowles,111and note.To Disappointment,28.Tomalin, J., hisShorthand Report of Lectures,11n., 575 n.To Matilda Betham. From a Stranger,404n.Tomkins, Mr.,397,402,403.To my own Heart,92n.Tooke, Andrew, 455 n.;hisPantheon, 455 and note.Tooke, Horne,218.To one who published in print what had been intrusted to him by my fireside,252n.Torbay,305n.To R. B. Sheridan, Esq.,116n.,118.To the Spade of a Friend (an Agriculturist), by Wordsworth, in honor of Thomas Wilkinson, 538 n.Totness,305.Toulmin, Rev. Dr.,220n.;tragic death of his daughter,247,248.Tour in North Wales, by J. Hucks,74n.,81n.Tour over the Brocken,257.Tour through Parts of Wales, by William Sotheby,396.To Valentine, by Southey,108and note.Towers,321.To William Wordsworth, 641, 644;C. quotes from, 646, 647;647 n.Treaty of Vienna, 615 and note.Trossachs, the,431,432,440.Tuckett, G. L.,57n.;letter from C.,57.Tulk, Charles Augustus, 684 n.;letters from C., 684, 712.Turkey,329.Turner, Sharon,425n., 593.Two Founts, The, 702 n.Two Round Spaces on a Tombstone, The, the hero of, 455.Two Sisters, To, 702 n.Tychsen, Olaus,398and note.Tyson, T.,393.Ulpha Kirk,393.Understanding, as distinguished from reason, 712, 713.Unitarianism,415, 758, 759.Upcott, C. visits Josiah Wedgwood at,308.Usk, the vale of,410.Valentine, To, by Southey,108and note.Valetta, Malta, C.’s visit to, 481-484, 487-497.Valette, General, 484;given command of the Maltese Regiment, 554, 555.Vane, Sir Frederick, his library,296.Velvet Cushion, The, by Rev. J. W. Cunningham, 651 and note.Vienna, Treaty of, 615 and note.Violin-teacher, C.’s,49.Virgil’sÆneid, Wordsworth’s unfinished translation of, 733 and note, 734.Virgil’sGeorgics, William Sotheby’s translation,375.Visions of the Maid of Orleans, The,192,206.Vital power, definition of, 712.Vogelstein, Karl Christian Vogel von, a letter of introduction from Ludwig Tieck to C., 670 n.Von Axen, Messrs. P. and O.,269n.Voss, Johann Heinrich, hisLuise,203n., 625, 627;hisIdylls,398.Voyage to Malta, C.’s, 469-481.Wade, Josiah,137n.,145,151n.,152n.,191,288;publication by Cottle of Coleridge’s letter of June 26, 1814, to, 616 n., 617 n.;letters from C.,151, 623.Waithman, a politician, 598.Wakefield, Edward, hisAccount of Ireland, 638.Wales, proposed colony of pantisocrats in,121,122,140,141.Wales, Tour through Parts of, by William Sotheby,396.Wales, North, C.’s tour of,72-81.Wales, South, C.’s tour of,410-414.Walford, John, Poole’s narrative of, 553 and note.Walker, Thomas,162.Walk into the country, a,32,33.Wallenstein, by Schiller, C.’s translation of,403, 608.Wallis, Mr., 498-500, 523.Wallis, Mrs.,392.Wanderer’s Farewell to Two Sisters, The, 722 n.Ward, C. A., 763 n.Ward, Thomas,170n.Wardle, Colonel, leads the attack on the Duke of York in the House of Commons, 543 and note.Warren, Parson,18.Wastdale,393,401.Watchman, The,57n.;C.’s tour to procure subscribers for,151and note,152-154;155-157;discontinued,158;174n., 611.Watson, Mrs. Henry, 698 n., 702 n.Wat Tyler, by Southey, 506 n.Wedgwood, Josiah,260,261,268,269n.;visit from C. at Upcott,308;his temporary residence at Upcott,308n.;337n.,350,351and note,416n.;withdraws his half of the Wedgwood annuity from C., 602, 611 and note;C.’s regard and love for, 611, 612.Wedgwood, Josiah and Thomas, settle on C. an annuity for life of £150,234and note,235and note;269n.,321.Wedgwood, Miss Sarah,412,416,417.Wedgwood, Thomas,323,379n.;with C. in South Wales,412,413;his fine and subtle mind,412;proposes to pass the winter in Italy with C.,413,414,418;415,416;a genuine philosopher, 448, 449;C.’s gratitude towards, 451;456 n., 493;C.’s love for, mingled with fear, 612;letter from C.,417.Welles, A., 462.Wellesley, Marquis of, 674.Welsh clergyman, a,79,80.Wensley, Miss, an actress, and her father, 704.Wernigerode Inn,298n.West, Mr., 633.Whitbread, Samuel, 598.White, Blanco, 741, 744.White, J. N., extract from a letter from Southey, 545 n.White Water Dash,375and note,376n.Wilberforce, William, 535.Wilkie, Sir David, his portraits of Hartley C., 511 n.;hisBlind Fiddler, 511 n.Wilkinson, Thomas, 538 n.;letter from C., 538.Will, lunacy or idiocy of the, 768.Williams, Edward (Iolo Morgangw),162and note.Williams, John (“Antony Pasquin”), 603 n.Wilson, Mrs., housekeeper for Mr. Jackson of Greta Hall, 461 and note, 491;Hartley C.’s attachment for, 510.Wilson, Professor, 756.Windy Brow,346.Wish written in Jesus Wood, February 10, 1792, A,35.With passive joy the moment I survey, an anonymous sonnet,177,178.With wayworn feet, a pilgrim woe-begone, a sonnet by Southey,127and note.Wolf, Freiherr Johann Christian von, 735.Wollstonecraft, Mary,316,318n.,321.Woodlands,271.Woolman, John, 540.Woolman, John, the Journal of,4and note.Worcester,154.Wordsworth, Catherine, 563.Wordsworth, Rev. Christopher, D. D.,225n.;Charles Lloyd reads Greek with,311.Wordsworth, Rev. Christopher, M. A., hisSocial Life at the English Universities in the Eighteenth Century,225n.Wordsworth, Rt. Rev. Christopher, D. D., hisMemoirs of William Wordsworth,432n., 585 n.Wordsworth, Dorothy,10n.;C.’s description of,218n.;visits C. with her brother,224-227;228,231,245n.,249;goes to Germany with William Wordsworth, Coleridge, and John Chester,259;with her brother at Goslar,272,273;returns with him to England,288,296;311n.,346,367,373,385;accompanies her brother and C. on a tour in Scotland,431,432and note;577, 599 n.Wordsworth, John, son of William W., 545.Wordsworth, Captain John, and the effect of his death on C.’s spirits, 494 and note, 495 and note, 497.Wordsworth, Thomas, death of, 599 n.;C.’s love of, 600.Wordsworth, William,10n.,163and note,164and note,218n.;visit from C. at Racedown,220and note,221;greatness of,221,224;settles at Alfoxden, near Stowey,224;at C.’s cottage,224-227;C. visits him at Alfoxden,227;228,231,232;suspected of conspiracy against the government,232n.,233;memoranda scribbled on the outside sheet of a letter from C.,238n.;his greatness and amiability,239;hisExcursion,244n.,337n., 585 n., 641, 642, 645-650;245;C.’s admiration for,246;250n.;accompanies C. to Germany,259;268,269n.;considers settling near the Lakes,270;271;at Goslar with his sister,272,273;anEpitaphby,284;returns to England,288,296;wishes C. to live near him in the North of England,296;his grief at C.’s refusal,296,297;304,313;his and C.’sLyrical Ballads,336,337,341,350and note,387;his admiration forChristabel,337;338,342;proposal from William Calvert in regard to sharing his house and studying chemistry with him,345,346;hisStanzas written in my Pocket Copy of Thomson’s Castle of Indolence,345n.;348,350;marries Miss Mary Hutchinson,359n.;363,367,370,373;his opinion of poetic license,373-375;C. addresses hisOde to Dejectionto,378and note,379and note,380-384;385-387;hisRuth,387;400,418,428;with C. on a Scotch tour,431-434;hisPeter Bell,432and note;441,443;receives a visit at Grasmere from C., who is taken ill there, 447;his hypochondria, 448;his happiness and philosophy, 449, 450;a most original poet, 450;451;hisTo a Highland Girl, 459;464, 468;his reference to C. inThe Prelude,386n.;452;hisBrothers, 494 n., 609 n.;hisHappy Warrior, 494 n.;extract from a letter to Sir George Beaumont on John Wordsworth’s death, 494 n.;511 and note, 522;his essays on the Convention of Cintra, 534 and note, 543 and note, 548-550;535;hisTo the Spade of a Friend, 558 n.;543 and note, 546, 522, 553 n., 556;C.’s misunderstanding with, 576 n., 577, 578, 586-588, 612;hisEssays upon Epitaphs, 585 and note;a long-delayed explanation from C., 588-595;reconciled with C., 596, 597, 599, 612;death of his son Thomas, 599 n.;second rupture with C., 599 n., 600 n.;his projected poem,The Recluse, 646, 647 and note, 648-650;678;on William Blake as a poet, 686 n.;his unfinished translation of theÆneid, 733 and note, 734;felicities and unforgettable lines and stanzas in his poems, 734;influence of theEdinburgh Reviewon the sale of his works in Scotland, 741, 742;759 n.;letters from C.,234, 588, 596, 599, 643, 733.Wordsworth, William, Life of, by Rev. William Angus Knight, LL. D.,164n.,220n., 447 n., 585 n., 591 n., 596 n., 599 n., 600 n., 733 n., 759 n.Wordsworth, William, Memoirs of, by Christopher Wordsworth,432n., 550 n., 585 n.Wordsworth, William, To, 641, 644;C. quotes from, 646, 647;647 n.Wordsworth, Mrs. William, extract from a letter to Sara Coleridge,220;525.SeeHutchinson, Mary.Wordsworths, the, visit from C. and his son Hartley at Coleorton Farmhouse, 509-514;545;letter from C., 456.Wrangham, Francis,363and note.Wrexham,77,78.Wright, Joseph, A. R. A. (Wright of Derby),152and note.Wright, W. Aldis,174n.Wynne, Mr., an old friend of Southey’s, 639 n.Wyville’s proofs of C.’s portrait, 770.Yarmouth,258,259.Yates, Miss,39.Yews near Brecon,411.York, Duke of, 543 n., 555 n., 567 and note.Young, Edward,404.Youth and Age, 730 n.Zapolya: A Christmas Tale, in two Parts, its publication in book form after rejection by the Drury Lane Committee, 666 and note, 667-669.


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