Byron, Honourable Augusta (sister | of the poet), 33 n. See Leigh, Honourable Augusta. Byron (George - Gordon - Byron), sixth Lord:-
1788. Born, Jan. 22, in Holles Street, London, xi.- According to Mr. Dallas, at Dover, xxx. His early prospects, xi. His pedigree, xi n.
1792-1795. Sent to a day-school,
and afterwards to the Grammar-
School, at Aberdeen, xi. 1796-1797.
Removed into the
Highlands, xii. His early love of mountain scenery, xii. 2, 27, 842. His attachment for Mary Duff, xii. 43 n. 842.
1798. His succession to the title, and removal to Newstead, xii. Placed under the care of a Not- tingham quack for the cure of his lameness, ib.
1799. Removed to the school of
Dr. Glennie, at Dulwich, and put under the care of Dr. Baillie, ib. His fondness for reading history, poetry, and the sacred writ- ings, ib.
1800-1804. His removal to Har- row, xiii. Notices of his school life, xii. xiii. 10 n. 11 n. 30-36. Instances of his quickness and energy, xiii. His first Harrow verses, xiii. 6 n. Heads a 're- belling' at Harrow, 31 n. 32 n. His respect for Dr. Drury, 35 n. His school friendships, xiii. 2, 4. His boyish love for his cousin, Margaret Parker, xiii. 2. His first dash into poetry, xiii. 2 n. His practice of dating his poems, 2 n. His early attachment to Miss Chaworth, xiv. 9 n. 1805-1806. His life and pursuits at college, xiv. 15n. Passes the vacation at Southwell, xiv. Visit to Harrowgate, 24 n. His skill in swimming, xiv. Private thea- tricals at Southwell, xv. 24 n. His first appearance as a poet, xv. 3 n. Prints a volume of his poems, but, at the suggestion of Mr. Becher, commits the edition to the flames, 28 n. 1807. Publishes Hours of Idle- ness,' xv. 45 n. His aristocra- tical notions, xv. xxxiii. Reviews Wordsworth's Poems, 805. Be- gins a poem entitled Bosworth Field,' xv. n. 1808. Effect produced on his mind by the critique on Hours of Idleness' in the Edinburgh Re- view,' xv. 45 n. His early scep- ticism, 39, 40. His love of so- litude, 86 n. His disappointment and loneliness at this period, xvi.
60 n. 70 n. Passes his time be tween the dissipations of London and Cambridge, 15 n. 1809-1810. Forms a design of visiting Persia, xvi. Takes his seat in the House of Lords, xvi. 60. English Bards and Scotch Reviewers published, xvii. 48. His subsequent regret, 66 n. Sets out on his travels, xvii. His character about this time, ib. Introduction to Ali Pacha, xviii. 91 n. Begins 'Childe Harold' at Ioannina, in Albania, 67 n. Concludes second canto at Smyr- na, 67 n. The Maid of Athens, 855 n. Writes Hints from Ho- race,' 171 n. and Curse of Mi- nerva,' 187 n. Swims from Ses- tos to Abydos, 853 n. 1811. Returns to England, after vi- siting Portugal, Spain, Sardinia, Sicily, Malta, Greece, Constanti- nople, etc. xviii. Effect of travel on his mind, and state of his affairs at this period, ib. Death of his mother, and of his college friends, Wingfield and Mathews, xviii. 83. And of Thyrza,' 859 n. Reviews Gell's 'Geography of Ithaca,' 805.
1812. Feb. 27. Makes his first
speech in the House of Lords, 811. Feb. 29. Publishes the first and second cantos of 'Childe Harold,' xix. 67 n. Presents the copyright of them to Mr. Dallas, 51 n.
Success of 'Childe Ha- rold,' xix. Although far advan- ced in an edition of English Bards,' determines to commit it to the flames, 822 n.
His po- pularity and gallantries at this period, xix. xx. Presented to the Prince Regent, 868 n. Writes the 'Address for the opening of Drury Lane Theatre,' 862 n. 1813. Becomes a dandy, or man of fashion, xx. 312 n. April, brings out anonymously the Waltz,' 191n. May, publishes the Giaour, 195 n. Dec., pub- lishes the Bride of Abydos,' 210 n.
His unsettled state of mind about this time, xx. 210 n. Jan., publishes the Corsair,' 223 n. April, writes 'Ode to Napoleon Bonaparte,' 868 n. Comes to the resolution, not only of writ- ing no more, but of suppressing all he had ever written, 242 n. May, writes 'Lara;' 242 n. Makes a second proposal for the hand of Miss Milbanke, and is accepted, xx. xxi. Dec., writes
'Hebrew Melodies,' 254 n. 1815. Jan. 2, marries Miss Mil-
banke, xxi. April, becomes personally acquainted with Sir Walter Scott, xxii. His respect for Sir Walter Scott, 131 n. Pressure of pecuniary embar- rassments, xxii. xxiii. July, writes the 'Siege of Corinth,' 260 n. Sept., writes 'Parisina,' 271 n.
1816. Jan., Lady Byron adopts the resolution of separating from him, xxii. Remarks thereon, xxii. 596 n. 877 n. March, writes 'Fare thee well,' and 'A Sketch,' 877 n. April, leaves England,
xxiii. 111 n. His route-Brus- sels, Waterloo, etc., xxiii. 114n. Takes up his abode at the Cam- pagne Diodati, xxiii. 121 n. Fi- nishes, June 27, the third canto of Childe Harold,' xxiii. 67 n. Writes, June 28, The Prisoner of Chillon,' xxiii. 278 n. Writes, in July, Monody on the Death of Sheridan,' the 'Dream,' Dark- ness,' Epistle to Augusta,' 'Churchill's Grave,' 'Prome- theus,' 'Could I remount,' 'Son- net to Lake Leman,' 879-888, and part of Manfred,' xxiii. 283n. August, an unsuccessful negoti- ation for a domestic reconciliation, 877 n. Sept., makes a tour of the Bernese Alps, xxiii. Oct., proceeds to Italy, staying a short time at Milan and Verona, ib. Nov., takes up his residence at Venice, ib. Marianna Segati, ib. 1817. Feb., finishes Manfred,' 283 n. March, translates, from the Armenian, a correspondence between St. Paul and the Corin- thians, 819 n. April, visits Fer- rara, 130, and writes 'Lament of Tasso,' 301. Makes a short visit to Rome, xxiv. and writes there a new third act to Mau- fred,' 294 n. July, writes, at Venice, the fourth canto of 'Childe Harold,' xxiv. 67n. Oct., writes Beppo,' 305.
1818. The Fornarina, Margarita Cogni, xxiv-xxvi. July, writes 'Ode on Venice,' 894 n. Nov., finishes Mazeppa,' 316. And first canto of Don Juan,' xxvi. 589 n.
1819. Jan., finishes second canto of Don Juan,' 615 n. April, his acquaintance with Countess Guiccioli, xxvi. 333 n. June, writes 'Stanzas to the Po,' 895 n. August, writes 'Letter to the Editor of my Grandmother's Re- view,' 792 n. Dec., completes the third and fourth cantos of 'Don Juan,' 636 n. Removes to Ravenna, xxvi.
1820. Subsequent connection with
Countess Guiccioli, and her se- paration from her husband, xxvii. xxxi. Feb., translates first canto of the 'Morgante Maggiore,' xxvii. 324. March, finishes Pro- phecy of Dante,' xxvii. 333 n. Translates 'Francesca of Rimini,' 899 n. And writes Observations upon an Article in Blackwood's Magazine,' 794. April-July, writes Marino Faliero,' xxvii. 347. Oct.-Nov., writes fifth canto of Don Juan,' 661 n. 1821. Feb., writes Letter on the Rev. W. L. Bowles's Strictures on the Life of Pope,' 821. March, Second Letter,' etc. 832. May, finishes 'Sardanapalus,' xxvii. 429 n. July, The Two Foscari,' xxvii. 463 n. Sept., 'Cain,' xxvii. 504 n. Oct., writes 'Heaven and Earth, a Mystery,' 416 n.; and Vision of Judg- ment,' 394 n. His Address to the Neapolitan government, xxvii. Regret of the poor at his depar- ture from Ravenna, xxviii. Re- moves to Pisa, ib. 1822. Jan., finishes Werner,' 532 n. July, writes sixth, se- venth, and eighth cantos of Don Juan,' 679 n. Finishes the 'De- formed Transformed,' 488 n. Death of his natural daughter, Allegra, xxviii. His project of visiting South America, ib. His coalition with Hunt in the 'Libe- ral,' xxviii. xxxiii. 409 n. 1823. Jan., writes ‘Age of Bronze,' 567 n. Feb., writes the Island,' 575 n. March, commences an epic entitled the 'Conquest,' 904. April, turns his views towards Greece, xxviii. Receives a com- munication from the London committee, xxix. July 14, sails for Greece, ib. Waits, at Cephalonia, the arrival of the Greek fleet, ib. His conversations on religion with Dr. Kennedy, ib. His noble conduct in Greece, ib. Testi- monies to the benevolence and soundness of his views, xxvii. xxix. xxxii.
1824, Jan. 5, arrives at Misso- longhi, xxix. Writes 'Lines on completing my thirty-sixth year,' 904 n. Intended attack upon Lepanto, xxx. Rupture with the Suliotes and the expedition sus- pended, ib. His last illness, ib. His death, ib. Sensation pro- duced by it in Greece and Eng- land, xxxi. His funeral, ib. In- scription on his monument, ib. His person, 112 n. His sensi-
tiveness on the subject of his
lameness, xi. xii. xiv. 184 n. 488 n. 489 n. 493 n. His ten- dency to make the worst of his own obliquities, 70 n. 87 n. His generosity and kind-hearted- ness, xxvii. xxxii. 795. His po- litics, 797. His religious opi- nious, xxxii. 39, 40, 84, 137, 296 n. 646. His tendency to superstition, xii. 267 n. 768. His fonduess for curious arms, xvii. 13. Summary of his cha- racter and writings, xxxii. Byron, Lady, xx-xxii. 61 n. 312 n. 454 n. 594 n. 596 n. 637 n. 796, 875, 877 n. Extract from her Remarks on Mr. Moore's Life of Lord Byron,' 596 n. Lines on hearing that she was ill,' 886. 'Lines on reading in the news- papers that she had been pa- troness of a charity ball,' 903. Byron, Honourable Augusta Ada, 111, 125, 876. Byzantium, 128, 852.
Cabot, Sebastian, 338 n. Cade, Jack, 646.
Cadiz, xviii. xix. 79, 594, 616. Cadiz, The Girl of,' 82 n. Cæsar, Augustus, his character, 870 n.
Cæsar, Julius, xxix. 137, 166, 491, 700. His laurel wreath, 142, 496. "The suitor of love,' 580, 635.
· Can Grande,' 571. Candia, 128, 626. Cannæ, battle of, 118. Canning, Right Hon. George, 62 n. 65. His opinion of the 'Bride of Abydos,' 220 n. His Inscription for Mrs. Brownrigg, the 'Prenti- cide,' 397 n. His oratory, 572. His defence of public schools and universities, 599 n. His charac- ter, 572, 680 n. Canongate, the, 76 n. Canova, 311, 386. His early love, 43 n. His Venus, 132 n. 308 n. 'Lines on his bust of Helen,' 891.
Cant, the grand primum mobile of England,' 824. The crying sin of the times,' 680. Cantemir, Demetrius, his History of the Ottoman Empire,' 675, 683.
Canterbury cathedral, 725. Capena, Porta, 166, 167. Capitoline Hill, the, 131 n. Capitol, the, 164, 165.
Capo di Ferro, Cardinal, 163. Capo d'Istria, 347.
Capo d'Istrias, Count, 574. Capo di Bove, 138 n. Capperonnier, M., 153 n. Caracalla, 168. Circus of, 167. Caractacus, 100, 747. Caravaggio, 748. Carbonari, 572. Care, 722.
Cain; a Mystery, 504. Wander- Carlisle (Frederick Howard), fifth
Cairn Gorme, 715. Calais, 311. Calderon, 594.
Caledonian Meeting, Address in- tended to be recited at,' 871. Calenture, 476 n. Described, 773. Calenus, A., 168 n. Caligula, 262 n. His wish, 683. Calm at sea, 633.
Calma and Orla, Death of,' 37. Calpe, 86. Calvin, 178.
Calypso, her island, 87, 87 n. Cambridge University, 22, 64 n., 842. Cambyses, 568. Camden, Lord, 814. Cameron, Evan and Donald, 114. Camilla, 755. Camillus, 167 n. Camoens, 52.
Stanzas to a lady, with the poems of,' 8. Campan, Madame, 287 n. Campbell, Thomas, esq. 62, 94 n., 613, 590, 731, 800, 824. His 'Pleasures of Hope,' 62 n. His 'Gertrude of Wyoming,' 182 n. Inadvertencies in his 'Lives of
Earl of, Lord Byron's guardian, xiii. 60, 61 n. 64. Dedication of Hours of Idleness' to, 1.¦ Character of his poems, 2 n. Lord Byron's Lines upon, 60. His al- ¦ leged neglect of his ward, 60 m. | Proposed reconciliation between Lord Byron and, ib. His advice to Lady Holland, 905. Carlisle (Isabella Byron), Countess of, 1 n. Carlisle (Henry) Fourth Earl of, 1 x. Carlo Dolce, 428, 748. Carlowitz, plain of, 262. Carnage, 699. 705. Carnival, xxv. 305-307. 'Caroline, Lines to,' 7, 8. Caroline, Queen of England, 668, 682 n., 733. 'Lines on,' 901. 'Epigram on Address to be pre- sented by the Brasiers' company,'
Carr, Sir John, 65, 82 n. Carrara, Francesca da, 151, 153. Carrer, the improvisatore, 386 n. Carthage, 146, 703. Cartwright, Major, 817. Cary, Rev. Henry Francis, his trans- lation of Dante,' 335, 336, 901.
Carysfort (John Joshua Proby), first Earl of, his Poems and Trage- dies,' 185 n.
Cash, potency of, 736, 751. Casimir, John, King of Poland, 318. Cassius, 827.
Charles of Anjou, 158. Charles, Prince, better known as the Pretender, 26 n.
Charles XII. of Sweden, 36 n., 317. His obstinacy at Bender, 707. Charlotte, Queen, 399. Charlotte, Princess of Wales, 733, 861 n. Stanzas on her death,' 145.
Castalian dews, 69 n., 99. Castelnau, Marquis de, his 'Histoire de la Nouvelle Russie,' 679. Castlereagh, Viscount (Robert Stew-Chase, the English, 749. art, Marquis of Londonderry, Chateaubriand, Viscount, 574. 572, 591, 670 n. 592 n. 715, Chatham, first Earl of, 742. 724,733, 898. 'Epigrams on,' Chatterton, Thomas, 62 n. 902. Epitaph on,' ib. vulgar, 841. Castri, village of, 69 n. 99. Chaucer, 179. Catalani, Madame, 58. Chaworth, Mr. xiv. xix. 13 n., 33 n. Catharine 1. of Russia, 571. Chaworth, Mary Anne (afterwards Catharine II. of Russia, 688, 713. Mrs. Musters), Lord Byron's early 715-718, 722. attachment to, xiv. 9 n., 33 n., Cathay, 735. 41n., 42 n., 70 n., 681n., 847n., 848 n., 850, 883 n. Death of, 9 n. 'Fragment written shortly after her marriage,' 8, 9 n. Stanzas to, 'Oh! had my fate,' 41. Stan- zas to, 'Well! thou art happy.' 847. 'Farewell to,' 848. zas to, on the author's leaving England,' 850.
Catholic emancipation, 813-817. Catiline, his character, 689. Cato, 336 n., lends his wife to Hortensius, 681. Catullus, 598, his 'Lugete, Veneres, Cupidinesque,' translated, 5. His 'Ad Lesbiam' translated, ib. 'The scholar of love,' 635. His 'Atys not licentious, 837. Caucasus, Mount, 65, 687. Cava, 350.
'Cavalier Servente,' 310, 715. Cecilia Metella, tomb of, 138. Cecrops, 188.
Cellini, Benvenuto, 501. Centlivre, Mrs., character of her comedies, 348 n. Drove Congreve from the stage, ib. Cephalonia, xxix. 88 n. Cephisus, river of, 188, 235. Ceres, 735. Temple of, 819. Certaldo, the priests of, 160. Certosa Cemetery, epitaphs at, n. Cervantes, 67 n., 88 n., 690.
Cheltenham, xii. xx. 580 n. Cheops, King, his pyramid, 615. Chesterfield, Earl of, his speech on the play-house bill, 178. remark on hunting, 755. Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, 87. See also 334, 647 n.
Childe Burun, 67 n.
Circus at Rome, 142. Maximus, 167. Of Caracalla, ib. Citharon, Mount, 99, 235. Cities, overthrow of great, 131 n. 703.
Clare (John Fitzgibbon), Earl of, xiii. xv. 32 n., 34 n., 39 n. 'Lines on,' 34, 39. 'Stanzas to,' 42. Clare, John, the poet, 838. Clarence, Duke of, 609. Clarendon, Lord, his character of Sir Nicholas Byron, 3 n. Clarens, xxiii. 123. Claridge, Mr. xiii.
Clarke, Dr. Edward Daniel, 85 n., 95 n., 656 n., 659 n. Clarke, Rev. James Stanier, his 'Naufragium,' 619 n. Clarke, Hewson, 64, 66. Classical education, 598. Classics, too early study of, 135, 175, 181.
Claudian, his 'Old Man of Verona,'
Claudius, the Emperor, 168. Clement XII., Pope, 142 n. Cleon, 99.
Cleonice and Pausanias, story of, 291 n., 300. Cleopatra, 567, 681, 765. Clergy, 752.
Clerks of public offices, 730. Clitumnus, the river, 134. Temple of, ib.
Child of Harrow's Pilgrimage, 67 n. Clootz, Jean Baptiste (Anacharsis), 'Childish Recollections,' 30. Children, 523, 524, 641. 'Chill and mirk is the nightly blast,'
Chillon, Prisoner of, 278. Chillon, Castle of, 121 n. 279, 280 n Cha-Chillon, Sonnet on, 278. Chimari, 135.
racter of his 'Don Quixote,' 743. Cevallos, Don Pedro de, 57 n. Ceylon, 735.
Charonea, 99, 115 n.
Chalons, battle of, 868 n.
Chamouni, 119 n. 'Lines found in the Travellers' book at,' 906.
Chandler, Dr. 85 n., 99.
Change, 733.
Chimariot mountains, 89. Chinnery, Mr., 814.
592, 593 n., 661 n. Clubs, 176, 750. Clusium, 350.
Clytemnestra, 718, 887.
Cobbett, William, 74 n. 680, 830,
888. Epigram on his digging up Tom Paine's bones,' 897. Coblentz, 117.
Cocker, the arithmetician, 777, 904. 'Cockney school' of poetry, xvii. 840. Cognac, apostrophized, 653. Cogni, Margarita, story of, xxiv.
Christ, 680. Pure creed of, made Cohen, Mr. F., 388.
sanction of all ill,' 761.
'Christabel,' 260 n. 266 n. Christianity, 698, 761. Chrysostom, St., 598.
Chantrey, Francis, esq. R. A., 615 n. Chrysso, 69 n.
Chaonia, xviii.
Charing Cross, 729.
Charity Ball, Lines on reading that Lady Byron was patroness of a,' 903.
Charlemagne, the Emperor, 574. Chrlemont, Lady, 826. Charlemont, Mrs., 877. Charles I. 3, 4 n., 287 n., 387 n., 747.
Charles II. 9 n., 29. Charles V. of Spain, 145, 869 n. Charles VIII. of France, 162.
'Churchill's Grave,' 885. Cibber, Colley, 823. Cicero, 137 n. His opinion on Bri- tain, 139 n. His villa, 146, 169. A puuster, 173 n. Cicisbeo, 310. Cicognara, Count Leopold, 126,
150. Cid, 568, 570. Cigars, 582.
Cincinnatus, 712, 573.
Cintra, 72, 73. Convention of, 74.
Coimbra, xiii. 83 n.
Coke, Mr., of Norfolk, 867. Colbleen, 44.
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, esq., his 'Christabel,' 195 n., 260 n., 266 n., 683 n., 875. His 'Wander- ings of Cain,' 529. His 'Biogra- phia Literaria,' 590 n., 645 n. His sketch of Don Juan's sup- posed character, 594 n., 613 n. His 'Devil's Walk,' 867 n. See also 53, 63, 589, 602, 613 n., 731, 799, 804. Coligny, 121 n.
Coliseum, the, 136n. 140, 163,298. College education, advantages of a,
Comedy, the day of, gone by, 750. Covent Garden, 307. Theatre of, Cypress-tree, 199.
Comitium, the, 164, 165. Commodus, the Emperor, 350. Common Lot, answer to a beauti- ful poem, entitled the,' 36. Commonwealth, 368, 894. Comnena, Anna, 102. Company, mixed, 312. Condorcet, Marquis de, 592, 593 n. Congreve, driven from the stage by
Mrs. Centlivre, 348 n. Congreve rockets, 606. 'Conquest, the,' a fragment, 904. Conscience, 200, 286, 295, 577, 602, 609, 635. Constable, the bookseller, 51 n., 184 n. Constans, 168.
Constant, Benjamin de, 572. Constantine, the Emperor, 168. Constantine, George, lexicographer,
Constantinople, xviii. 93, 99, 727, 825. Slave market at, 661. Contarini, Andrea, Doge, 159. Contarini, Madame, xxv. Conversationists, 750. Cook, Captain, 54. Cooke, George Frederick, comedian, 58 n., 351 n. Cookery, science of, 766. Copet, 157, 876 n., 888. Copyright, sums paid to Lord By- roa for, 52 n. Coquette, 313, 740. Coray, 101, 103. Corfu, 100, 315. 'Corinne' quoted, 156. Corinth, Siege of, 260. Corinth, gulf of, xxx. Corinthian brass, 685. Cork Convent, 73 n. Cornelia, 138. 'Cornelian, the,' 23. 'Cornelian heart which was broken, Lines on a,' 861. Cornwall, xvii.
Cornwall, Barry (Bryan Walter Procter), 731.
848 n. Cowper, Lady, xxi. Coxcomb, 657.
Dallas, Robert Charles, xvi. 51 m., 54 n. 859 n.
Coxe, Archdeacon, his 'Life of Marlborough,' 645. His Life of Sir Robert Walpole,' 664 u. Crabbe, Rev. George, 613, 590.Damætas, a Character,` 15. 'Nature's sternest painter, yet Damas, Count de, 693. the best,' 63. The first in point of power and genius,' 63 n. The first of living poets,' 800. 'Craning,' 754.
Dallaway, Rev. James, his Cun- stantinople' quoted, 197 n. Dalrymple, Sir Hew, 74 n.
Crashaw, Richard, 643. Cowley's lines on, 643 n. Creation, Mosaic account of the, 507, 518 n. Crema, 394, 470.
Cressy, battle of, xi. n., 3 n., 725. Cribb, Tom, the pugilist, 189, 837. 'Critic,' Sheridan's, 792; 'too good for a farce,' 882 n. Croker, Crofton, Esq., his Fairy Legends,' 772 n. Croker, Right Hon. John Wilson, his query concerning the title of the Bride of Abydos,' 210 n. His Boswell' quoted, 146 n., 186 n., 566 n., 641 n., 671 n. Croly, Rev. Dr. George, 731. His 'Letter of Cato to Lord Byron,' 787.
Cromwell, the 'sagest of usurpers,' 136. His death, 29. His 'des- tiny,' 136.
Crossing the Line, ceremony at, 582. Crowe, Rev. Wm, his strictures ou
'English Bards,' 56 n. Crusades, xi. n. 3 n. Cruscan school of poetry, the, anni
hilated by Gifford, 61, 800. Ctesilaus, 142 n.
Damme,' the British, 730. Dance, Pyrrhic, 97, 639, 644. 'Dance of Death,' Holbein's, 763. Hollar's, 763 n.
Dancing, 113, 639, 657, 732, 755. Dandies, xx. 312 n. Dynasty of
the, 312. Dandolo, Henry, 'the octogenarian chief,' 128. Account of, 151. 'Dandy' described, 311, 312. Daniel, 667, 710.
Dante, his early passion for Bea- trice, xii. 43 n., 335 n. His infe- licitous marriage, 336, 637. His popularity, 334 n., 801. His gentle feelings, 335 n., 899 n. His banishment and poverty, 341. His tomb at Ravenna, 341, 659. His Beatrice, 637. tation of, 647. His half-way house' of life, 686, 721. See also, 133, 158, 889, 900. Pro- phecy of, 333. Danton, 592, 593 n. Danube, the, 142, 263. Dardanelles, the, 213, 658. 'Darkness,' 884.
Daru, M., his picture of Venetian society and manners, 392, 487 n. Darwin, Erasmus, his pompons chime,' 63. His 'Botanic Gar- den,' 63 n. Put down by a poem in the 'Anti-Jacobin,' 800.
Dates, a sort of post-house, where the Fates change horses,' 603. David, King, 193, 492, 609. His harp, 254. His hymns, 11, 254n. Davies, Scrope, esq. xviii. 312 n. Dedication of 'Parisina' to, 271. Davy, Sir Humphry, 346. His safety lamp, 606.
Dead, features of the, 197. Belief that the souls of inhabit the forms of birds, 222. 'Dear Doctor, I have read your play,' 892.
tions of the Turkish character, 103.
De Pauw, his writings charac- terised, 100, 101.
De Quincey, Mr., his 'Confessions of
an English Opium-Eater,' 650 n. De Retz, Cardinal, his account of
a shipwreck in the Gulf of Lyons, 620 n.
Dervish Tahiri, Lord Byron's faith- ful Arnaout guide, 97, 207 n., 261 n.
Desaix, General, 593. Deshayes, the ballet-master, 59. Desmoulins, Camille, 729 n. Despair, 113, 219, 237, 281, 622, 702.
Despotism, 672. Destiny, 136.
'Dear object of defeated care,' 856. Death, Slumber the sister of, 12, Shuns the wretched, 612. Ad- vantages of an early, 649, 719. The 'Sovereign's sovereign,' 720. A reformer, 721. 'Duunest of all duns,' 760. 'A gaunt gour-De mand,' 761. See also, 95, 122, 140, 197, 206, 451, 511, 517, 618, 647, 655, 665, 712, 720, 752.
'Death and the Lady,' 637. Death, in the Apocalypse,' 289. Death of Calmar and Orla,' 37. Dee, the, 44, 720.
Tott, Baron, his History of the Turks,' 676 n., 683. 'Devil's Drive, the; an unfinished Rhapsody,' 867.
esq. ib. Origin of the charac- ter, 592 n. When first intro- duced upon the stage, ib. Sketch of his supposed character by Mr. Coleridge, 594 n., 613 n. Fragment on the back of the MS. of Canto I., 615 n. Preface to Cantos VI., VII., VIII., 679. Testimonies of authors, 779. Let- ter to the Editor of My Grand- mother's Review,' 792. 'Ob- servations upon an Article in Blackwood's Magazine,' 794. Dedication of Observations' to J. D'Israeli, esq., ib. See also xxxii. 647 n., 731. Don Quixote,' xxxii. 49 n. 'A too true tale,' 743. Delight of read- ing in the original, 760. Donaghadee, 816. Donati Corso, 336 n. Donoughmore, Earl of, 813. Doomsday-book, xi. 721.
'Devil's Walk,' Coleridge's, attri- Doria, 128, 151. buted to Porson, 867 n. Devotion, 507, 646, 683. 'Diable Boiteux,' 10 n. Diana, temple of, 143, 190.
De Grammont, his 'Memoirs,' 647n. D'Egville, the ballet-master, xvi. D'Herbelot, 204 n.
D'Israeli, J., esq. his Quarrels of Authors,' 173 n., Dedi- 794. cation of 'Observations upon an Article in Blackwood's Magazine to, 794. Dekker, Thomas, his 'Wonder of a Kingdom,' quoted, 847 n. Delawarr (George John West), fifth Earl, xv. 34n. Verses to,' 42. 'Lines on,' 34.
Delhis, the, 70, 92.
nition of an epic, 612 n. Diderot, 395 n.
Dido, 19, 700.
'Difficile est propriè,' etc. of Ho- race, disputes on the meaning of, 174 n.
Dorotheus of Mitylene, 104. Dorset (Thomas Sackville), Earl of, 'called the drama forth,' 9. Dorset (Charles Sackville), Earl of, his character, 9 n.
Dorset (George-John Frederick), fourth Duke of, xiii. 'Lines ad- dressed to,' 9. Some account of, 9 n., 10 n. 'Lines occasioned by the death of,' 873. Doubt, 712, 726. Dover, 'dear,' 724. Downs, the' xxxi. Drachenfels, 117, 724.
Drapery misses,' 731. Drawcansir, 174, 731. depen-Dream, the,' 882.
Digestion, 712, 714. Dinner, a man's happiness dent on, 751. Dinner-bell, 'the tocsin of the soul,' 666.
Diodati, xxiii. 121 n. Diodorus Siculus, 430. Diogenes, 572, 729, 766, 772 n. Dion, 164, 165.
Denham, his 'Cooper's Hill,' 725 n. Doctors' Commons, 715. Denina, 155.
Denman, Baron (Lord Chief Jus- tice), his translation of the Greek song on Harmodius and Aristo- geiton, 113 n. Dennis, John, the critic, 55, 176. 237 n. His tract against operas, 176 n.
Dent d'Argent, 287 n. D'Ohsson, accuracy of his delinea-
Dogs, 691. Fidelity of, 605, 848. Drury, Mark, 31 n. Dolce, Carlo, 748. Dolfino, Giovanni, 151. Domenichino, 169. Domingo, St., island of, 241. Domitian, the Emperor, 350. DomitiusMarsus, translation from,5. Don, the river, 720. Don Juan, 589. Dedication of 'Don Juan' to Robert Southey,
Drury Lane Theatre, 345 n., 348 n., 351 12., 862 n. 'Address, spoken at the opening of,' 862. Dryden, his dislike of Cambridge, 64 n. His infelicitous marriage,
637 n. His 'Absalom and Achi- tophel,' 646. His Theodore and Honoria,' 647. His 'Ode,' 799, 802. His epigram under
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