Abergavenny, 410.Abergavenny, Earl of, wreck of the,494n.;495n.Abernethy, Dr. John,525;C. determines to place himself under the care of,564,565.Achard, F. C., 299 and note.Acland, Sir John,523and note.Acting,621-623.Acton, 184, 186-188, 191.Adams, Dr. Joseph, 442 and note.Addison’sSpectator, studied by C. in connection withThe Friend,557,558.Address on the Present War, An, 85 n.Address to a Young Jackass and its Tethered Mother, 119 and note, 120.Aders, Mrs.,701n.,702n.,752;letters from C.,701,769.Adscombe, 175, 184, 188.Advising, the rage of,474,475.Adye, Major,493.Æschylus, Essay on the Prometheus of,740and note.Aids to Reflection,688n.;preparation and publication of,734n.,738;C. calls Stuart’s attention to certain passages in,741;favourable opinions of,741;756n.Ainger, Rev. Alfred, 400 n.Akenside, Mark, 197.Albuera, the Battle of, C.’s articles on,567and note.Alfoxden, 10 n.;Wordsworth settles at, 224, 227;326,515.Alison’sHistory of Europe,628n.Allen, Robert, 41 and note, 45, 47, 50;extract from a letter from him to C., 57 n.;63, 75, 83, 126;appointed deputy-surgeon to the Second Royals, 225 and note;letter to C., 225 n.Allsop, Mrs.,733n.Allsop, Thomas, friendship and correspondence with C.,695,696;publishes C.’s letters after his death,696;hisLetters, Conversations, and Recollections of S. T. Coleridge, 41 n.,527n.,675n.,696and note,698n.,721n.;711;C.’s letter of Oct. 8, 1822,721n.;letter from C.,696.Allston, Washington,523;his bust of C.,570n.,571;his portraits of C.,572and note;his art and moral character,573,574;581,633;his genius and his misfortunes,650;695and notes;letter from C.,498.Ambleside, 335;Lloyd settles at, 344;577,578.America, proposed emigration of C. and other pantisocrats to, 81, 88-91, 98, 101-103, 146;prospects of war with England, 91;241;progress of religious deism in, 414;C.’s letter concerning the inevitableness of a war with,629.Amtmann of Ratzeburg, the, 264, 268, 271.Amulet, The, 257.Ancient Mariner, The, 81 n.;written in a dream or dreamlike reverie, 245 n.;696.Animal Vitality, Essay on, by Thelwall, 179, 212.Annual Anthology, the, edited by Southey, 207 n., 226 n., 295 n., 298 n.;C. suggests a classification of poems in, 313, 314, 317;318, 320, 322 and note, 330, 331,748n.Annual Review,488,489,522.Anti-Jacobin, The Beauties of the, its libel on C., 320 and note.Antiquary, The, by Scott, C.’s portrait introduced into an illustration for,736and note.Ants, Treatise on, by Huber,712.Ardinghello, by Heinse,683and note.Arnold, Mr.,602,603.Arrochar, 432 and note.Arthur’s Crag, 439.A-seity,688and note.Asgill, John, and his Treatises,761and note.Ashburton, 305 n.Ashe, Thomas, hisMiscellanies, Æsthetic and Literary,633n.Ashley, C. with the Morgans at,631.Ashley, Lord, and the Ten Hours Bills,689n.Ashton, 140 and note.As late I roamed through Fancy’s shadowy vale, a sonnet, 116 n., 118.Atheism, 161, 162, 167, 199, 200.Athenæum, The, 206 n.,536n.,753n.Atlantic Monthly, 206 n.Autobiographical letters from C. to Thomas Poole, 3-21.Baader, Franz Xavier von,683and note.Babb, Mr., 422.Bacon, Lord, hisNovum Organum,735.Badcock, Mr., 21.Badcock, Harry, 22.Badcock, Sam, 22.Bala, 79.Ball, Lady,494n.,497.Ball, Sir Alexander John,484,487,496,497;mutual regard of C. and,508n.;524,554;C.’s narrative of his life,579n.;his opinions of Lady Nelson and Lady Hamilton,637.Ballad of the Dark Ladie, The, 375.Bampfylde, John Codrington Warwick, his genius, originality, and subsequent lunacy, 309 and note;hisSixteen Sonnets, 309 n.Banfill, Mr., 306.Barbauld, Anna Lætitia, 317 n.Barbou Casimir, The, 67 and notes, 68.Barlow, Caleb, 38.Barr, Mr., his children, 154.Barrington, Hon. and Rt. Rev. John Shute, Bishop of Durham,582and note.Bassenthwaite Lake, 335, 376 n.;sunset over, 384.Beard, On Mrs. Monday’s, 9 n.Beaumont, Lady,459,573,580,592,593;procures subscribers to C.’s lectures,599;644,645,739,741;letter from C.,641.Beaumont, Sir George, 440 n.,462;his affection for C. preceded by dislike,468;493;extract from a letter from Wordsworth on John Wordsworth’s death,494n.;496;lends the Wordsworths his farmhouse near Coleorton,509n.;579-581;C. explains the nature of his quarrel with Wordsworth to,592,593;595n.,629;on Allston as an historical painter,633;739,741;letter from C.,570.Beauties of the Anti-Jacobin, The, its libel on C., 320 and note.Becky Fall, 305 n.Beddoes, Dr. Thomas, 157, 211, 338;C.’s grief at his death,543and note,544and note;his advice and sympathy in response to C.’s confession,543n.;his character.544.Bedford, Grosvenor, 400 n.Beet sugar, 299 and note.Beguines, the, 327 n.Bell, Rev. Andrew, D. D.,575,582and note,605;hisOrigin, Nature, and Object of the New System of Education,581and note,582.Bell, Rev. Andrew, Life of, by R. and C. C. Southey,581n.Bellingham, John,598n.Bell-ringing in Germany, 293.Belper, Lord (Edward Strutt), 215 n.Bennett, Abraham, his electroscope, 218 n., 219 n.Bentley’s Quarto Edition of Horace, 68 and note.Benvenuti,498,499.Benyowski, Count, or the Conspiracy of Kamtschatka, a Tragi-comedy, by Kotzebue, 236 and note.Berdmore, Mr., 80, 82.Bernard, Sir Thomas,579and notes,580,582,585,595n.,599.Betham, Matilda, To. From a Stranger, 404 n.Bible, The, as literature, C.’s opinion of, 200;slovenly hexameters in, 398.Bibliography, Southey’s proposed work, 428-430.Bibliotheca Britannica, or an History of British Literature, a proposed work, 425-427, 429, 430.Bigotry, 198.Billington, Mrs. Elizabeth Weichsel, 368.Bingen,751.Biographia Literaria, 3, 68 n., 74 n., 152 n., 164 n., 174 n., 232 n., 257, 320 n.,498n.,607n.,669n.,670n.;C. ill-used by the printer of,673,674;679,756n.Birmingham, 151, 152.Bishop’s Middleham, 358 and note, 360.Blackwood’s Magazine,756.Blake, William, as poet, painter, and engraver,685n.,686n.;C.’s criticism of his poems and their accompanying illustrations,686-688;hisSongs of Innocence and Experience,686n.Bloomfield, Robert, 395.Blumenbach, Prof., 279, 298.Book of the Church, The,724.Books, C.’s early taste in, 11 and note, 12;in later life, 180, 181.Booksellers, C.’s horror of,548.Borrowdale, 431.Borrowdale mountains, the, 370.Botany Bay Eclogues, by Robert Southey, 76 n., 116.Bourbons, C.’s Essay on the restoration of the,629and note.Bourne, Sturges,542.Bovey waterfall, 305 n.Bowdon, Anne, marries Edward Coleridge, 53 n.Bowdon, Betsy, 18.Bowdon, John (C.’s uncle), C. goes to live with, 18, 19.Bowdons, the, C.’s mother’s family, 4.Bowles, the surgeon, 212.Bowles, To, 111.Bowles, Rev. William Lisle, C.’s admiration for his poems, 37, 42, 179;63 n., 76 and note;C.’s sonnet to, 111 and note;115;his sonnets, 177;hisHope, an Allegorical Sketch, 179, 180;196, 197, 211;his translation of Dean Ogle’s Latin Iambics, 374 and note;school life at Winchester, 374 n.;C.’s, Southey’s, and Sotheby’s admiration of, and its effect on their poems, 396;borrows a line from a poem of C.’s, 396;his second volume of poems, 403, 404;637,638,650-652.Bowscale, the mountain, 339.Box,631.Boyce, Anne Ogden, herRecords of a Quaker Family,538n.Boyer, Rev. James, 61, 113,768n.Brahmin creed, the, 229.Brandes, Herr von, 279.Brandl’sSamuel Taylor Coleridge and the English Romantic School, 258,674n.,740n.Bratha, 394,535.Bray, near Maidenhead, 69, 70.Brazil, Emperor of, an enthusiastic student and admirer of C.,696.Bread-riots,643n.Brecon, 410, 411.Bremhill,650.Brent, Mr.,598,599.Brent, Miss Charlotte,520,524-526;C.’s affection for,565;577,585,600,618,643,722n.;letter from C.,722.SeeMorgan family, the.Brentford, 326,673n.Bridgewater, 164.Bright, Henry A., 245 n.Bristol, C.’s bachelor life in, 133-135;138, 139, 163 n., 166, 167, 184, 326, 414,520,572n.,621,623,624.Bristol Journal,633n.British Critic, the, 350.Brookes, Mr., 80, 82.Brothers, The, by Wordsworth, the original of Leonard in,494n.;C. accused of borrowing a line from,609n.Brown, John, printer and publisher ofThe Friend,542n.Brun, Frederica, C.’s indebtedness to her for the framework of theHymn before Sunrise in the Vale of Chamouni, 405 n.Bruno, Giordano, 371.Brunton, Miss, 86 and note, 87, 89;verses to, 94.Brunton, Elizabeth, 86 n.Brunton, John, 86 n., 87.Brunton, Louisa, 86 n.Bryant, Jacob, 216 n., 219.Buchan, Earl of, 139.Buclé, Miss, 136.SeeCruikshank, Mrs. John.Buller, Sir Francis (Judge), 6 n.;obtains a Christ’s Hospital Presentation for C., 18.Buonaparte, 308, 327 n., 329 and note;his animosity against C.,498n.;530n.;C.’s cartoon and lines on,642.Burdett, Sir Francis,598.Burke, Edmund, C.’s sonnet to, 116 n., 118;hisLetter to a Noble Lord, 157 and note;Thelwall on, 166;177.Burnett, George, 74, 121, 140-142, 144-151, 174 n., 325,467.Burns, Robert, 196;C.’s poem on, 206 and note, 207.Burton, 326.Burton’sAnatomy of Melancholy, 428.Busts of C.,570n.,571,695n.Butler, Samuel (afterwards Head Master of Shrewsbury and Bishop of Lichfield), 46 and note.Buttermere, 393.Byron, Lord, hisChilde Harold,583;666,694,726.Byron, Lord, Conversations of, by Capt. Thomas Medwin,735and note.Cabriere, Miss, 18.Caermarthen, 411.Caldbeck, 376 n.,724.Calder, the river, 339.Caldwell, Rev. George, 25 and note, 29, 71, 82.Calne, Wiltshire, C.’s life at,641-653.Calvert, Raisley, 345 n.Calvert, William, proposes to study chemistry with C. and Wordsworth, 345;his portrait in a poem of Wordsworth’s, 345 n.;proposes to share his new house near Greta Hall with Wordsworth and his sister, 346;his sense and ability, 346;347, 348.Cambridge, description of, 39;137, 270.Cambridge, Reminiscences of, by Henry Gunning, 24 n., 363 n.Cambridge Intelligencer, The, 93 n., 218 n.Cambridge University, C.’s life at, 22-57, 70-72, 81-129;C. thinks of leaving, 97 n.;137.Cameos and intaglios, casts of,703and note.Campbell, James Dykes, 251 n., 337 n.;hisSamuel Taylor Coleridge, 269 n.,527n.,572n.,600n.,631n.,653n.,666n.,667n.,674n.,681n.,684n.,698n.,752n.,753n.,772n.Canary Islands, 417, 418.Canning, George,542,674.Canova, Antonio, on Allston’s modelling,573.Cape Esperichel,473.Carlisle, Sir Anthony, 341 and note.Carlton House, 392.Carlyle, Thomas, his portrait of C. in theLife of Sterling,771n.Carlyon, Clement, M. D., hisEarly Years and Late Recollections, 258, 298 n.Carnosity, Mrs.,472.Carrock, the mountain, a tempest on, 339, 340.Carrock man, the, 339.Cartwright, Major John,635and note.Cary, Rev. Henry, hisMemoir of H. F. Cary,676n.Cary, H. F., Memoir of, by Henry Cary,676n.Cary, Rev. H. F., his translation of theDivina Commedia,676,677and note,678,679;C. introduces himself to,676n.;685,699;letters from C.,676,677,731,760.Casimir, the Barbou, 67 and notes, 68.Castlereagh, Lord,662.Castle Spectre, The, a play by Monk Lewis, C.’s criticism of, 236 and note, 237, 238;626.Catania,458.Cat-serenades in Malta,483n.,484n.Catherine II., Empress of Russia, 207 n.Cathloma, 51.Catholic Emancipation, C.’s Letters to Judge Fletcher on,629and note,634and note,635,636,642.Catholicism in Germany, 291, 292.Catholic question, the, letters in theCourieron,567and note;C. proposes to again write for theCourieron,660,662;arrangements for the proposed articles on,664,665.Cattermole, George,750n.;letter from C.,750.Cattermole, Richard,750n.Cattle, disposal of dead and sick, in Germany, 294.Chalmers, Rev. Thomas, D. D., calls on C.,752and note.Chantrey, Mr. (afterwards Sir) Francis, R. A., C.’s impressions of,699;727.Chapman, Mr., appointed Public Secretary of Malta,491,496.Character, A,631n.Charity, 110 n.Chatterton, Monody on the Death of, 110 n., 158 n.;C.’s opinion of it in 1797, 222, 223;620n.Chatterton, Thomas, unpopularity of his poems, 221, 222;Southey’s exertions in aid of his sister, 221, 222.Chemistry, C. proposes to study, 345-347.Chepstow, 139, 140 n.Chester, John, accompanies C. to Germany, 259;265, 267, 269 n., 272, 280, 281, 300.Childe Harold, by Byron,583.Childhood, memory of, in old age, 428.Children in cotton factories, legislation as to the employment of,689and note.Christ, both God and man,710.Christabel, written in a dream or dreamlike reverie, 245 n.;310, 313, 317, 337 and note, 342, 349;Conclusion to Part II., 355 and note, 356 n.;Part II., 405 n.;a fine edition proposed, 421, 422;437 n.,523;C. quotes from,609,610;the broken friendship commemorated in,609n.;the copyright of,669;theEdinburgh Review’sunkind criticism of,669and note,670;Mr. Frere advises C. to finish,674;696.Christianity, the one true Philosophy(C.’smagnum opus), outline of,632,633;fragmentary remains of,632n.;the sole motive for C.’s wish to live,668;J. H. Green helps to lay the foundations of,679n.;694,753;plans for,772,773.Christian Observer,653n.Christmas Carol, A, 330.Christmas Indoors in North Germany, 257, 275 n.Christmas Out of Doors, 257.Christmas-tree, the German, 289, 290.Christ’s Hospital, C.’s life at, 18-22;173 n.Christ’s Hospital Five and Thirty Years Ago, by Charles Lamb, 20 n.Christ’s Hospital, List of Exhibitioners, from 1566-1885, 41 n.Chronicle, Morning, 111 n., 114, 116 n., 119 n., 126, 162, 167,505,506,606n.,615,616.Chubb, Mr., of Bridgwater, 231.Church, The Book of the, by Southey,724.Church, the English, 135, 306,651-653,676,757.Church, the Scottish, in a state of ossification,744,745.Church, the Wesleyan,769.Cibber, Colley, and his son, Theophilus,693.Cibber, Theophilus, his reply to his father,693.Cintra, Wordsworth’s pamphlet on the Convention of,534and note,543and note;C.’s criticism of,548-550.Clagget, Charles, 70 and note.Clare, Lord,638.Clarke, Mrs., the notorious,543n.Clarkson, Mrs.,592.Clarkson, Thomas, 363, 398;hisHistory of the Abolition of the Slave Trade,527and note,528-530;his character,529,530;C.’s review of his book,535,536;538n.,547,548;on the second rupture between C. and Wordsworth,599n.Clement, Mr., a bookseller,548.Clergyman, an earnest young,691.Clevedon, C.’s honeymoon at, 136.Clock, a motto for a market,553and note,554n.Coates, Matthew, 441 n.;his belief in the impersonality of the deity, 444;letter from C., 441.Coates, Mrs. Matthew, 442, 443.Cobham,673n.Cole, Mrs., 271.Coleorton, Memorials of, 369 n., 440.Coleorton Farmhouse, C.’s visit to the Wordsworths at,509-514.Coleridge, Anne (sister—usually called “Nancy”), 8 and note, 21, 26.Coleridge, Berkeley (son), birth of, 247 and note, 248, 249;taken with smallpox, 259 n., 260 n.;262, 267, 272;death of, 247 n., 282-287, 289.Coleridge, David Hartley (son—usually called “Hartley”), birth of, 169;176, 205, 213, 220, 231, 245, 260-262, 267 n., 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;345 n., 355, 356 n., 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;