Absent-mindedness, Francis Thompson's,9,26n.,31,276Academy, The,71n.,329;articles by F. T. in,42,163-4,255,257,259-64,267-70,316,321,332-3;poems by F. T. in,255,259,337;F. T.'s connexion with,245,253-64,334-5Accent,176Acerbity, F. T.'s assumed,89Aeschylus,58,90"After her Going,"183"After Woman, The,"195,228-9Aloofness, F. T.'s,8,24,35-6,279-80Alphonsus, Father,181"Amelia Applejohn,"247American Ecclesiastical Review,143"Amphicypellon" (Sister-Songs),105-106,294Ann (De Quincey's),63,83Ann (Francis Thompson's),63,81-4,92Anger, F. T.'s incapacity for,54,141-2Anselm, Fr. (now Archbishop of Simla),174,180-1,183,189-90;letters to F. T.,344-5"Anthem of Earth, An,"37,47,177,201,241;alluded to,157Aquinas, St. Thomas,218Archer, Mr. William,144,152-3,337;quoted,241;letter to F. T.,242Arnold, Matthew, F. T. on,170Arnold, Sir Edwin,233Ashbourne, Lord,183Ashton-under-Lyne,5,39,71Asquith, Mr.,160"Assumpta Maria,"173-4Astrology,330"Astronomer, A Dead,"124,126Athenæum, The, poem by F. T. in,235;reviews of F. T. in,144-6,241;F. T.'s connexion with,243,326,336Augustine, St., quoted,147,165;F. T. on,172Austin, Mr. Alfred,332Ave Maria(Notre Dame, Indiana),137n.Ballantyne, R. M.,16Barry, Rev. Canon,171Beacock, Mr.,Concordance to F. T.,154,165,167Beardsley, Aubrey,323-4Bearne, Fr. David,185Beauty, female,10,12Bennett, Mr. Arnold,149-50Berlioz,55,348Bernard, St.,172,191,288Beuno's, St., College,185Bible, the, its diction,158,171;symbolism in,191,194,196;F. T.'s reading of,172-3;Apocalypse,172-3;Canticles,223;Ecclesiastes,173,193,238;Genesis,227;Pentateuch,223;the Prophets,196,264;Psalms,194,196,209;St. John,189,225Blackburn, Mrs.,126,143,252Blackburn, Vernon,21,95,126-7,138-9,152Blackfriars,64,278Blake,331;quoted,223;F. T.'s reading of,58,90;Mr. E. J. Ellis on,219Blunt, Mr. W. Scawen,85n.,137,245,347-8;quoted,131n.;F. T. on,256;F. T.'s reading of,165Bookman, The, review ofNew Poems,241;Mr. Garvin's article in, on F. T.,167,243Bootblack, F. T. as a,65Booth, Mr. Bramwell,107Booth, "General,"79-80,106Bootmaker's assistant, F. T. as a,71-5Boys and boyhood,17-19,21Breviary, the,171-3,182Bridges, Mr. Robert,136"Brin,"118British Review,240Broads, the Norfolk,118,173Brondesbury,45,274Brontë, Charlotte,76-7,127,328"Broom-branch at Twilight, A,"304Browne, Sir Thomas, quoted,84,95-6;F. T.'s reading of,95,165;his diction,47,155-6Browning, E. B.,124,127Browning, R., Browning on F. T.,120-2,124,137n.;William Sharp'sLifeof, reviewed by F. T.,121,124;his obscurity,146;his diction,154-5;his observation,275Bryan, Maggie,230Bunyan,225"Bunyan in the Light of Modern Criticism,"92,267Burns, Robert, F. T. compared with,140;F. T. on,168,263-4Burton'sAnatomy of Melancholy,188Butler, Samuel (Hudibras),196,270"By Reason of thy Law,"174Campion,152Cancelled passages,107-8Canon Law inHer Portrait,174"Captain of Song, A,"235Capuchins,128,140,180-1Cardan,196Cardinal points, symbolism of the,192-6Carlisle Place,108Carmen,102"Carmen Genesis,"285-6,309-10Carmina Mariana,173Carroll, Dr., late Bishop of Shrewsbury,24,107n.,117,144;letters to,97,123Casartelli, Dr., Bishop of Salford,15Catholic Encyclopædia,335Catholic World(N.Y.),137n.Catholicism, F. T. on,59-60,224"Catholics in Darkest England,"106Cawein, Mr. Madison,268-9Chambers, Mr. E. K.,154Chancery Lane,253-4Chapman,175Charing Cross,61;post office,86-8Charles Borromeo, St.,208-9Chatterton,61Chelsea,4,82Chesterfield, Lord,272Chesterton, Mr. G. K.,165,208,331Child set in the midst by Modern Poets, The,123Child who will never grow old, The,250Children and Childhood. F. T.'s childhood,5-14,24,98;his child-likeness,247,249;his ways with children,74,104,114-17,119,251;on the children of London,79-82Chisholm, Mr. Hugh,140Church, the,202,226,322Church Court (or Passage), Chancery Lane,5,68"Clarendon" Reading Room,68Clarke, Fr. R. F.,85,193Clement, St.,222-3Cobbe, Frances Power,260-1Cock, Mr. Albert,201Coleridge, F. T.'s early reading of,10,96,161-2,241;affinities and analogies with F. T.,3,47,49,56,71n.,94-5,163,241,325,340,343-4;and opium,53;as a poet,127,163-4;quoted,166,179,205"Collecting" books,62Collins,87Colwyn Bay,12-13,44Constable & Co., Messrs.,277"Contemplation,"222Contemporary Review,136Conversation, F. T.'s,47,62,111,253,311-12,314,342,349Cooper, T. Fenimore,16Corbishly, Monsignor,26Corporal Punishment,19-20"Corymbus for Autumn, A,"137n.,167Courage, F. T.'s lack of active,55,62Covent Garden,76-7,91,273,278Cowley,170;F. T. compared to,146-7;diction,155;F. T.'s reading of,165-7;quoted,173Crashaw, F. T. and,144,146-7,164,166-7,179,257,267-8,288Crawley,112,181,189,344-6Cricket,13,39-45,326,328Critic, The(N.Y.),137,240Cross, the,6,95n.,193n.,211-13Crosskell, Canon Charles, Procurator of Ushaw,26Crowley, Mr. Aleister,268Cuthbert, Fr.,189Daily Chronicle, reviews of F. T.,135,145,170,240,241;review of Mrs. Meynell,149;paragraph by A. M.,159;odes by F. T. in,321,333Daily Mail, verse by F. T. in,227;F. T.'s reading of,314-15,328Daily News,241"Daisy,"104,118,123,140,160,167Daniel, Samuel,270Dante,14,87,170,172,200Darwinism,244"Daughter of Lebanon" (De Quincey's),84,164David, Mr. and Mrs.,347Davidson, John,136,140-1,176,311"Dead Cardinal of Westminster, To the,"107-8(cancelled stanzas),129,167,226de Bary, Mr. Richard,182Dedications toPoemsandNew Poems,128,236-7Denbigh, Lady,186Depression, F. T.'s fits of,27,47,96,185De Quincey, affinities and analogies with F. T.,46-7,50-2,62-3,76,83-84,95,168,329,343;F. T.'s reading of,46-7,50,53-4,98,164-5,267-8;and opium,48-9,51-3,95;otherwise quoted,133n.Despairs and panics,117-8,316-7,335De Vere, Aubrey,269Diction, F. T.'s,132-3,148,152-60,193Dimbovitza, The Bard of the,264Dolls,9-10"Domus Tua,"130,148Donne,148,155,165,173-4,212n.,213Doubleday, Mr. and Mrs.,242,247-8;letter to Mr. Doubleday,306n.Douglas, Lord Alfred,269Dowling, Mr. Richard,267Dowson, Ernest,160,323-4Drayton, Michael,154-5,165,270"Dread of Height, The,"220,222,225"Dream Tryst,"13-14,92,102,124,167"Dress" (verses inDaily Mail),227Driffield, Fr.,101Drummond of Hawthornden,208Drury Lane,89Dryden,101,146,155,175,307Dublin Review,94,96-7,100,201Dumas,259Earlyverse,27-30Ecclesiastical Ballads,169,195n.,283Eckhart, Meister,165Edgbaston,248Edgware Road,65,275,287Edinburgh Review,150-1,171,185,241,246Egoism, the poets',308Egyptian religion,193-4,196,222-3Elgin Avenue,273-4,280,339Eliot, George,127Elision,132Elizabethans, the,177,256,270,334Embankment, Thames,24,278Emerson,321,342Encyclopædia, an,56Enlistment,56-7,163"Erotic" poet(!), F. T. as an,3,14n.,124Esotericism,191-6,223-4Eternal punishment,226Etymologies,159-60Eve, the New,194-5Exercise-books,32,34,104Extinct animals,37,157Failures, F. T.'s successive,32-4,