Continent, Tours on the :-
Journal of Dorothy Words- worth (1820), iii. 1; extracts from, 3-46, 63, 65, 326. Journal of Mrs. Wordsworth,
(1820), iii. 1, 49, 65; Journal of tour in Holland (1823), 80- 88.
Series of Poems by Wordsworth
on, iii. 1, 49, 326.
Convention of Cintra, The, pamphlet on, ii. 121, 126-143; historical facts of, 127; letter to Wrangham as to, 127; pamphlet published, 128; opinions of Southey, Coleridge, Lamb, and Canning, 128; extracts from letters of Wordsworth to editor of Courier, 129-133; 261, 265.
Cooksons of Forncett, their marriage, i. 49; birth of their child, 53. Corn Law Rhymes, iii. 259. Cornwall, Barry, tragedy by, iii. 63. Copyright law, letter of Words-
worth to Crabb Robinson as to, iii. 300; letters to Henry Reed as to, 306, 313; speech by Serjeant Talfourd in the House of Com- mons as to, 319; petition of Words- worth to the House of Commons on the subject, 320-323; petition by Carlyle, 323-325; letter of Talfourd to Wordsworth, 325; letter to Rowan Hamilton as to, 326; letter of Talfourd as to second reading of Bill, 328; letter of Wordsworth to W. E. Gladstone as to, 328; reply thereto, 329; letters of Wordsworth to F. Pollock, Travers Twiss, Lieut.-Gen. Sir William Gomm, 330; R. M. Milnes and F. Lloyd, 331; Crabb Robin- son, 332; Talfourd, 333; E. Hors- man, 334; Sir R. H. Inglis, 335; Talfourd, 336-338; W. E. Glad- stone, 339, and reply, 340; Tal- fourd, 341-352; Lord Mahon, 352; letter of unknown correspondent, 354; letters to Moxon as to, 363, 364.
Cottle, Joseph, Early Recollections of Coleridge, etc., by, i. 112; visits Stowey, 120; letters from Coleridge to, 123; negotiations as to publica- tion of Lyrical Ballads, 152; corre- spondence with, 153; introduc- tion to Wordsworth, 157; Remi- niscences, 156-160; visit to Words- worth, 195; letters of Wordsworth to, 196; as to Lyrical Ballads, ii. 1; letter of Wordsworth to, as to second edition of Lyrical Ballads, 3; letter to, as to request for verses, iii. 190; letter of, to Wordsworth on death of Dora, 474. Cotton's Winter, ii. 197. Cowley, ii. 324.
Cowper, i. 402; ii. 220; Sonnet to Romney, iii. 259. Crabbe, iii. 305, 376. Cradock, Dr., i. 33, 372.
Cuckoo, The, ii. 195; letter to Mr. Field as to change in text of, iii. 154, 155.
Cuckoo and Nightingale, of Chaucer, i. 282, 302; iii. 402.
Daffodils, The, ii. 92, 95, 214. Daisy, The, allusion to John Words- worth, i. 371; ii. 95.
Daniel in the lions' den, sonnet on
Rubens' picture of, iii. 205; ex- tract from Crabb Robinson's diary as to, 205.
Dante, ii. 67, 324; iii. 92. Davy, Sir Humphry, Coleridge's letters to, i. 221, 229; iii. 211.
Mrs., iii. 243; reminiscences of later years at Rydal, 441, 442, 458-460; letter of, to Mrs. Graves as to last illness and death of Wordsworth, 488. Dejection, An Ode, by Coleridge, ii. 86, 164.
De Morgan, Augustus, extract from Budget of Paradoxes as to Words- worth and Byron, iii. 228. Departure, Our, i. 322, 329.
De Quincey, description of Mrs. Wordsworth, i. 337; letter from,
as to Convention of Cintra, ii. 133, 136; tenant of Dove Cottage, 151; account of introduction to John Wilson, 159, 202; Poets of the Lake Country, 202, 272, 284, 303; iii. 243.
Descartes On Method, i. 6. Description of the Scenery of the English Lakes, ii. 153, 155-158; paper by Stopford Brooke on, 158; letter of Wordsworth to Lady Beaumont as to, 158.
Descriptive Sketches, published, i. 46; 59, 68, 92; ii. 239.
De Vere, Aubrey, i. 5, 258; letter of Rowan Hamilton to, as to Cole- ridge and Wordsworth, iii. 210; letter of, to Rowan Hamilton, 230, 243; correspondence between Rowan Hamilton and, 252-254; letter of, to Moxon as to proposed volume of selections by, 405. Dewey, Rev. Orville, account of an interview with Wordsworth from The Old World and the New by, iii. 237-242.
Dichtung und Wahrheit, ii. 202. Digby, Kenelm, iii. 188. "Dishonoured Rock and Ruin," a
sonnet, iii. 165, 208.
Dix, John, extract from Pen and Ink Sketches of Poets, etc., by, iii. 265. Dockray, Benjamin, letter of Words- worth to, as to slavery, iii. 397. Donne's sonnet, "Death be not proud,” iii. 231.
Dove Cottage, i. 200, 208; life at, 255; removed from, to Coleorton farm-house, ii. 52; tenanted by De Quincey, 151.
Dove and Mouse, story of, i. 289. Drummond, Mrs., ii. 17; letter to,
as to Dorothy Wordsworth, iii. 211.
Dryden, letter of Wordsworth to Sir Walter Scott on, ii. 26; transla- tion of Virgil by, 296-301, 319. Duchess of Devonshire, i. 214. Duddon, The River, a series of son- nets, ii. 153; iii. 45, 52, 359.
Dyce, Alex., iii. 189; letters to, 361.
Dyer's Ruins of Rome, ii. 324.
Ecclesiastical Sonnets, allusion to W.'s mother in, i. 19; some written at Coleorton, iii. 55; letter of Southey to Townsend as to, 55; letter of Wordsworth to Sharp on, 62; with the exception of the tragedy the least successful of Words- worth's efforts, 62; 314.
Edgeworth, F. B., letter of Words- worth to Sir W. Rowan Hamil- ton as to style of, iii. 159; visit of Wordsworth to, 165, 170, 207.
Education, Wordsworth's views of, and its methods, ii. 376-396; ad- dress at Bowness on, 397. Elegiac musings, iii. 186. Emerson, iii. 312.
Emigrant Mother, The, i. 300; letter to Mr. Field as to change in text, iii. 153. Envy, iii. 459. Epitaph, i. 289, 384.
Epitaphs translated from Chiabrera, ii. 122; iii. 267.
Essay upon Epitaphs, ii. 122; letter of Dorothy Wordsworth as to,
122; letter from Charles Lamb to Wordsworth as to, 152; iii. 327. Esthwaite Water, i. 27, 38; ii. 357. Evening Star over Grasmere Water, i. 389.
Evening Voluntaries, i. 23; iii. 230, 267.
Evening Walk, i. 42; dedicated and published, 44, 46, 68; Dorothy's objections to, 81, 92; ii. 239. Examiner, The, iii. 249, 364. Excursion, The, joy of youth in the presence of Nature, i. 30, 59; published, ii. 226; reviewed by Hazlitt in Examiner, 228; by Lamb in Quarterly, 228; extracts from Crabb Robinson's diary as to, 227-231; review in Edinburgh Review, 230, 232;
letter of Southey to Bernard Barton on, 231; letter of Southey to Sir Walter Scott on Edinburgh Review notice of, 232; letter of Southey to C. H. Townsend on, 232; letter of Charles Lamb to Wordsworth on receiving copy of, 233; another as to his review in Quarterly, 235; letter of Words- worth to Poole as to, 248; Cole- ridge disappointed with, 256-260; the residence of "the Solitary,' 284; iii. 52, 95, 106; letter to Mr. Field as to change in text, 155, 168, 234, 315, 327; Landor and, 359; letter of Wordsworth to Moxon as to republishing, 403. Expostulation and Reply, i. 119.
FANCY opposed to imagination, ii. 197, 199, 282.
Farmer of Tilsbury Vale, The, ii.
Female Vagrant, The, iii. 406.
Fenwick Notes, i. 1, 6, 23, 107, 117, 119, 161, 181, 363; ii. 21, 35, 51, 126, 167, 212; iii. 131, 200, 305; letter of Wordsworth to Miss Fenwick, 283.
Fermor, Mrs., ii. 90, 95. Field, Barron, unpublished memoirs
of the life of Wordsworth by, i. 78, 144, 146; extracts from Ms. Memoir, ii. 328-330; letter of Wordsworth to, as to publishing, 386; letter to Moxon as to same, 400; iii. 149; letter to, on changes in the text of poems, 150-156; let- ters to, 156; letter of Crabb Robinson as to Italian tour, 296; letter of Wordsworth to Moxon as to Ms. Memoir, 318. Firgrove, The, i. 269, 368. Fleming, companion of walks round
Esthwaite, i. 38; death of, iii. 234.
Fletcher, Mrs., letter of, iii. 226, 243; extracts from Autobiography of, 296-298, 372-376, 417-420; reminiscences of later years at VOL. III.
Rydal, 438-439, 442; letter of, to Lady Richardson, 480; letters of, to Lady Richardson as to last ill- ness and death and burial of Wordsworth, 489, 491.
Forbes' Travels in India, iii. 158. Foresight, i. 310.
Forncett rectory, i. 47; description of, 50; visit of Wordsworth to, 53.
Forster's Life of Walter Savage Landor, iii. 360. Fountain, The, i. 26.
Fox, Right Hon. C. J., letters of Wordsworth to, i. 214, 217-221, with copy of Lyrical Ballads, ii. 3, 201; iii. 51.
Caroline, extracts from Jour- nals of, iii. 299, 421, 463-467, 482.
Fox How, purchased for Arnold family, iii. 224.
Friend, The, i. 162; ii. 121-122;
letter to, from John Wilson, 144; Wordsworth's reply, 145-148; letter of Dorothy Wordsworth to Lady Beaumont as to, 148-150, 172.
Furness Abbey, i. 28.
GALLOW-HILL, note on, i. 343. Galt's Life of Byron, iii. 186. Garrick and Othello, ii. 320. Gifford, editor of the Quarterly Review, letter of Lamb to Words- worth as to Gifford's treatment of review of The Excursion, ii. 235; iii. 269, 418.
Gillies, R. P., sonnet on, ii. 218;
sketch of Wordsworth by, 218; extracts from Wordsworth's let- ters to, 221-225; as to Sir Walter Scott's novels, 249, 272-275; iй. 234.
Mrs. Margaret, portraits of Wordsworth by, ii. 417. Gipsies, ii. 53; letter to Mr. Field as to change in text of, iii. 154. Gladstone, Right Hon. W. E., pupil of Bishop of St. Andrews, iii. 207;
correspondence of Wordsworth with, as to Copyright Bill, 328-330, 340-342; letters of, to Professor Knight, 355-356; letters of Words- worth to, as to resignation of 426-430; stamp-distributorship,
obtains for Wordsworth his pen- sion from the Civil List, 430; letter of Wordsworth to, as to State and Prospects of the Church, 461.
Glow-worm, The, i. 306; composed, 307.
Goddard, William, death of, iii. 64. Godwin, Coleridge's letters to, i. 221, 222-224; letters of Words- worth to, ii. 277-278. Goethe, ii. 324; iii. 257, 305. Gomm, Sir William, iii. 234; letter of Wordsworth to, as to Copyright Bill, 330.
Gough, Mr., proposed selection from Wordsworth's writings by, iii. 411. Grace Darling, iii. 316.
Grasmere, letter of Wordsworth to Coleridge describing journey from Sockburn to, i. 202-207; Home at Grasmere, 208, 232-254; Doro- thy's "Grasmere Journal," 259- 334.
Grattan, T. C., extract from Beaten
Paths, iii. 131-137.
Graves, Rev. R. P., Reminiscences of Wordsworth by, ii. 326-328; account of Wordsworth's visit to Ireland by, iii. 165, 170; Words- worth's correspondence. with Rowan Hamilton, 184; letter of, as to Coleridge and Wordsworth, 235; letter of Rowan Hamilton to, 492.
Mrs., letter of Mrs. Davy to, as to last illness and death of Words- worth, iii. 488.
Gray (the poet), ii. 196, 273; iii. 61;
Landor on, 93; Ode on a Distant Prospect of Eton College by, iii. 162, 467.
Green-Linnet, The, i. 321; letter to Mr. Field as to change of text in, iii. 153.
Greenwood, R. N., i. 31, 38. Grosart, Rev. Dr., his edition of the Prose Works of Wordsworth, i.
Guesses at Truth, by Julius C. Hare, iii. 379.
Guide to the District of the Lakes, i. 231; ii. 29; extracts from, 252; reprinted, iii. 254.
Guilt and Sorrow, i. 85, 109.
HAMILTON, SIR W. ROWAN, letter of Wordsworth to, as to structure of sonnet, iii. 159; letter to, as to writings, 161; letters to, as to visit to Ireland, 163; letter criticising verses written by, and Miss Ham- ilton, 171-174; letters to, 183, 186; Mr. Graves' account of correspond- ence with, 184; visit of, to Rydal Mount, 184; correspondence of, with Aubrey de Vere, 252-254; letter of Wordsworth to, 261; letters to, as to Professor Wilson and his guests, 185; letter to, as to journey to Cambridge, 186; letter to, and P.S. by Dorothy, 191; letters to, 207-210; letter of, to Aubrey de Vere as to Coleridge and Wordsworth, 210; letter of Words- worth to, as to Dowling, Coleridge, and Landor, 212 letter to, 227; letter of Aubrey de Vere to, 230; Wordsworth admired verses of,
letter of, to Aubrey de Vere, 252, and his reply, 253; another, 254; letter of Wordsworth to, and his reply as to patronage, 301-304; letter of Wordsworth to, as to poems and question of copyright, 326; letter of Wordsworth as to having been appointed a member of the Royal Irish Academy, 471.
Miss E. M., letter of Words- worth to Sir W. Rowan Hamil- ton as to poem by, iii. 162; account of Wordsworth's visit to Ireland by, 166-170; visit of, to Rydal Mount, 184; letter of Dor- othy to, 205.
Hardrane Waterfall, description of, i. 205. Hare, Augustus William, tutor to poet's eldest son, iii. 97, 104.
Julius C., ii. 302; iii. 97; Guesses at Truth, by, 363; editor of Philological Museum, 363; letter of, to Wordsworth, as to reception of Installation Ode, 477. "Hark! 'tis the Thrush," iii. 337. Hart Leap Well, i. 202, 214; Lamb's
opinion of, ii. 188, 305. Hawkshead Grammar School, i. 25; Wordsworth sent to it, 25; in- fluence of time spent there on his after-life, 29; school at present time, 31; poet's name carved on desk, 31; Ode on Immortality con- nected with days at, 37; fragments of verses written while at, 38. Haydon, B. R., picture of Words- worth's head in his "Christ's Entry into Jerusalem," i. 51; cast of Wordsworth's face by, 50; extract from artist's diary as to cast, 251-252; letters of, 260; sonnet to, 261; account of an immortal dinner" at the house of, 289-293; "Christ's entry into Jerusalem," 313; picture by, of Napoleon on the Island of St. Helena, and sonnet on, iii. 192, 310; allusion of Gladstone to sonnet, 339; letter to Moxon as to sonnet, 366; letter to Miss Barrett, as to her sonnet on portrait of Wordsworth by, 381; correspond- ence between Wordsworth and, 388-395; extracts from diary of, 421, 424, 468; correspondence, 469. Hayley, William, ii. 198. Hazlitt, William, i. 5, 144; account
by, of visit to Alfoxden, 148; por- trait of Coleridge by, ii. 45; The Excursion and, 237, 253, 277; attack on Wordsworth in The Examiner by, 278; narrow escape of, at Keswick, 278, 288. Helvellyn, five lines on, i. 382;
ascended by Wordsworth, with Sir
Walter Scott and Sir Humphry Davy, ii. 26; allusion to, in Mus- ings near Aquapendente, 26. Herbert, George, ii. 327. Highland Girl at Inversnaid, To, ii. 195; iii. 52, 72.
Hill, Rev. Mr., Warwick, i. 38. Hine, Dr., Selection from poems for school use, edited by, iii. 191, 193.
Hoare, Gurney, iii. 421.
Hobart, Bishop, New York, iii. 102. Hogg, James, "The Ettrick Shep-
herd," ii. 221; Elegy on, iii. 231, 234; death of, 234; Lines to the memory of Lamb and, 267. Holland, Mrs. Wordsworth's Journal of tour in, iii. 80-88.
Homer, Wordsworth's opinion of, ii. 317.
Horace, Wordsworth's love for, ii. 318, 328.
Hornby Castle Succession Case, and Dr. Shelton Mackenzie's recollec- tions, iii. 268.
Horsman, Edward, letter of, as to Copyright Bill, iii. 334. Housmann's Collection of Sonnets, iii. 258.
Hunt, Leigh, ii. 25; extracts from Autobiography of, 252-255, 278; The Manciple's Tale, iii. 311. Hutchinson, account of connection of, family with Sockburn, i. 192.
Henry, "retired mariner" of ninth sonnet, iii. 140-142, 145, 147, 149, 182, 211.
Joanna, iii. 70, 143, 144, 182,
Mary (wife of Wordsworth), school-mates, i. 21, 335; married, 18, 340, 343, 351; ii. 43, 109; letter of, to Sara Coleridge, iii. 188, 210, 256; name on stone by roadside, 290, 295; intimacy with Words- worth, 335; her character, 337; De Quincey's description of, 337; allusions to, in poems, 338; Doro- thy's opinion of, 343; unable to join in tour in Scotland, 363, 380;
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