A.Abuses,i. 284.Acquiescence, not choice,i. 19.Action, springs of,i. 160.Addresses, Two, to the Freeholders of Westmoreland,i. 211.270;occasion of writing,i. 214.Addison,i. 357.iii. 508.Adventurers,i. 241.Advice to the Young,i. 295.326.Admiration, unqualified,i. 312.Advancement and preferment of youth,i. 352.'Age, present,' supposed moral inferiority of,i. 310.Agitators,i. 249.Alban's, St.,ii. 46.Alfoxden,iii. 16.[277]Alpedrinha,i. 56.Allies, to be supported,i. 138.how,i. 138-9.et seqq.Alston,ii. 193.'Altering' of poems,ii. 207.Ambleside,ii. 224-6;road from, to Keswick,ii. 227-8.'Amends,' how to make,i. 130-1,et seqq.American war,i. 135.6.American edition of poems,iii. 483-4.Anxiety, moderate,i. 324.Appendixto Bishop Watson's Sermon,i. 24-30;to Contention of Cintra,i. 175-79.(See preface, I.xiv.-xix.)Apology for the French Revolution,i. 1-23.(See preface, I.x.-xix.)Arbitrary,distinctions,i. 16-17;power,i. 158-9.Aristocracy,i. 19.Aristarchus,ii. 17.Armistice,i. 84.preamble of,i. 86.articles of,i. 88-94.Armstrong, Dr.,iii. 506.Army,British, departure of,i. 38.Spanish, the people,i. 47.French, and the French government,i. 95.'Arrow,'i. 21.Artevelde, van, Philip,iii. 492.Art and nature,ii. 157-61.Arts and science,i. 154.fine,i. 323.Ashe,i. 360.Ashley,iii. 507.Assembly,i. 147.Asturias,i. 52-3.B.'Badpeople,'ii. 41.'Babes in the wood,'ii. 98.Bacon,quotation from,i. 357.and Shakespeare,iii. 457.Beia,i. 55.Benevolence,i. 171.'Beck.'i. 336.Beaumont, Sir George H. and Lady,letters to,ii. 146-201;drawings by Sir George,ii. 151.Beaumont, Sir John,i. 346.iii. 505.Bell, Peter,ii. 182.Bell, Dr.,iii. 507.Bede,iii. 506.Biscayans,i. 60.Biography, of authors,ii. 11-12.Birthday,iii. 443-4.Bonaparte,i. 37.acknowledgment of titles,i. 84-5;influence of concession on,i. 93-4;ravager of Europe,i. 115.formidable yet weak,i. 163-4;to decrease,i. 200.ii. 18.et alibi frequenter.Books, religious,i. 335.'Bolton, Mr.,'i. 350.Boswell's Johnson,ii. 9.Bran [misprinted Braw],iii. 69.Bleeding, good,i. 86.Britain, history of a noble one,i. 101-2.Brougham,public life of,i. 225.et seqq.,i. 242-8,et seqq.later opinion of,iii. 504.Bruce, Michael,ii. 21.i. 343.Bruce, P.H..iii. 507.Browne, Sir Thomas,ii. 23.Browning, Robert,letter to the Editor, i. xxxiv.;quotation from poem of,iii. 508.Brun, Frederica,iii. 505.Brooke, Lord,iii. 506.Burke,i. 21.i. 357.Burns, Robert, Cottar's Saturday-night,i. 356-60;letter to a friend of,ii. 1.ii. 19;Gilbert,ii. 5.ii. 19.ii. 343;fitted to tell the whole truth of,ii. 6-7;quotations from,ii. 7.ii. 13-14,331,343 (bis),ii. 347,iii. 436.iii. 506.Building and gardening,ii. 184.ii. 191.Buttermere and Crummock,ii. 230.Burnet, Thomas,ii. 327.ii. 507.Burnet, Bishop,iii. 506.Buchanan,iii. 459.Byron,iii. 462-3,ii. 503.C.Calamity, how to be regarded,i. 52.Castile, council of,i. 59.Cadiz, governor of,i. 92.Catholic Relief Bill,i. 259.i. 70.Camden,ii. 27.343-4.Carter, Miss, 'Spring,'iii. 426.Campbell, odd forgetfulness of,ii. 445.Celandine, small,iii. 505.Chamber, personal character of and its chief,ii. 140-1.Child and man,i. 170.Charles I., tyranny of,i. 310.epitaph of,ii. 49.Sydney and,ii. 50.Chatterton,ii. 21.ii. 343.Chiabiera,ii. 58.ii. 68,et seqq.Christabelle,iii. 427.Chronological classification of poems,iii. 474.Church of England, servility of its clergy,i. 3-4;notices of,i. 262-4,i. 283,et seqq.Churchyard, village,ii. 33-4;country,ii. 41.et seqq.;on sea-coast,iii. 434.Clark, Mrs.,ii. 66-7,iii. 344-5.Classical study,iii. 479.Clergyman, the,i. 286-7,et seqq.Cleveland, history of,iii. 508.Cockburn, Mrs.,iii. 509.Coleridge,ii. 155-6,163,164,166,167,168,170,174-5,184-4,193,iii. 427.441,442,444,469-70,492,507,et alibi frequenter.Coleridge, Hartley,iii. 482.et alibi.Coleridge, the Lord,i. xxxiii.Collins,ii. 120.iii. 419.Commissioners, report of,i. 274.'Common life,'ii. 81-2,et seqq.Companions,i. 229.'Compulsory' relief,i. 278.Conciliation and concession,i. 265.Condemnation, inevitable,i. 82-3.Coniston,ii. 226-7.Constancy,i. 51.Contempt,ii. 18.Contention of Cintra,i. 31.172;occasion of writing,i. 35.129;importance of,i. 37.143;impression produced by the,i. 37.condemned,i. 65.reception by the people,i. 69.results of, as a military act,i. 70-1;critical examination of its terms,i. 71.et seqq.;not necessary,i. 82.military results,i. 84.et seqq.;conditions of, thus far examined,i. 99.injury done to British character,i. 99-100,101-102;sorrow of the nation over,i. 103-4;punishment demanded,i. 104-5;to be repudiated,i. 105-6;disgrace of,i. 121.Vindication of the Opinions on,i. 195.209.(See preface. Vol. I.xiv.-xix.Continuous education,i. 355-6.Contradictions,i. 237.Conversations and personal reminiscences of Wordsworth,iii. 403.504.Coöperation of working people,i. 282.Copyright, international,iii. 483.Corruption,i. 20.Cortes,i. 147.Cotton, Charles, and Walton,ii. 89.345.Cotton, Dr.,ii. 142-4.Counters and stakes,i. 81.County elections, entire charge of,i. 251-2.Courage,i. 50.intellectual, lacking,i. 74-5.Cowley,iii. 465.Courts, corruption of,i. 14.Cowper,ii. 104.211,346.Crabbe,iii. 503.et alibi.Crashaw,ii. 344.Criticism, false,ii. 175.181;result of inEdinburgh ReviewandQuarterly,iii. 437.a low ability for,iii. 438.9;verbal,iii. 474.5.Critic, decision of,ii. 110.Cromwell,i. 166.359.Crowe,iii. 506.Cuckoo,ii. 136-7.Cumberland's Calvary,iii. 415.Curates,i. 285-6.Currie, Dr.,ii. 5.indignation with,ii. 7-8,i12D.Dalrymple, Sir Hew,i. 72.et frequenter.Daughter, education of a,i. 329-33.Dante,i. 359.et alibi.Da Vinci, Leonardo,iii. 506.Darwin, Dr.,iii. 507.D'Abrantes, title of, wrongly acknowledged,i. 68.357.Delusions,i. 19.Debt, national,i. 20.'Declarations,'i. 43-4.Defeats and disasters,i. 44-5.Delicacy, no,i. 98.Defence of fellow-countrymen,i. 113.Despotismi. 139.40229.Despond, those who,i. 171-2.Detraction, no,ii. 42.Dedication, to the Queen,i. v.;of 1815,ii. 144.De Vere, Sir Aubrey,iii. 495.509-510.De Quincey, i. xxxiii.-iv.,iii. 507.Diction, of poetic,ii. 101.5.'Difficulties,'i. 72.Diogenes,i. 238.Disabilities, civil,i. 269.Dissenters,i. 262.'Dignity,' individual,i. 292.Discrimination in epitaphs,ii. 37-8.Doe, White, the,iii. 430.et alibi.Double sense,ii. 45-6.Drummond, Miss.ii. 65-6.Dryden,ii. 118.iii. 416.419.Duty,i. 40.1,129,326,349.Dupont,i. 358.Duppa,ii. 162.346,iii. 506.Dubartas,ii. 111-12.Dyer, John,ii. 196.7,ii. 196.iii. 216.405,506,et alibi.E.Economists, unfortunate,i. 233.Education, of,i. 327.56;what it is,i. 343-4,et seqq.,moral,i. 346-7;of Scotland,i. 348.continuous,i. 355-6.Edinburgh Review, censured,ii. 16.et alibi.Edwards, John,ii. 33.344.Edgeworth, Francis,iii. 508.Egle, bank of,iii. 508.Election, free,i. 234.Elizabeth,i. 310.Elliot, Jane,iii. 509.Emerson,i. xxxiv,et alibiEnds,i. 80-1.Enthusiasm,i. 149.Epitaphs, upon, from 'The Friend,'ii. 27.40;laws of,31,et seqq.;requisites of,ii. 35.et seqq.;a perfect,ii. 39.The country Churchyard, and critical Examination of ancient,ii. 41.59;in Germany,ii. 44.homeliness,ii. 46-7;in Westmoreland,ii. 51-2;of Pope, criticised,ii. 55.et seqq.;Celebrated Epitaphs considered,ii. 60.75;favourable examples,ii. 72.et seqq.(See preface, I.xxiv.-v.)Equality,i. 14.288.Established church and priesthood,i. 232.preservation of,i. 290.Eschylus,iii. 508.'Estate,' gift of,ii. 151.Europe, state of,i. 220-1.Evil,ii. 91.Excursion,ii. 145.8,168-9.Executive, the power,i. 13.F.Faith,ii. 109-10.Fancy and imagination,ii. 134-5,et seqq.'Favourite spots,'iii. 424.Fame, posthumous,iii. 458.493.Faber,iii. 488.506.Family, a single,215-16.et seqq.;defence of the,217-18.et seqq.Feelings,i. 65.158,ii. 83.4,et seqq.;rely on our,ii. 99.Ferguson, General,i. 137.Fermor, Mrs.,ii. 178.Fenwick, Miss,xxvi-xxx.Ferdinand VII.,i. 358.'Fire.'i. 118-19.Flowers,iii. 447.Florus,i. 359.Fortitude, ancient,i. 205-6.Forebodings,i. 249-50.Fore-feeling,ii. 344.Founders of a school to be remembered,i. 351.Fool, in Lear,iii. 419.Fools, Paradise of,ii. 18.Fox, letter to, on poems,ii. 202.5;reply,ii. 205-6.Frere,i. 67.8,96,358.French armies, character of,i. 79-80;to surrender at discretion,i. 81.under French government,i. 90.'Free,' a nation resolved to be,i. 146.Franchise,i. 223.239.Fuller,iii. 506.G.Gardening,ii. 174.and building,ii. 184.191.Generals, British, bearing of,i. 79.political,i. 95.incompetent and competent,i. 143.Girl, peasant,iii. 466-7;education of,i. 341.Goldsmith,ii. 154.333.Goethe,iii. 435.6,465.Grammar, &c.,i. 353.Grasmere,ii. 229.Gratifications, what,i. 315-16.Gratuitous instruction,i. 346.Gratitude for kindnesses,ii. 149.Graves, Rev. R.P., M.A.,i. xxxv-vi.;prayer by,i. 359-60.Gray,ii. 41.67-68,85-6,327,344,345,iii. 507.Gray, James,ii. 5.343.Gregoire,i. 4,5,357.Grievances, national,i. 4.Grimm, Baron,ii. 113.Guide through the District of the Lakes,ii. 215.313.(See underLakesand different places.)H.Hamlet,i. 22.Hakewell,ii. 113.345.Hamilton, Sir R.W.,iii. 492.506,