Greenough, Mr.,458and note.Greta, the river, 339.Greta Hall, near Keswick, C.’s life at, 335-444;situation of, 335;description of 391, 392;C. urges Southey to make it his home, 391, 392, 394, 395;Southey at first declines but subsequently accepts C.’s invitation to settle there, 395 n.;Southey makes a visit there which proves permanent, 435;460n.;sold by its owner in C.’s absence,490,491;C.’s last visit to,575and note,576-578;724,725.SeeKeswick.Grey, Mr., editor of theMorning Chronicle, 114.“Grinning for joy,” 81 n.Grisedale Tarn,547.Grose, Judge,567and note.Grossnessversussuggestiveness, 377.Group of Englishmen, A, by Eliza Meteyard, 269 n., 308 n.Growth of the Individual Mind, On the, C.’s extempore lecture,680and note,681.Gunning, Henry, hisReminiscences of Cambridge, 24 n.Gwynne, General, K. L. D., 62.Hæmony, Milton’s allegorical flower, 406, 407.Hague, Charles, 50.Hale, Sir Philip, a “titled Dogberry,” 232 n.Hall, S. C., 257,745n.Hamburg, 257, 259;C.’s arrival at, 261;268 n.Hamilton, a Cambridge man at Göttingen, 281.Hamilton, Lady,637and note.Hamilton, Sir William Rowan,759and note,760.Hamlet, Notes on,684n.Hancock’s house, 297.Hangman and gallows in Germany, 294.Hanover, 279, 280.Happiness, 75 n.Happy Warrior, The, by Wordsworth, the original of,494n.Harding, Miss, sister of Mrs. Gillman,703.Harper’s Magazine,570n.,571n.Harris, Mr.,666.Hart, Dick, 54.Hart, Miss Jane, 7, 8.Hart, Miss Sara, 8.Hartley, David, 113, 169, 348, 351 n., 428.Haunted Beach, The, by Mrs. Robinson, 322 n.;C. struck with, 331, 332.Hayes, Mary, 318 and note;herFemale Biography, 318 and note;her correspondence with Lloyd, 322;C.’s opinion of her intellect, 323.Hazlitt, William, supposed to have written theEdinburgh Reviewcriticism ofChristabel,669and note.Hebrew poetry richer in imagination than the Greek, 405, 406.Heinse’sArdinghello,683and note.Helen, by Maria Edgeworth,773,774.Helvellyn,547.Henley workhouse, C. nurses a fellow-dragoon in the, 58 and note.Herald, Morning, its notice of C.’s tragedy,Remorse,603.Herbert, George, C.’s love for his poems,694,695;hisTemple,694;hisFlower,695.Heretics of the first two Centuries after Christ, History of the, by Nathaniel Lardner, D. D., 330.Herodotus,738.Hertford, C. a Blue-Coat boy at, 19 and note.Hess, Jonas Lewis von,555and note.Hessey, Mr., of Taylor and Hessey, publishers,739.Hexameters, parts of the Bible and Ossian written in slovenly, 398.Heyne, Christian Gottlob, 279;C. calls on, 280;281.Higginbottom, Nehemiah, a pseudonym of C.’s, 251 n.Highgate, History of, by Lloyd,572n.Highland Girl, To a, by Wordsworth,549.Highland lass, a beautiful, 432 and note,459.High Wycombe, 62-64.Hill, Mrs. Herbert.SeeSouthey, Bertha.Hill, Thomas,705and note.History of Highgate, by Lloyd,572n.History of the Abolition of the Slave Trade, by Thomas Clarkson, C.’s review of,527and note,528-530,535,536.History of the Heretics of the first two Centuries after Christ, by Nathaniel Lardner, D. D., 330.History of the Levelling Principle, proposed, 323, 328 n., 330.Hobbes, Thomas, 349, 350.Holcroft, Mr., C.’s conversation on Pantisocracy with, 114, 115;the high priest of atheism, 162.Hold your mad hands!, a sonnet by Southey, 127 and note.Holland,751.Holt, Mrs., 18.Home-Sick, Written in Germany, quoted, 298.Homesickness of C. in Germany, 265, 266, 272, 273, 278, 288, 289, 295, 296, 298.Hood, Thomas, hisOdes to Great People, 250 n.Hope, an Allegorical Sketch, by Bowles, 179, 180.Hopkinson, Lieutenant, 62.Horace, Bentley’s Quarto Edition of, 68 and note.Hospitality in poverty, 340.Hour when we shall meet again, The, 157.Howe, Admiral Lord, 262 and note.Howe, Emanuel Scoope, second Viscount, 262 n.Howell, Mr., of Covent Garden, 366 and note.Howick, Lord,507.Howley, Miss,739.Huber’sTreatise on Ants,712.Hucks, J., accompanies C. on a tour in Wales, 74-81;hisTour in North Wales, 74 n., 81 n.;76, 77 and note, 81 and note, 306.Hume, David, 307, 349, 350.Hume, Joseph, M. P., a fermentive virus,757.Hungary, 329.Hunt, Leigh, Autobiography of, 20 n., 41 n., 225 n.,455n.Hunter, John, 211.Hurwitz, Hyman,667n.;hisIsrael’s Lament,681n.Hutchinson, George, 358 and note, 359 n., 360.Hutchinson, Joanna, 359 n.Hutchinson, John, of Penrith, 358 n.Hutchinson, John, of the Middle Temple, 359 n.Hutchinson, Mary, marries William Wordsworth, 359 n.;367.Hutchinson, Sarah, 359 n., 360, 362, 367, 393 n.;her motherly care of Hartley C.,510;511;C.’s amanuensis,536n.,542n.;582,587,590n.Hutchinson, Thomas, of Gallow Hill, 359 n., 362.Hutton, James, M. D., 153 and note;hisInvestigation of the Principles of Knowledge, 167.Hutton, Lawrence,570n.Hutton Hall, near Penrith, 296.Hymn before Sunrise in the Vale of Chamouni, origin of, 404 and 405 and note.Ibi Hæc Incondita Solus, by George Coleridge, 43 n.Idolatry of modern religion, the, 414, 415.Illuminizing, 323, 324.Illustrated London News, The, 258, 453 n., 497 n.,768n.Imagination, education of the, 16, 17.Imitated from the Welsh(a song), 112 and note, 113.Imitations from the Modern Latin Poets, 67 n., 122.Impersonality of the Deity, 444.Indolence, a vice of powerful venom, 103, 104.Infant, the death of an, 282-287.Infant, who died before its Christening, On an, 287.Ingratitude, C. complains of,627-631.Insincerity, a virtue, 161.Instinct, definition of, 712.In the Pass of Killicranky, by Wordsworth,458.Ireland, Account of, by Edward Wakefield,638.Ireland, View of the State of, by Edmund Spenser,638n.Irving, Rev. Edward,723;a great orator,726;on Southey and Byron,726;741,742,744,748,752.Isaiah, 200.Israel’s Lament, by Hyman Hurwitz, C. translates,681and note.Jackson, Mr., owner of Greta Hall, 335, 368, 391, 392, 394, 395, 434,460and note,461;godfather to Hartley C.,461n.;sells Greta Hall,491;Hartley C.’s attachment for,510.Jackson, William, 309 and notes.Jackstraws,462,468.Jacobi, Heinrich Freidrich,683.Jacobinism in England,642.Jardine, Rev. David, 139 and note.Jasper, by Mrs. Robinson, 322 n.Jeffrey, Francis (afterwards Lord),453n.,521n.;C. accuses him of being unwarrantably severe on him,527;536n.,538n.;C.’s accusation of personal and ungenerous animosity against himself and his reply thereto,669and note,670;735;his attitude toward Wordsworth’s poetry,742;letters from C.,527,528,534.SeeEdinburgh Review.Jerdan, Mr., of Michael’s Grove, Brompton,727.Jesus College, C.’s life at, 22-57, 70-72, 81-129.Jews in a German inn, 280.Joan of Arc, by Southey, 141, 149, 178 and note, 179;Cottle sells the copyright to Longman, 319.John of Milan,566n.Johnson, J., the bookseller, lends C. £30, 261;publishesFears in Solitude, for C., 261 and notes, 318;321.Johnson, Dr. Samuel, on the condition of the mind during stage representations,663.Johnston, Lady,731.Johnston, Sir Alexander,730and note;C.’s impressions of,731.Josephus, 407.Kant, Immanuel, 204 n., 351 n.;C.’s opinion of the philosophy of,681,682;hisKritik der praktischen Vernunft,681,682and note;hisReligion innerhalb der Grenzen der blossen Vernunft,682;valued by C. more as a logician than as a metaphysician,735;hisCritique of the Pure Reason,735.Keats, John,764n.Keenan, Mr., 309.Keenan, Mrs., 309 and note.Kehama, The Curse of, by Southey,684.Kempsford, Gloucestershire, 267 n.Kendal,447,451,452,535,575.SeeGrasmere.Kendall, Mr., a poet, 306.Kennard, Adam Steinmetz,762n.;letter from C.,775.Kennard, John Peirse,762n.;letter from C.,772.Kenyon, Mrs.,639,640.Kenyon, John,639n.;letter from C.,639.Keswick, 174 n.;C. passes through, during his first tour in the Lake Country, 312 n.;a Druidical circle near, 312 n.;C.’s house at, 335;climate of, 361;405 n.,530,535,724,725.SeeGreta Hall.Keswick, the lake of, 335.Keswick, the vale of, 312 n., 313 n.;its beauties, 410, 411.Kielmansegge, Baron, and his daughter, Mary Sophia, 263 n.Kilmansig, Countess, C. becomes acquainted with, 262, 263.King, Mr., 183, 185, 186.King, Mrs., 183.Kingsley, Rev. Charles,771n.Kingston, Duchess of, her masquerade costume, 237.Kinnaird, Douglas,666,667.Kirkstone Pass, a storm in, 418-420.Kisses, 54 n.Klopstock, Friedrich Gottlieb, 257;hisMessias, 372, 373.Knecht, Rupert, 289 n., 290, 291.Knight, Rev. William Angus, LL.D., hisLife of William Wordsworth, 164 n., 220 n.,447n.,585n.,591n.,596n.,599n.,600n.,733n.,759n.Kosciusko, C.’s sonnet to, 116 n., 117.Kotzebue’sCount Benyowski, or the Conspiracy of Kamtschatka, a Tragi-comedy, 236 and note.Kubla Khan, when written, 245 n.;437 n.Kyle, John, the Man of Ross, 77,651n.Lake Bassenthwaite, 335, 376 n.;sunset over, 384.Lake Country, the, C. makes a tour of, 312 n., 313;another tour of, 393 and note, 394;C.’s last visit to,575n.SeeGrasmere,Greta Hall,Kendal,Keswick.Lalla Rookh, by Moore,672.Lamb, C., To, 128 and note.Lamb, Charles, love of Woolman’s Journal, 4 n.;visit to Nether Stowey, 10 n.;hisChrist’s Hospital Five and Thirty Years Ago, 20 n.;a man of uncommon genius, 111;writes four lines of a sonnet for C., 111, 112 and note;and his sister, 127, 128;C.’s lines to, 128 and note;163 n.;correspondence with C. after his (Lamb’s) mother’s tragic death, 171 and note;182;extract from a letter to C., 197 n.;206 n.;hisGrandame, 206 n.;C.’s poem on Burns addressed to, 206 and note, 207;extract from a letter to C., 223 n.;visits C. at Nether Stowey, 224 and note, 225-227;temporary estrangement from C., 249-253;his relations to the quarrel between C. and Southey, 304, 312, 320 n.;visits C. at Greta Hall with his sister, 396 n.;a Latin letter from, 400 n.;405 n., 421, 422,460n.,474;hisRecollections of a Late Royal Academician,572n.;his connection with the reconciliation of C. and Wordsworth,586-588,594;on William Blake’s paintings, engravings, and poems,686n.;704;hisSuperannuated Man,740;744;his acquaintance with George Dyer,748n.;751n.,760;letter of condolence from C., 171;other letters from C., 249,586.Lamb, Charles, Letters of, 164 n., 171 n., 197 n., 396 n., 400 n.,465n.,466n.,686n.,748n.Lamb’s Prose Works, 4 n., 20 n., 25 n., 41 n.Lamb, Mary, 127, 128, 226 n.;visits the Coleridges at Greta Hall with her brother Charles, 396 n.;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,495and 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., 29 n.Laudanum, used by C. in an attack of neuralgia, 173 and note, 174 and note, 175-177;193, 240,617,659.SeeOpium.Lauderdale, James Maitland, Earl of,689and note.Law, human as distinguished from divine,635,636.Lawrence, Miss, governess in the family of Dr. Peter Crompton,758n.;letter from C.,758.Lawrence, William,711n.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,711and note.Lecky, G. F., British Consul at Syracuse,458;C. entertained by,485n.Lectures, C.’s at the Royal Institution,506n.,507,508,511,515,516,522,525;at the rooms of the London Philosophical Society,574and note,575and note;a proposed course at Liverpool,578;preparations for another course in London,579,580,582,585;at Willis’s Rooms on the Drama,595and note,596,597,599;602,604;an extempore lectureOn the Growth of the Individual Mind, at the rooms of the London Philosophical Society,680and note,681;regarded as a means of livelihood,694;on the History of Philosophy, delivered at the Crown and Anchor, Strand,698and note.Lectures on Shakespeare,575n.Lectures on Shakespeare and Other Dramatists,756n.Leghorn,498,499and note,500.Le Grice, Charles Valentine, 23, 24;hisTineum, 111 and note;225 and 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,734and note.Leslie, Charles Robert,695and note;his pencil sketch of C.,695n.;introduces a portrait of C. into an illustration forThe Antiquary,736and 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, 25 n., 86 n., 267 n., 366 n., 369 n.,527n.,534n.,542n.,543n.,705n.Letter smuggling,459.Letters on the Spaniards,629and note.Letter to a Noble Lord, by Edmund Burke, 157 and note.Leviathan, the man-of-war,467;a majestic and beautiful creature,471,472;477.Lewis Monk, his play,Castle Spectre, 236 and note, 237, 238,626.Liberty, the Progress of, 206.Life and death, meditations on, 283-287.Life-masks of C.,570and note.Lime-Tree Bower my Prison, this, 225 and note, 226 and notes, 227, 228 n.Lines on a Friend who died of a Frenzy Fever, 98 and note, 103 n., 106 and note.Lines to a Friend, 8 n.Lippincott’s Magazine,674n.Lisbon, the Rock of,473.Literary Life.SeeBiographia Literaria.Literary Remains,684n.,740n.,756n.,761n.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, 4 n.;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, 206 n.;207 n., 208 n.;with C. at Nether Stowey, 213;238;a serious quarrel with C., 238, 245 n., 246, 249-253;hisEdmund Oliverdrawn from C.’s life, 252 and 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,572n.,578.Llyswen, 234 n., 235 n.Loch Katrine, 431, 432 and note, 433.Loch Lomond, 431, 432 n., 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,753n.Logic, The History of,753n.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,574and note,575and note,680n.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,538n.,550,733n.Losh, James, 219 and note.Louis XVI., the death of, 219 and note.Love, George Dawe engaged on a picture to illustrate C.’s poem,573.Love and the Female Character, C.’s lecture,574n.,575and note.Lovell, Robert, 75;C.’s opinion of his poems, 110;114;hisFarmhouse, 115, 121, 122, 139, 147, 150;dies, 159 n.;317 n.Lovell, Robert, and Robert Southey of Balliol College, Bath, Poems by, 107 n.Lovell, Mrs. Robert (Mary Fricker), 122, 159 and 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, 369 and note,547.Luise, ein ländliches Gedicht in drei Idyllen, by Johann Heinrich Voss, quotation from, 203 n.;an emphatically original poem,625;627.Lüneburg, 278.Lushington, Mr., 101.Luss, 431.Lycon, Ode to, by Robert Southey, 107 n., 108.Lyrical Ballads, by Coleridge and Wordsworth, 336, 337, 341, 350 and 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,454n.,455n.;596.Macklin, Harriet,751and note,764.Madeira, 442,451,452.