Sussex,346Sutherland, the Duchess of,252Swedenborg,206-7,271Swinburne, F. T's reading of,97,265,268;F. T. on,126,178-9,266"Sylvia,"8,148,151,349Symons, Arthur,144-6,198-9,269Symbolism,193-6,211,215,218Tablet, The,99,125,126,137n.,138"Tancred, Francis" (pseudonym of F. T.),106Tate, Dr., President of Ushaw,26,32Taylor, Jeremy,156Tennyson,101,120,179n.,230,260Terence,299Texts as stimulants,32,68,325-6Thames Embankment,24,64,192,278Theresa, St.,146Thomas à Kempis,225-6,243,283Thomas, Mr. Edward,198Thomas of Celano,181Thompson, Dr. Charles (F. T.'s father),1,2,4,36,54-60,71,107n.,127,144,185-6Thompson, Edward Healy (F. T.'s uncle),2,3,14n.,46n.,58-9,61,68,85n.,124Thompson family, the,1-5Thompson, Francis Joseph, birth, pedigree, parentage,1-4;his paternal uncles,2,3;other relatives,4,5;childhood,6seq.;home-life,7-14,35,54-5,57-60,74-5;early reading,6,10-12;at the seaside,12,13;cricket,13,39-45;at Ushaw,15-21,24-32;intention of the priesthood abandoned,32-4;a medical student at Owens College, Manchester,35-46;visits to London (1879 and 1882),46,54;illness,46;reading de Quincey,46;taking opium,48-53,56;fails in his exams.,54-6;love of music,55;enlists,56-7;flight from home,57,to Manchester,58,to London,58,61;odd jobs,62-3;an outcast,63-4;lodging-houses and refuges,64-5;pieces of good-luck,67-8;roofless nights,69-70;with Mr. McMaster (the bootmaker),70-75;a Christmas at home,74-5;"in darkest London,"76-80;his "brave, sad, lovingest, tender thing,"81-4,92;a meeting with the editor ofMerry England,85-90;the Meynell household,90-2;contributes toMerry England,92,120-6;sent to a private hospital,94;renunciation of opium,94-5;at Storrington,95;writing poetry,95;the essay on Shelley,96-100;return to London,104;"The Hound of Heaven" and "Sister Songs,"104;article on General Booth'sIn Darkest England,106-7;interview with Cardinal Manning,107-8;journalism,111-12,117,253-70;visits to Crawley,112-13,344-6;in Kensington Gardens,114-15;at Friston, in Suffolk,118-19;at Pantasaph,128-33,140,143-48,177,180-97,230-39;Poems(1893),128-48;Sister Songs(1895),141,145,149-50;friendship with Coventry Patmore,139,146-9,189-97,220-4,233-4;his critics,152-61;his congeners,161-70,174;his father's death,185-186;his mysticism,191-232;his attitude to Nature,205-8;his religion,224-7;his attitude to women,227-32;a love-affair,230;death of Patmore,234-7;New Poems,198,201,203,236-43;return to London,245;meeting with Meredith,245-7;other friends,247-52;writes forThe Academy,253-70,334-6;criticisms on and meeting with W. E. Henley,262-7;his catholic appreciation of modern literature,265-6,268-9;but preference for the older writers,270-271;as a Londoner,272-81,284,288;his poverty,284-7;his loneliness,291;bereft of song,301-4,306-7;was he happy or unhappy? 304-5,329-33;his personal appearance,327-8;writes forThe Athenæum,336;a return to opium,342;visits to Sussex,344-49;returns to London, and goes into hospital,349;death,350Thompson, Francis Joseph, letters from, to Mother Austin (his sister Mary),333;to Dr. Carroll,97,123;to Mr. Doubleday,306n.;to Mr. C. L. Hind,256-61;to Mr. William Hyde,277;to Mrs. Meynell,130,132-3,159,177,183,188-9,226,297,312-13;to Everard Meynell,44,159,328-31,345;to Wilfrid Meynell,85,88,100,103-5,110n.,112,114-17,129,135,145,180,183,234-5,238,242,250,316-18,334-5,337-8;to Coventry Patmore,191-3,195,233-4,236,238;to Mrs. Patmore,234;to Mrs. Saleeby (néeMonica Meynell),340-341;to Miss Agnes Tobin,252—— Letters to, from Father Anselm,344-5;from Mr. W. Archer,242;from Mother Austen (his sister Mary),334;from Mr. J. L. Garvin,332-3;from Mr. C. L. Hind,264;from Mrs. Hamilton King,132,250;from Miss K. Douglas King,250;from Mr. H. W. Massingham,332,336;from Mrs. Meynell,129,158;from Coventry Patmore,149,194,197,221,233;from Mrs. Patmore,237;from Mr. Vernon Rendall,336;from W. T. Stead,106;from Mrs. Tynan Hinkson,102Thompson, Helen (F. T. s sister),1n.Thompson, John Costall (F. T.'s uncle),2,3Thompson, Margaret (F. T.'s sister),1,128Thompson, Mary (F. T.'s sister), "Mother Austin," a nun,1n.,7,8,12-14,39-4,57,59,75,127,186,287n.,341;letter to,333;letter from,334Thompson, Mary Turner,néeMorton (F. T.'s mother),1,4,7,10,46,48-9Thorp, Mr.,259Times, The,240,319,320Timidity, F. T.'s,13,15,32,265"To my Godchild,"123,137,162,273Tobin, Miss Agnes,252Tolstoy,109"Tommy,"15,19,27"Tom o' Bedlam,65,207Toys, F. T.'s,8,98Traherne,74,285,288Traill, Mr. H. D.,144-5,149Tregunter Road, Fulham,46"Twopenny Damn, The,"139Tyburn,275Tynan, Katharine (Mrs. Hinkson),85n.,102,122,137n.,209,302;letters to F. T.,102"Ultima,"306University Press, Notre Dame, Ind.,318-9Unpublished fragments of verse,65,81,161,188,208,213,236,270,276-7,280,291-3,295Unpublished poems,73-4,77-8,292-3,296-7Unpunctuality, F. T.'s,9,33,72,257,264-5,327Unworldliness, F. T.'s,5,249,287-8Ushaw, F. T. at,14,34,127Vaughan, Henry,198,209,288Vaughan, Cardinal,33,99,283Verlaine,320,322"Veteran of Heaven, The,"169,195n.Vienna Café, The,280,303Vulgate, the,171Wales, F. T. in,24,128-32,143-9,177-97,230-9War, fears of a general,193n.,339-40Wardour Street,70Watson, Mr. William,136,145,259Watts, Mr. Augustine,21Watts-Dunton, Mr. Theodore,165Waugh, Mr. Arthur,258Weekly Register, The,111,113,124,127,135,137Weekly Sun,141Wells, Mr. H. G.,258Westbourne Grove,266,284,286"Westminster Drolleries,"64Westminster Gazette,137,154Whiteing, Mr. Richard,112,241Whiteside, Dr., Archbishop of Liverpool,27Whitten, Mr. Wilfred,71n.,257,337;his reminiscences of F. T.,253-4,280-1,303,307Wilde, Oscar,127,252Wilkinson, Fr. Adam,20,24Winefride's Well, St.,185Wiseman, Cardinal,23,99,100Woman, F. T. on,227-9,231Womanon F. T.,149Wordsworth,quoted,311;quotedby F. T.,87,159;points of contact with F. T.,160,167,183,325;points of opposition,205-6;F. T.'s article on,260Wormwood Scrubbs,44Wyndham, Mr. George,100,160,256