Chapter 68

508,et frequenter.Hamilton, Miss,iii. 508.Hazlitt, i. xxiv.,ii. 168.177,iii. 125.et alibi.Hearne,iii. 505.Hemans, Mrs.,iii. 507.Hessians,i. 136.High-minded men,i. 76.Hope,i. 41.123-4,148,169,322-3.Honour,i. 78.Home influences,i. 345.Houbraken,ii. 170.346.Homer and the classics,iii. 458.9.Horace,i. 357.iii. 509.(bis).Humanity,i. 78.274.Humility,iii. 491.Humour,iii. 495-6.'Hurricane,'iii. 507.I.Idiots,ii. 212.Impulses, grand,i. 115.Imagination,i. 154.and taste,ii. 126.et seqq.;and fancy,ii. 134.5,et seqq.Immoral, the perishable,i. 163.Improvement, process of intellectual,i. 318-20.Immortality,ii. 27.30.Imbecility,i. 172.Imagery and imagination,iii. 464-5.Independence and liberty,i. 102-3;of Spain,i. 151.'Indifferent,'i. 110.Invasion of our country, supposed,i. 114.Infancy and childhood,i. 318.Intellect, sharpening of,i. 340.Infant-schools,i. 343.Inscriptions at Coleorton,ii. 191.2,195-6.'Intimations of immortality,'iii. 464.Individual character,iii. 467-8.Intake,iii. 505.Ireland,i. 267-8,et alibi.J.James I.,ii. 47-8.Johnson, Dr.,ii. 98.103-4.Jones, Rev. Robert,iii. 506.Judges in England,i. 12.Junot,i. 55-6.'Judicature, court of,' not essential to a verdict on wrong,i. 108-10.Justice,i. 116.moral,i. 118.K.Kant,iii. 420.Keble,iii. 441.Kendal and Windermere Railway, two letters on,ii. 321-41,iii. 448-9.Keswick, vale of,ii. 229.Kirkstone, pass of,ii. 314-15.Klopstock,iii. 405-23.Knowledge, life and spirit of,i. 309.for virtue,i. 320.L.Laws, partial and oppressive,i. 12-13.Laws, delay,i. 20.Labour, dishonoured,i. 18.Lament for England,i. 112.Land,i. 239.Landscape gardens,i. 248.Lakes, the country of, as formed by Nature,ii. 235-6;as affected by its inhabitants,ii. 256-69;changes and rules of taste for preventing their bad effects,ii. 269-86;miscellaneous observations,ii. 287.301;excursions to the top of Scawfell, &c.,ii. 302.315.itinerary of,ii. 316-19.(See preface, i.xxv.-vi.)Laodamia,iii. 496.Laing, Malcom,ii. 345.Lamb, letters of,iii. 507.Leon,i. 60.Legislation for the Poor, &c.,i. 271-94.Letter-writing, difficulty of,ii. 149-50.Leech-gatherer,ii. 206-7.Letters and extracts of Letters,ii. 217.401.(See preface, I.xxx.-ii.)Liberty,i. 6.against oppression,i. 52.and independence,i. 155-6.Life,i. 77-8,280.Library for poor,i. 337-8.Lindsay, Lady Ann,iii. 509.Louis XVI., 'royal martyr' (so-called),i. 4-5.et seqq.Loyalty, enthusiasm of,i. 46.Lowther family,i. 235.iii. 507-8.'Lower orders,'i. 273.Loughrigg Tarn,ii. 155.Loweswater,ii. 230.Locke,iii. 461.Loison,i. 357.Luff, Mr.,ii. 172.Lucretius,ii. 347.Lyttleton, Lucy,ii. 52.Lord, monody criticised,ii. 53-4.Lyrical ballads, defence of,ii. 79.100.Lying,iii. 497-8.M.Macpherson,ii. 122.et seqq.Madoc,ii. 169.171.Madras, system of education,i. 341.343.Malignity,ii. 17.Manner in conversation,iii. 480.Manufactories, workmen in,i. 282-3.Massaredo,i. 56-8,357.Mathetes, Letter of,i. 297.308;Answer to,i. 309-26.Mason, William,ii. 62.et seqq.Matter-of-fact and poetry,ii. 86.Means,i. 80.Mearely,ii. 344.Memory,ii. 41.Metrical language,ii. 95-6,et seqq.Might,i. 116.Military spirit,i. 48-9;men to be judged by the people,i. 83-4.Milton,i. 358.(bis),359,360.ii. 6.40,114-15,136,142,et seqq.344,345,346,iii. 430.1,449,453-4,461,505,506,507,508;contemporary notice of,iii. 509.et alibi frequenter.'Ministry,' the conduct of the,i. 105-6.Mirza, vision of,i. 3.Miscarriages, national,i. 128-9.Misery, effects of,i. 281.Monarchy, objections to,i. 13.et seqq.Montgomery, James,iii. 505.Montrose, Marquis of,ii. 49,51,344.Monuments to Literary Men,ii. 20.22;beauty of,ii. 31-2;monition of,ii. 32-3.near churches,ii. 34-5;in churches,iii. 450-1.'Moral' superiority,i. 165.Morla,i. 357-8.Morning Post, letter to,ii. 321-41.N.Nations, the two suffering,i. 63-4;to speak to representatives of,i. 144-5.Nature,i. 317.ii. 60.iii. 493-4;and art,ii. 157.161.Needpath Castle, sonnet on,ii. 152.345-6.Nelson, Lord,ii. 173.Necklace, diamond,i. 357.Newcastle, Duchess of,iii. 508.Nobility, hereditary, a wrong,i. 17.Notes and Illustrations of the Poems(a), the notes originally added to the first and successive editions;(b) the whole of the I.F. MSS.,ii. 1.216.(For details of these Notes, see minute'Contents' of Vol. III.)O.Obliquities of admiration,ii. 116.Observation and description,ii. 131.144.'Occurrences,'i. 98.Offices,i. 18-19.Oligarchy,i. 147.'Oppression,'i. 168-9.'Opposition,' in House of Commons needed,i. 219.the party of,i. 222.degenerated,i. 225.Originality,ii. 126.Oviedo,i. 63.Oversight, culpable,i. 68.Ovid,iii. 506.P.Paine, Thomas,i. 14.357.Parchment, 'dead,'i. 21.Past, retrospect of,i. 43-4.Passions and passion,i. 115-6.ii. 127.et seqq.;in poetry,iii. 473-4;though not declamatory,iii. 489.'Party,'i. 144.219.Patriot, the,i. 150.Palafox,i. 167.359.Pasley, letter to,i. 195.206;essay on the military policy of Great Britain,i. 197.205,et seqq.Palmers,ii. 46.Page, Frederic,iii. 508.'People,' the,i. 10-11;Spanish,i. 47-8;their ways and needs,i. 334.339.Peasants and mechanics,i. 11-12;peasantry,i. 159.'Petition,' vindication of,i. 107-8,110.'Petty' things,i. 120.Peninsula, southern,i. 122-3.'Peace,'i. 221.Peterkin,ii. 5.343.'Pedlar,'ii. 163.346.Pelayo and Cid,i. 358.Petrarch,i. 359.Philosophy,i. 316.Pity,i. 5.Pitt,ii. 174.Pleasures, poetic,ii. 13.production of,ii. 90.Pluralities,i. 284.Policy,i. 116.'Political' generals,i. 78-9.95.Poems, classification of,ii. 133.et seqq.Poet, what is a,ii. 87.et seqq.Poetry, of the Principles of and the 'Lyrical Ballads,'ii. 79.100;as a study,ii. 106.130;kinds of readers of,ii. 106.as observation and description,ii. 131.144;forms of,ii. 132-3;of the principle of and Wordsworth's own poems,ii. 208-14.(See preface, I.xxv.-vi.)Poor, laws to be reformed,i. 232.amendment act,i. 273-4,et seqq.;just claims of the,i. 274-7,278-9.Pope,ii. 55.et seqq., 116,iii. 419.'Popular,'ii. 129.vox populi,ii. 130.Portugal,i. 80.1.Portugeze,i. 43.54-5,67,86,97,100-101,et seqq.Power without right,i. 159-60.Priesthood, French,i. 6-7.Principles,i. 39.43,74-5,144,145;of poetry,ii. 79.100.Primogeniture,i. 16.Prostitution,i. 18.'Precautions,'i. 45.61.Prudence,i. 58-9.Private, a, individual,i. 83.Private property,i. 89-90.Preface, Editor's,i. vii-xxxviii.Prisoners of war,i. 89.Property, a sound basis,i. 240.Protestantism and Popery,i. 261.Progress,i. 314-15.Prosaisms,ii. 85.Prose, more of but for Coleridge,iii. 457.Purpose, worthy,ii. 82.Public, not the people,ii. 130.Puny,ii. 347.Pyrrhus,i. 359.Q.Qualities, moral,i. 49-50.Queen, dedication and poem to the,i. v-vi.R.Racine,i. 5.6.'Rash' politicians,i. 248.Reputation,i. 3.Republic, American,i. 10.Republican, Wordsworth a,i. 3.10republicanism defended,i. 9-10.et seqq.Revolution,i. 6.war against the French,i. 135.iii. 490.Reform, parliamentary,i. 22.Representation, universal,i. 11.'Rejoicing,' deplorable,i. 69.105.Regeneration, national,i. 122.'Remonstrance,'i. 127.Representation of Westmoreland,i. 215.Religion, in poetry,ii. 108-9.et seqq.Religious instruction,i. 354.Reserve, biographical,ii. 9.'Reliques,'ii. 120.et seqq.Reynolds, Sir Joshua,ii. 153-7,161-2,345.'Recluse,' the,ii. 163.105.Revision of Authorised Version, &c.,iii. 471-3.Riddance,i. 115.Royalty, no more, in France,i. 5.Road, anecdote,i. 22.old,iii. 428.Robespierre,ii. 18.Roscius, Young,ii. 164.165.Robinson Crusoe,iii. 468.Rogers,iii. 516.et alibi.'Ruin mouldering.'i. 237.Russell,iii. 507.509.S.Saragossa,i. 117.121,166,357.Sass, Padre St. Iago,i. 167.359.Scott, i. xiv.,iii. 442.30,445,457,462,487;vindication of,509,et alibi frequenter.Scotland, critics of,ii. 116.Schiller,iii. 417.Seville,i. 1-3.60.Shelvocke,iii. 505.Shelley,iii. 489.493,501,503.Shakespeare,ii. 113.114,136,139,140,141,345-6,460,488,506,509,et alibi frequenter.Silence,ii. 10.Simonides,ii. 30.Sincerity,ii. 48.Slavery,i. 77.Smith, Charlotte,iii. 507.Southey's Letters,iii. 509.Spain and Britain,i. 41-2,161-2,et seqq.Spanish people, patriotism of,i. 45-7,et seqq.,125-6,et seqq.Spenser,i. 322.ii. 111-12,345,347,iii. 466,506,et alibi.Speech on laying the Foundation stone of Bowness School,i. 350-6.Spelling and style,iii. 452.3.Struggle, how the, ought to have been carried on,i. 116.Statesmen and courtiers, minds of,i. 130-1,et seqq.Stagnation, apparent,i. 313.Statistical account of Scotland,ii. 44.Style,ii. 84.et seqq.Stevens, George,ii. 113-14.Steamboats and railways,ii. 340.Superstition,i. 117.Superiority,i. 321.Sword, not pen,i. 95.Sympathy,ii. 38.Sydney, Sir Philip,ii. 49-50.Sympson, Rev. John,iii. 506.T.Tam o'Shanter,ii. 13-14.Tempers and dispositions,i. 279.Teacher, enlightened,i. 325.Tenderness,iii. 480.489.Tennyson,iii. 390.492,et alibi.Things, if not men,i. 142.Thomson,ii. 117.et seqq.,160,iii. 505.et alibi.Timidity,i. 231.Tourist, directions and information for the,ii. 221.et seqq.Traitors,


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