Curtis, Rev. T., partner of Fenner, C.’s publisher, his ill-usage of C.,674.Cuxhaven, 259.Dalton, John,457and note.Damer, Hon. Mrs., 368.Dana, Miss R. Charlotte,572n.Dante and hisDivina Commedia,676,677and note,678,679,731n.,732.Danvers, Charles, his kindness of heart, 316.Dark Ladie, The Ballad of the, 375.Darnley, Earl,629.Dartmoor, a walking-tour in, 305 and note.Dartmouth, 305 and note.Darwin, Dr. Erasmus, C.’s conversation with, 152, 153;his philosophy of insincerity, 161;C.’s opinion of his poems, 164;211;the first literary character in Europe, and the most original-minded man, 215;386,648.Dash Beck, 375 n., 376 n.Davy, Sir Humphry, 315-317, 321, 324, 326, 344, 350, 357, 365, 379 n.,448;a Theo-mammonist,455;456;C. attends his lectures,462and note,463;C.’s esteem and admiration for,514;his successful efforts to induce C. to give a course of lectures at the Royal Institution,515,516;seriously ill,520,521;hears from C. of his improvement in health and habits,533n.;673n.;letters from C., 336-341, 345,514.Davy, Sir Humphry, Fragmentary Remains of, edited by Dr. Davy, 343 n.,533n.Dawe, George, R. A., his life-mask and portrait of C.,572and note;his funeral and C.’s epigram thereon,572n.;immortalized by Lamb,572n.;engaged on a picture to illustrate C.’s poem,Love,573;his admiration for Allston’s modelling,573;his character and manners,581;a fortunate grub,605.Dawes, Rev. John, teacher of Hartley and Derwent C.,576and note,577.Death, fear of, responsible for many virtues,744;the nature of,762,763.Death and life, meditations on, 283-287.Death-mask of C., a,570n.Death of Mattathias, The, by Robert Southey, 108 and note.Deism, religious, 414.Dejection: An Ode, 378 and note, 379 and note, 380-384, 405 n.Della Cruscanism, 196.Democracy, C. disavows belief in, 104-105;134, 243.SeeRepublicanismandPantisocracy.Denbigh, 80, 81.Denman, Miss,769,770.Dentist, a French, 40.De Quincey, Thomas, 405 n.,525;revises the proofs and writes an appendix for Wordsworth’s pamphletOn the Convention of Cintra,549,550n.;563,601,772n.Derby, 152;proposal to start a school in, 170 and note;188;the people of, 215 and note, 216.Derwent, the river, 339.Descartes, René, 351 and note.Destiny of Nations, The, 278 n., 178 n.Deutschland in seiner tiefsten Erniedrigung, by John Philip Palm, C.’s translation of,530.De Vere, Aubrey, extract from a letter from Sir William Rowan Hamilton to,759n.Devil’s Thoughts, The, by Coleridge and Southey, 318.Devock Lake, 393.Devonshire, 305 and note.Devonshire, Georgiana, Duchess of, Ode to, 320 and note, 330.Dibdin, Mr., stage-manager at Drury Lane Theatre,666.Disappointment, To, 28.Dissuasion from Popery, by Jeremy Taylor,639.Divina Commedia, C. praises the Rev. H. F. Cary’s translation of,676,677and note,678,679;Gabriele Rossetti’s essay on the mechanism and interpretation of,732.Doctor, The,583n.,584n.Döring, Herr von, 279.Dove, Dr. Daniel,583and note,584.Dove Cottage, Grasmere, 379 n.SeeGrasmere.Dowseborough, 225 n.Drakard, John,567and note.Drayton, Michael, hisPoly-Olbion, 374 n.Dreams, the state of mind in,663.Drury Lane Theatre, C.’sZapolyabefore the committee of,666and note,667.Dryden, John, his slovenly verses,672.Dubois, Edward,705and note.Duchess, Ode to the, 320 and note, 330.Dunmow, Essex,456,459.Duns Scotus, 358.Dupuis, Charles François, hisOrigine de tous les Cultes, ou Religion Universelle, 181 and note.Durham, Bishop of,582and note.Durham, C. reading Duns Scotus at, 358-361.Duty,495n.Dyer, George, 84, 93, 316, 317;his article on Southey inPublic Characters for 1799-1800, 317 and note;363, 422;sketch of his life,748n.;C.’s esteem and affection for,748,749;his benevolence and beneficence,749;letter from C.,748.Earl of Abergavenny, the wreck of,494n.;495n.Early Recollections of Coleridge, by Joseph Cottle, 139 n., 140 n., 151 n., 219 n., 232 n., 251 n.,616n.,617n.,633n.Early Years and Late Recollections, by Clement Carlyon, M. D., 258, 298 n.East Tarbet, 431, 432 and note, 433.Echoes, 400 n.Edgeworth, Maria, herHelen,773,774.Edgeworth, Richard Lovell, 262.Edgeworth’sEssay on Education, 261.Edgeworths, the, very miserable when children, 262.Edinburgh, a place of literary gossip, 423;C.’s visit to, 434-440;Southey’s first impressions of, 438 n.Edinburgh Review, The, 438 n.;Southey declines Scott’s offer to secure him a place on,521and note,522;its attitude towards C.,527;C.’s review of Clarkson’s book in,527and note,528-530;636,637;severe review ofChristabelin,669and note,670;Jeffrey’s reply to C. in,669n.;re-echoes C.’s praise of Cary’sDante,677n.;its broad, predetermined abuse of C.,697,723;its influence on the sale of Wordsworth’s books in Scotland,741,742.Edmund Oliver, by Charles Lloyd, drawn from C.’s life, 252 and note;311.Education, Practical, by Richard Lovell Edgeworth and Maria Edgeworth, 261.Education through the imagination preferable to that which makes the senses the only criteria of belief, 16, 17.Edwards, Rev. Mr., of Birmingham, extract from a letter from C. to, 174 n.Edwards, Thomas, LL. D., 101 and note.Egremont, 393.Egypt, Observations on,486n.Egypt, political relations of,492.Eichhorn, Prof., of Göttingen, 298,564,707,773.Einbeck, 279, 280.Elbe, the, 259, 277.Electrometers of taste, 218 and note.Elegy, by Robert Southey, 115.Elleray,535.Elliot, H., Minister at the Court of Naples,508and note.Elliston, Mr., an actor,611.Elmsley, Rev. Peter, 438 and note, 439.Encyclopædia Metropolitana, a work projected by C.,674,681.Encyclopædias, 427, 429, 430.Ennerdale, 393.Epitaph, by C.,769and note,770,771.Epitaph, by Wordsworth, 284.Erigena, Joannes Scotus, 417;the modern founder of the school of pantheism, 424.Erskine, Lord, his Bill for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals,635and note.Erste Schiffer, Der(The First Navigator), by Gesner, 369, 371, 372, 376-378, 397, 402, 403.Eskdale, 393, 401.Essay on Animal Vitality, by Thelwall, 179, 212.Essay on Fasting, 157.Essay on the New French Constitution, 320 and note.Essay on the Prometheus of Æschylus,740and note.Essay on the Science of Method,681and note.Essays on His Own Times, 156 n., 157 n., 320 n., 327 n., 329 n., 335 n., 414 n.,498n.,567n.,629n.,634n.Essay on the Fine Arts,633and note,634.Essays upon Epitaphs, by Wordsworth,585and note.Estlin, Mrs. J. P., 190, 213, 214.Estlin, Rev. J. P., 184, 185, 190, 239, 287, 288;his sermons, 385;416;letters from C., 213, 245, 246, 414.Ether, 420, 435.Etna,458,485n.,486n.Evans, Mrs., C. spends a fortnight with, 23 and note;24;C.’s filial regard for, 26, 27;her unselfishness, 46;letters from C., 26, 39, 45.Evans, Anne, 27, 29-31;letters from C., 37, 52.Evans, Eliza, 78.Evans, Mrs. Elizabeth, of Darley Hall, her proposal to engage C. as tutor to her children, 215 n.;her kindness to C. and Mrs. C., 215 n., 210;231, 367.Evans, Mary, 23 n., 27, 30;an acute mind beneath a soft surface of feminine delicacy, 50;C. sees her at Wrexham and confesses to Southey his love for her, 78;97 and note;song addressed to, 100;C.’s unrequited love for, 123-125;letters from C., 30, 41, 47, 122, 124;letter to C., 87-89.Evans, Walter, 231.Evans, William, of Darley Hall, 215 n.Evolution,648.Examiner, The, its notice of C.’s tragedy,Remorse,606.Excursion, The, by Wordsworth, 244 n., 337 n.,585n.;C.’s opinion of,641;theEdinburgh Review’scriticism of,642;C. discusses it in the light of his previous expectations,645-650.Exeter, 305 and note.Ezekiel,705n.Faith, C.’s definition of, 202;204.Fall of Robespierre, The, 85 and note, 87, 93, 104 and notes.Falls of Foyers, the, 440.Farmer, Priscilla, Poems on the Death of, by Charles Lloyd, 206 and note.Farmers, 335 n.Farmhouse, by Robert Lovell, 115.Fasting, Essay on, 157.Faulkner: a Tragedy, by William Godwin,524and note.Fauntleroy’s trial,730.Faust, C.’s proposal to translate,624and note,625,626.Favell, Robert, 86, 109 n., 110 n., 113, 225 and note.Fayette, 112.Fears in Solitude, published, 261 n.;318, 321, 328,552,703and note.Fellowes, Mr., of Nottingham, 153.Female Biography, or Memoirs of Illustrious and Celebrated Women, by Mary Hayes, 318 and note.Fenner, Rest, publishesZapolyafor C.,666n.;his ill-usage of C. in regard toSibylline Leaves,Biographia Literaria, and the projectedEncyclopædia Metropolitana,673,674and note.Fenwick, Dr., 361 and note.Fenwick, Mrs. E.,465and note.Fernier, John, 211.Fichte, Johann Gottlieb, the philosophy of,682,683,735.Field, Mr., 93.Fine Arts, Essays on the,633and note,634.Fire, The, by Robert Southey, 108 and note.Fire and Famine, 327.First Landing Place, The,684n.First Navigator, The, translation of Gesner’sDer Erste Schiffer, 369, 371, 372, 376-378, 397, 402, 403.Fitzgibbon, John,638.Fletcher, Judge, C.’sCourierLetters to,629and note,634and note,635,636,642.Florence,499n.Flower, Benjamin, editor of theCambridge Intelligencer, 93 and note.Flower, The, by George Herbert,695.Flowers,745,746.Fort Augustus, 435.Foster-Mother’s Tale, The,510n.Fox, Charles James, hisLetter to the Westminster Electors, 50;327;Coleridgeversus, 423, 424;proposed articles on,505;506;death of,507and note;629and note.Fox, Dr.,619.Foyers, the Falls of, 440.Fragment found in a Lecture Room, A, 44.Fragments of a Journal of a Tour over the Brocken, 257.France, political condition of, in 1800, 329 and note.France, an Ode, 261 n.,552.Freeling, Sir Francis,751.French, C. not proficient in, 181.French Constitution, Essay on the New, 320 and note.French Empire under Buonaparte, C.’s essays on the,629and note.French Revolution, the, 219, 240.Frend, William, 24 and note.Frere, George,672.Frere, Right Hon. John Hookham,672and note;advice and friendly assistance to C. from,674,675and note;698,731,732,737.Fricker, Mrs., 98, 189;C. proposes to allow her an annuity of £20, 190;423,458.Fricker, Edith (afterwards Mrs. Robert Southey), 82;marries Southey, 137 n.;163 n.SeeSouthey, Mrs. Robert.Fricker, George, 315, 316.Fricker, Martha,600.Fricker, Sarah, C. falls in love with, 81;83-86;C.’s love cools, 89;marries C., 136;138, 163 n.;letter from Southey, 107 n.SeeColeridge, Mrs. Samuel Taylor.Friend, The, 11 n., 25 n., 86 n., 257, 274 n., 275 n., 351 n., 404 n., 412 n.,453n.,454n.;preliminary prospectus of, and its revision,533,536and note,537-541,542n.;arrangements for the publication of,541,542and note,544,546,547;its vicissitudes during its first eight months,547,548,551,552,554-559;Addison’sSpectatorcompared with,557,558;the reprint of,575,579and note,580n.,585and note;606,611,629and note,630,667n.;J. H. Frere’s advice in regard to,674;the object of the third volume of,676;684n.;697,756n.,768and note.Friends, C. complains of lack of sympathy on the part of his,696,697.Friend’s Quarterly Examiner, The,536n.,538n.Frisky Songster, The, 237.Frost at Midnight, 8 n., 261 n.Gale and Curtis,579and note,580n.Gallow Hill, 359 n., 362, 379 n.Gallows and hangman in Germany, 294.Gardening, C. proposes to undertake, 183-194;C. begins it at Nether Stowey, 213;recommended to Thelwall, 215;at Nether Stowey, 219, 220.Gebir, 328.Gentleman’s Magazine, The,455n.Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire, Ode to, 320 and note, 330.German language, the, C. learning, 262, 263, 267, 268.German philosophers, C.’s opinions of,681-683,735.German playing-cards, 263.Germans, their partiality for England and the English, 263, 264;their eating and smoking customs, 276, 277;an unlovely race, 278;their Christmas-tree and other religious customs, 289-292;superstitions of the bauers, 291, 292, 294;marriage customs of the bauers, 292, 293.Germany, 257, 258;C.’s sojourn in, 259-300;post coaches in, 278, 279;the clergy of, 291;Protestants and Catholics of, 291, 292;bell-ringing in, 293;churches in, 293;shepherds in, 293;care of owls in, 293;gallows and hangman in, 294;disposal of dead and sick cattle in, 294;beet sugar in, 299.Gerrald, Joseph, 161 and note, 166, 167 n.Gesenius, Friedrich Heinrich Wilhelm,773.Gesner, hisErste Schiffer(The First Navigator), 369, 371, 372, 376-378, 397, 402, 403;his rhythmical prose, 398.Ghosts,684.Gibraltar,469,473,474;description of,475-479;480,493.Gifford, William, his criticism of C.’s tragedy,Remorse,605,606;669,737.Gillman, Alexander,703n.Gillman, Henry,693n.Gillman, James, hisLife of Coleridge, 3, 20 n., 23 n., 24 n., 45 n., 46 n., 171 n., 257;442 n.,680n.,761n.;his faithful friendship for C.,657;C. arranges to enter his household as a patient,657-659;C.’s pecuniary obligations to,658n.;character and intellect of,665;670n.,679,685,692,704;C.’s gratitude to and affection for,721,722;on C.’s opium habit,761n.;768;extracts from a letter from John Sterling to,772n.;letters from C.,657,700,721,729,742.Gillman, James, the younger, passes his examination for ordination with great credit,755.Gillman, Mrs. James (Anne), her faithful friendship for C.,657;character of,665;679,684,685,702n.,705,721,722,729,733;illness of,738;C.’s attachment to,746;C.’s gratitude to and affection for,754;764,774;letters from C.,690,745,754.Ginger-tea, 412, 413.Glencoe, 413, 440.Glen Falloch, 433.Gloucester, 72.Gnats,692.Godliness, C.’s definition of, 203 n., 204;St. Peter’s paraphrase of, 204.Godwin, William, 91, 114;C.’s sonnet to, 116 n., 117;lines by Southey to, 120;his misanthropy, 161, 162;161 n., 167;C.’s book on, 210;316, 321;hisSt. Leon, 324, 325;a quarrel and reconciliation with C.,457,464-466;hisFaulkner: a Tragedy,524and note;C. accepts his invitation to meet Grattan,565,566;letter from C.,565.Godwin, William: His Friends and Contemporaries, by Charles Kegan Paul, 161 n., 324 n.,465n.Godwin, Mrs. William,465,466,566.Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von, hisFaust, C.’s proposal to translate,624and note,625,626;hisZur Farbenlehre,699.Gosforth, 393.Goslar, 272, 273.Göttingen, C. proposes to visit, 268-270, 272;268 n., 269 n.;C. calls on Professor Heyne at, 280;C. enters the University of, 281;the Saturday Club at, 281;the gallows near, 294;C.’s stay at, 281-300.Gough, Charles, 369 n.Governments as effects and causes, 241.Grasmere, 335, 346, 362, 379 n., 394, 405 n., 419, 420;C. visits and is taken ill there,447,448;C. visits,533-569.SeeKendal.Grattan, Henry, C.’s admiration for,566.Greek Islands, the, 329.Greek poetry contrasted with Hebrew poetry, 405, 406.Greek Sapphic Ode,On the Slave Trade, 43 and note.Green, Mr., clerk of theCourier,568and note.Green, Joseph Henry,605,632n.;his eminence in the surgical profession,679n.;C.’s amanuensis and collaborateur,679n.;C. appoints him his literary executor,679n.;his published works,679n.,680n.;his character and intellect,680n.;his faithful friendship for C.,680n.;hisSpiritual Philosophy, founded on the Teaching of S. T. Coleridge,680n.;receives a visit from C. at St. Lawrence, near Maldon,690-693;753n.;letters from C.,669,680,688,699,704,706,726,728,751,754,767.Green, Mrs. Joseph Henry,691,692,699,705.