INDEX.
The Roman letters refer to the Volume; the Arabic figures to the Page.
A.
- ABERDEEN, Mrs. Byron's residence at, i. 11.;
-
- the day school there at which Lord Byron was a pupil, i. 17.;
- his allusion to the localities of, i. 34.;
- affection of the people of, for his memory, i 36.
- Absence, consolations in, ii. 279.
- Abstinence, the sole remedy for plethora, iii. 337.
- Abydos, Lord Byron's swimming feat from Sestos to, i. 316. 321. 323; v. 129.; vi.
[280](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-10.htm.html#pg280).
-
- See Bride of Abydos.
- Abyssinia, Lord Byron's project of visiting, ii. 232.
- Academical studies, effect of, on the imaginative faculty, i. 197.
- Acerbi, Giuseppe, iii. 307.
- Acland, Mr., Lord Byron's school-fellow at Harrow, i. 97.
- Acting, no immaterial sensuality so delightful, iii. 81.
- Actium, remains of the town of, i 295.
- Actors, an impracticable race, iii. 185.
- Ada, iii. 195.
-
- See Byron, Augusta-Ada.
- Adair, Robert, esq. i, 319. 335. 341.; ii. 9.
- Adams, John, the Southwell carrier,
-
- Lord Byron's epitaph on, i. 153.
- Addison, Joseph, his character as a poet, i. 197.
-
- His conversation, vi.
[354](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg354).
- His 'Drummer', vi.
[392](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-14.htm.html#pg392).
- 'Adolphe,' Benjamin Constant's, its character, iii. 251.
- Adversity, iii. 205.
- 'Æneid, the,' written for political purposes, ii. 60.
- Æschylus, i. 64.
-
- His 'Prometheus', iv. 67.
- His 'Seven before Thebes', 68.
- 'Agathon,' Wieland's history of, iv. 236.
- Aglietti, Dr., MS. letters in his profession offered to Mr. Murray, iv, 98. 126. 129.
- Albania, i. 299. 316.
- Albanians, their character and manners, i. 299. 316.
- Alberoni, Cardinal, ii. 266.
- Albrizzi, Countess, some account of, iii. 318.
-
- Her conversazioni, iv. 212.
- Her 'Ritratti di Uomini Illustri', 213.
- Her portrait of Lord Byron, 214.
- Alder, Mr, iv. 10.
- Alexander the Great, his exclamation to the Athenians, i. 12.
- Alfieri, Vittorio, his description of his first love, i. 26.
-
- Effect of the representation of his 'Mira' on Lord Byron, iii. 77.; iv. 180. 180 n.
- His conduct to his mother, iii. 127.
- His tomb in the church of Santa Croce, iv. 12.
- Coincidences between the disposition and habits of Lord Byron and, ii. 5.; vi.
[231](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-8.htm.html#pg231). [233](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-8.htm.html#pg233).
- His 'Life' quoted, i. 45.; ii. 5. 64.; ii. 6.; iv. 342.
- Alfred Club, ii. 99. 106.; iii. 233.; iv. 20.
- Algarotti, Francesco, his treatment of Lady M.W. Montagu, iv. 126.
- Ali Pacha of Yanina, account of, i. 290, 317.; vi.
[350](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-12.htm.html#pg350).
-
- Lord Byron's visit to, i. 294.
- His letter in Latin to Lord Byron, ii. 242.
- Allegra (Lord Byron's natural daughter), iv. 133. 133 n. 164. 172. 241. 246. 255. 299.; v. 78. 141. 174.
-
- Her death, v. 328, 329, 330, 362.
- Inscription for a tablet to her memory, v. 335.
- Allen, John, esq., a 'Helluo of books,' ii. 302.
- Althorp, Viscount, iii. 20, 59.
- Alvanley (William Arden), second Lord, iii. 232.
- Ambrosian library at Milan, Lord Byron's visit to, iii. 300.
- 'Americani,' patriotic society so called, v. 105.
- Americans, their freedom acquired by firmness without excess, v. 200.
- Amurath, Sultan, iii. 22.
- 'Anastasius,' Mr. Hope's, his character, iv. 342.
- 'Anatomy of Melancholy,' a most amusing medley of quotations and classical anecdotes, i. 144.
- Ancestry, pride of, one of the most decided features of Lord Byron's character, i. 1.
- Andalusian nobleman, adventures of a young, v. 234.
- Animal food, influence of, on the character, ii, 106.
- Annesley, the residence of Miss Chaworth, i. 80, 83, 84.
- Annesley, Mr., Lord Byron's schoolfellow at Harrow, i. 91.
- Anstey's 'Bath Guide,' indecencies in, iv. 361.
- 'Anti-Byron,' a satire, iii. 14, 57.
- Anti-Jacobin Review, iii. 64.
- Antiloctius, tomb of, i. 316.
- Antinous, the bust of, super-natural, vi.
[373](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg373).
- 'Antiquary,' character of Scott's novel so called, iii. 296.
- 'Antony and Cleopatra,' observations on the play of, ii. 256.
- Apollo Belvidere, iv. 28.
- Arethusa, fountain of, Lord Byron's visit to, vi.
[073](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-2.htm.html#pg073).
- Argenson, Marquis d', his advice to Voltaire, iii. 65 n.
- Argyle Institution, ii. 139, 140.
- Ariosto, Lord Byron's imitation of, ii. 111.;
-
- his portrait by Titian, iv. 8.;
- Measure of his poetry, 65.;
- spared by the robber who had read his 'Orlando Furioso,' v. 15.;
- his courage, vi.
[247](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-8.htm.html#pg247).
- Aristides, ii. 273.
- Aristophanes, Mitchell's translation of, its excellence, iv. 345.
- 'Armageddon,' Townshend's poem so called, ii. 58.
- Armenian Convent of St. Lazarus, iii. 325, 334, 336.
-
- Language, iii. 312, 325, 330.
- Grammar, iii. 315, 334, 335, 354.; iv. 34.
- Art, not inferior to nature, for poetical purposes, vi.
[364](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg364).
- Arts, gulf of, i. 301.
- Ash, Thomas, author of 'The Book,' ii. 334.
-
- Lord Byron's generous conduct towards, ii. 336.
- Athens, Lord Byron's first visit to, i. 305.;
-
- account of the maid of, i. 307, 320.
- Atticus, Herodes, ii. 266.
- Aubonne, iii. 268.
- Augusta, stanzas to, iii. 289, 291.
- Augustus Cæsar, his times, v. 104.
- 'Auld lang syne,' v. 301.
- Authors, an irritable set, iii. 15.
- Avarice, iv. 127. 234.
- 'Away, away, ye notes of woe,' ii: 97.
- 'A year ago you swore,' &c. v. 28.
B.
- Bacon, Lord, on the celibacy of men of genius, iii, 134.
-
- Inaccuracies in his Apophthegms, v. 59, 64.
- Baillie, Joanna, the only woman capable of writing tragedy, in. 168.
- Baillie, Dr., Lord Byron put under his care, i. 44.
- ——, Dr. Matthew, consulted on Lord Byron's supposed insanity, vi.
[277](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-9.htm.html#pg277).
- Baillie 'Long', iii. 235.
- Baillie, Mr. D., i. 138.
- Balgounie, brig of, i. 35.
- Ballater, a residence of Lord Byron in his youth, i. 21.
- Bandello, his history of Romeo and Juliet, iii. 322.
- Bankes, William, esq., i.182. 183.; ii. 146.; iv. 239. 349.
-
- Letters to, i. 124. 126. 264.; ii. 146. 172. 182.; iv. 259. 280. 286.
- Barbarossa, Aruck, ii. 266.
- Barber, J.T., the painter, ii. 79.
- Barff, Mr., Lord Byron's letters to, on the Greek cause, vi.
[161](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-5.htm.html#pg161). [164](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-5.htm.html#pg164). [174](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-5.htm.html#pg174). [175](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-5.htm.html#pg175). [182](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-6.htm.html#pg182). [184](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-6.htm.html#pg184). [185](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-6.htm.html#pg185). [193](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-6.htm.html#pg193). [195](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-6.htm.html#pg195). [196](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-6.htm.html#pg196).
- Barlow, Joel, character of his 'Columbiad', i. 146.
- Barnes, Thomas, esq., ii. 38.
- Barry, Mr., the banker of Genoa, i. xiv.; iv. 232.; vi.
[059](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-2.htm.html#pg059).
- Bartley, George, the comedian, iii. 177.
- ——, Mrs., the actress, iii. 168. 177.
- Bartolini, the sculptor, his bust of Lord Byron, v. 322. 373.
- Bartorini, princess, her monument at Bologna, iv. 162.
- Bath, Lord Byron at, i. 78.
- 'Bath Guide,' Anstey's, iv. 261
- Baths of Penelope, Lord Byron's visit to, vi.
[074](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-2.htm.html#pg074)
- 'Baviad and Mæviad,' extinguishment of the Delia Cruscans by the, iv. 32.
- Bay of Biscay, iii.146.
- Bayes, Mr., caricature of Dryden, v. 264 n.
- Beattie, Dr., his 'Minstrel', i. 64. 212.
- Beaumarchais, his singular good fortune, ii.95.
- Beaumont, Sir George, iii. 166.
- Beauvais, Bishop of, ii. 143.
- Beccaria, anecdote of, iii. 301.
- Becher, Rev. John, Lord Byron's friend, i. 98.
-
- His epilogue to the 'Wheel of Fortune', 117.
- His influence over Lord Byron, 119. 131. 138.
- Letters to, 204. 209. 216.
- Beckford, William, esq., his 'Tales' in continuation of 'Vathek', iv. 91.
- Beggar's Opera,' Gay's, a St. Giles's lampoon, ii. 303.
- Behmen, Jacob, his reverses, ii. 59.
- Bellingham, Lord Byron present at his execution, ii. 152.
- Beloe, Rev. William, character of his 'Sexagenarian', iv. 84.
- Bembo, Cardinal, amatory correspondence between Lucretia Borgia and, iii. 300.
- Benacus, the (now the Lago di Garda), iii. 304.
- Bentham, Jeremy, quackery of his followers, iv. 154. 155.
- Benzoni, Countess, her conversazioni, iv.212.; v. 189.
-
- Some account of, iv. 220.
- 'Beppo, a Venetian Story', iii. 236.; iv. 66. 77. 101.
-
- See also, i. 253.
- Bergami, the Princess of Wales's courier and chamberlain, iii. 333.
- Bernadotte, Jean-Baptiste-Jules, King of Sweden, ii. 240.
- Berni, the father of the Beppo style of writing, iv. 95.
- Berry, Miss, ii. 151.
- 'Bertram,' Mathurin's tragedy of, iii. 184.; iv. 65.
- Bettesworth, Captain (cousin of Lord Byron), the only officer in the navy who had more wounds than Lord Nelson, i. 174.
- Betty, William Henry West (the young Roscius), ii. 160.
- Beyle, M., his 'Histoire de la Peinture en Italie', iii. 302.
-
- His account of an interview with Lord Byron at Milan, iii. 302.
- Bible, the, read through by Lord Byron before he was eight years old, v. 265.
- Biography, iv. 265.
- 'Bioscope, or Dial of Life,' Mr. Grenville Penn's, ii. 170.
- Birch, Alderman, ii. 182.
- Blackett, Joseph, the poetical cobbler, i. 246.; ii. 13. 57. 58.
-
- His posthumous writings,
- Blackstone, Judge, composed his Commentaries with a bottle of port before him, vi.
[354](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg354).
- Blackwood's Magazine, its Remarks on Don Juan, iv. 269.
- Blake, the fashionable tonsor, v. 32.
- Bland, Rev. Robert, ii. 77. 93, 93 n., 95. 297.
- Blaquiere, Mr., vi.
[044](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-1.htm.html#pg044). [142](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-4.htm.html#pg142).
- Bleeding, Lord Byron's prejudice against, vi.
[203](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-7.htm.html#pg203).
- Blessington, Earl of, i. xiv.; iv. 232 n.; vi.
[013](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg013).
-
- Letters to, vi.
[018](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg018). [021](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg021). [023](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg023).
- ——, Countess of, vi.
[013](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg013). [016](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg016), [017](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg017).
-
- Impromptu on her taking a villa called 'Il Paradiso,' vi.
[016](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg016).
- Lines written at the request of, vi, 17.
- Letters to, vi.
[026](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg026). [028](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg028). [058](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-2.htm.html#pg058).
- Blinkensop, Rev. Mr., his Sermon on Christianity, ii. 218.
- Bloomfield, Nathaniel, ii. 25.
- ——, Robert, ii. 25.
- Blount, Martha, Pope's attachment to, vi.
[351](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-12.htm.html#pg351). [388](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-14.htm.html#pg388).
- Blucher, Marshal, iii. 174. 236.
- 'BLUES, THE; a Literary Eclogue,' v. 246.
- 'Boatswain,' Lord Byron's favourite dog, i. 114. 134. 221.
- Boisragon, Dr., ii. 165.
- Bolivar, Simon, v. 342. 343 n.
- Bolder, Mr., Lord Byron's schoolfellow at Harrow, i. 91.
- Bologna, Lord Byron's visit to the cemetery of, iv. 161.
- Bolton, Mr., letters of Lord Byron to, respecting his will, ii. 43. 47. 48.
- Bonneval, Claudius Alexander, Count de, ii. 266.
- Bonstetten, M., iii. 250. 252. 372.
- Books, list of, read by Lord Byron before the age of 15, i. 144,
- Borgia, Lucretia, her amatory correspondence with Cardinal Bembo, iii. 300. 305.
- 'Born in a garret, in a kitchen bred,' iii. 229.
- Borromean Islands, in, 299. 307.
- 'Bosquet de Julie,' iii. 257. 284.
- 'Bosworth Field,' Lord Byron's projected epic entitled, i. 170. 175.
- Botzari, Marco, his letter to Lord Byron, vi.
[075](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-2.htm.html#pg075).
- His death,
[076](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-2.htm.html#pg076).
- Bowers, Mr. (Lord Byron's school-master at Aberdeen), i. 17.
- Bowles, Rev. William Lisle, his controversy concerning Pope, v. 29. 37. 98. 138. 152.; vi.
[350](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-12.htm.html#pg350), [351](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-12.htm.html#pg351). [353](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg353).
-
- His 'Spirit of Discovery,'
[348](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-12.htm.html#pg348).
- His 'invariable principles of poetry,'
[355](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg355).
- His hypochondriacism,
[396](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-14.htm.html#pg396).
- His 'Missionary,'
[406](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-15.htm.html#pg406).
- Lord Byron's 'Letter on his Strictures on the Life and Writings of Pope,'
[346](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-12.htm.html#pg346).
- Lord Byron's 'Observations upon Observations; a Second Letter,' &c.,
[382](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-14.htm.html#pg382).
- Bowring, Dr., Lord Byron's letters to, on the Greek cause, and his intention to embark in it, vi.
[044](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-1.htm.html#pg044). [049](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-1.htm.html#pg049). [060](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-2.htm.html#pg060). [092](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg092). [098](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg098), [099](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg099). [101](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg101). [107](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg107).
- Boxing, ii. 271.
- Bradshaw, Hon. Cavendish, iii. 170.
- Braham, John, the singer, ii. 260.; iii. 145.
- Breme, Marquis de, iii. 307.
- 'BRIDE OF ABYDOS; a Turkish Tale,' ii. 248. 258. 264. 290. 293. 312. 314. 326.; iii. 54. 228.
- Bridge of Sighs at Venice, account of, iv. 40.
- Brientz, town and lake of, iii. 266.
- 'Brig of Balgounie,' i. 35.
- 'British Critic,' ii. 259.
- 'British Review,' its character of the 'Giaour,' ii. 229.
- ——, 'my Grandmother's Review,' iv. 186.;
-
- Lord Byron's letter to the editor, 187.
- Broglie, Duchess of (daughter of Mad. de Staël), her character, iii. 285 n.
-
- Anecdote of, iv. 150.
- Her remark on the errors of clever people, vi.
[260](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-9.htm.html#pg260).
- Brooke, Lord (Sir Fulke Greville), account of a MS. poem by, ii. 181.
- Brougham, Henry, esq. (afterwards Lord Brougham and Vaux), a candidate for Westminster against Sheridan, iii. 12.
- Broughton, the regicide, his monument at Vevay, iii. 256.
- Brown, Isaac Hawkins, his 'Pipe of Tobacco,' ii. 169. 179.;
-
- his 'lava buttons,' iii. 124.
- Browne, Sir Thomas, his 'Religio Medici' quoted, ii. 315.
- Bruce, Mr., i. 348.; ii. 9.
- Brummell, William, esq., iii. 236.
- Bruno, Dr., Lord Byron's medical attendant in Greece, vi.
[055](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-1.htm.html#pg055). [201](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-7.htm.html#pg201).
-
- Anecdote of,
[128](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-4.htm.html#pg128).
- Brussels, iii. 243, 245.
- Bryant, Jacob, on the existence of Troy, v. 70.
- Brydges, Sir Egerton, his 'Letters on the Character and Poetical Genius of Byron,' ii. 195.
-
- His 'Ruminator,' 271.
- Buchanan, Rev. Dr., ii. 232 n.
- Bucke, Rev. Charles, ii. 188.
- Buonaparte, Lucien, his 'Charlemagne,' ii. 93 n., 234.
- ——, Napoleon, one of the most extraordinary of men, ii. 35. 240.; iii. 3. 37. 234.,
-
- that anakim of anarchy, 261.;
- poor little pagod, iii. 21. 62.;
- ode on his fall, 63. 155. 172.;
- fortune's favourite, 156.
- Burdett, Sir Francis, ii. 130. 151.
-
- His style of eloquence, ii. 209.
- Burgage Manor, Notts, the residence of Lord Byron, i. 92.
- Burgess, Sir James Bland, iii. 184.
- Burke, Rt. Hon. Edmund, his oratory, ii. 209.
- Burns, Robert, his habit of reading at meals, i. 139 n.
-
- His elegy on Maillie, 223.
- 'What would he have been, if a patrician?' ii. 257.
- His unpublished letters, 302.
- His rank among poets, vi.
[377](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-14.htm.html#pg377).
- 'Often coarse, but never vulgar,' 413.
- Burton's 'Anatomy of Melancholy,' 'a most amusing and instructive medley,' i. 144.
- Burun, Ralph de, mentioned in Doomsday Book, i. 1.
- Busby, Dr., Dryden's reverential regard for, i. 57.
- ——, Thomas, Mus. Doct., his monologue on the opening of Drury Lane Theatre, ii. 177. 180. 182.
-
- His translation of Lucretius, 262.; iii. 58.
- Butler, Dr. (headmaster at Harrow), i. 64. 87. 167. 200, 201.
-
- Reconciliation between Lord Byron and, 270.
- BYRON, Sir John, the Little, with the great beard, i. 4.
- ——, Sir John, 1st Lord, his high and honourable services, i. 5.
- ——, Sir Richard, tribute to his valour and fidelity, i. 6.
- ——, Admiral John (the grand-father of the poet), his shipwreck and sufferings, i. 6.
- ——, William, fifth Lord (grand-uncle of the poet), i. 6.
-
- His trial for killing Mr. Chaworth in a duel, 7.
- His death, 29.
- His eccentric and unsocial habits, 30.
- BYRON, John (father of the poet), his elopement with Lady Carmarthen, i. 7.
-
- His marriage with Miss Catherine Gordon, 7.
- His death at Valenciennes, 16.
- ——, Mrs. (mother of the poet), descended from the Gordons of Gight, i. 6.
-
- Vehemence of her feelings, 7.
- Ballad on the occasion of her marriage, 8.
- Her fortune, 9 n.
- Separates from her husband, 11.
- Her capricious excesses of fondness and of anger, 13. 38. 103.
- Her death, ii. 31.
- Lord Byron's Letters to, ii. 217. 220. 233. 268. 290. 313. 328. 337. 340. 350. 353. 356.
- See also, i. 101. 104, 105. 107. 347.; ii. 32. 35. 39.; v. 3.
- ——, Honourable Augusta (sister of the poet), i. 7.
-
- See Leigh, Honourable Augusta.
- ——, (GEORGE-GORDON-BYRON), sixth Lord—
-
- 1788. Born Jan. 22., in Holles Street, London, i. 10.
- 1790-1791. Taken by his mother to Aberdeen, i. 11.
-
-
- Impetuosity of his temper, 12.
- Affectionate sweetness and playfulness of his disposition, 13.
- The malformation of his foot a source of pain and uneasiness to him, 14.
- His early acquaintance with the Sacred Writings, 14.
- Instances of his quickness and energy, 15.
- Death of his father, 16.
-
- 1792-1795; Sent to a day-school at Aberdeen, i. 17.
-
-
- His own account of the progress of his infantine studies, 18.
- His sports and exercises, 20.
-
- 1796-1797. Removed into the Highlands, i. 21.
-
-
- His visits to Lachin-y-gair, 22.
- First awakening of his poetic talent, 22.
- His early love of mountain scenery, 25.
- Attachment for Mary Duff, 26.
-
- 1798. Succeeds to the title, i. 29.
-
-
- Made a ward of Chancery, under the guardianship of the Earl of Carlisle, and removed to Newstead, 33.
- Placed under the care of an empiric at Nottingham for the cure of his lameness, 41.
-
- 1799. First symptom of a tendency towards rhyming, i. 42.
-
-
- Removed to London, and put under the care of Dr. Baillie, 44.
- Becomes the pupil of Dr. Glennie, at Dulwich, 44.
-
- 1800-1804. His boyish love for his cousin, Margaret Parker, i. 52.
-
-
- His 'first dash into poetry,' 52.
- Is sent to Harrow, 54.
- Notices of his school-life, 60.
- His first Harrow verses, 61.
- His school friendships, 66.
- His mode of life as a schoolboy, 76.
- Accompanies his mother to Bath, 78.
- His early attachment to Miss Chaworth, 79.
- Heads a 'rebelling' at Harrow, 86.
- Passes the vacation at Southwell, 92.
-
- 1805. Removed to Cambridge, i. 92.
-
-
- His college friendships, 93.
-
- 1806. Aug.-Nov., prepares a collection of his poems for the press, i. 110.
-
-
- His visit to Harrowgate, 113.
- Southwell private theatricals, 116.
- Prints a volume of his poems; but, at the entreaty of Mr. Becher, commits the edition to the flames, 118.
-
- 1807. Publishes 'Hours of Idleness,' i. 129.
-
-
- List of historical writers whose works he had perused at the age of nineteen, 140.
- Reviews Wordsworth's Poems, 169.
- Begins 'Bosworth Field,' an epic. Writes part of a novel, 175.
-
- 1808. His early scepticism, i. 177.
-
-
- Effect produced on his mind by the critique on 'Hours of Idleness,' in the Edinburgh Review, 204.
- Passes his time between the dissipations of London and Cambridge, 210.
- Takes up his residence at Newstead, 216.
- Forms the design of visiting India, 220.
- Prepares 'English Bards and Scotch Reviewers,' for the press, 226.
-
- 1809. His coming of age celebrated at Newstead, i. 227.
-
-
- Takes his seat in the House of Lords, 235.
- Loneliness of his position at this period, 241.
- Sets out on his travels, 251.
- State of mind in which he took leave of England, 259.
- Visits Lisbon, Seville, Cadiz, Gibraltar, Malta, Prevesa, Zitza, Tepaleen, 277.
- Is introduced to Ali Pacha, 277-288.
- Begins 'Childe Harold' at Ioannina, in Albania, 313.
- Visits Actium, Nicopolis; nearly lost in a Turkish ship of war; proceeds through Acarnania and Ætolia towards the Morea, 301.
- Reaches Missolonghi, 302.
- Visits Patras, Vostizza, Mount Parnassus, Delphi, Lepanto, Thebes, Mount Cithæron, 303.
- Arrives, on Christmas-day, at Athens, 305.
-
- 1810. Spends ten weeks in visiting the monuments of Athens; makes excursions to several parts of Attica, 307.
-
-
- The Maid of Athens, 310.
- Leaves Athens for Smyrna, 312.
- Visits ruins of Ephesus, 313.
- Concludes, at Smyrna, the second canto of 'Childe Harold,' 313.
- April, leaves Smyrna for Constantinople. 315.
- Visits the Troad. 316.
- Swims from Sestos to Abydos, ibid.
- May, arrives at Constantinople. 323.
- June, expedition through the Bosphorus to the Black Sea. 325.
- July, visits Corinth. 341.
- Aug.-Sept., makes a tour of the Morea, 340.
- Returns to Athens.346.
-
- 1811. Writes 'Hints from Horace,' and 'Curse of Minerva.' 350.
-
-
- Returns to England, 354.
- Effect of travel on the general character of his mind and disposition, ii. 1.
- His first connection with Mr. Murray. 30.
- Death of his mother. 31.
- Of his college friends, Matthews and Wingfield, 39. 50.
- And of 'Thyrza,' 75.
- Origin of his acquaintance with Mr. Moore, 79.
- Act of generosity towards Mr. Hodgson, 108.
-
- 1812. Feb. 27., makes his first speech in the House of Lords, ii. 120.
-
-
- Feb. 29., publishes the first and second cantos of 'Childe Harold,' 131.
- Presents the copyright of the poem to Mr. Dallas, 138.
- Although far advanced in a fifth edition of 'English Bards,' determines to commit it to the flames, 145.
- Presented to the Prince Regent, 153.
- Writes the Address for the opening of Drury Lane Theatre, 158.
-
- 1813. April, brings out anonymously 'The Waltz,' ii. 187.
-
-
- May, publishes the 'Giaour,' 188.
- His intercourse, through Mr. Moore, with Mr. Leigh Hunt, 204.
- Makes preparations for a voyage to the East, 217.
- Projects a journey to Abyssinia, 232.
- Dec., publishes the 'Bride of Abydos,' 312.
- Is an unsuccessful suitor for the hand of Miss Milbanke, 338.
-
- 1814. Jan., publishes the 'Corsair,' iii. 24.
-
-
- April, writes 'Ode on the Fall of Napoleon Buonaparte,' 63.
- Comes to the resolution, not only of writing no more, but of suppressing all he had ever written, 70.
- May, writes 'Lara;' makes a second proposal for the hand of Miss Milbanke, and is accepted, 113.
- Dec., writes 'Hebrew Melodies,' 141.
-
- 1815. Jan 2., marries Miss Milbanke, iii. 139.
-
-
- April, becomes personally acquainted with Sir Walter Scott, 159.
- May, becomes a member of the sub-committee of Drury Lane theatre, 170.
- Pressure of pecuniary embarrassments, 191.
-
- 1816. Jan., Lady Byron adopts the resolution of separating from him, iii. 198.
-
-
- Samples of the abuse lavished on him, 216 n.
- March, writes 'Fare thee well,' and 'A Sketch,' 229.
- April, leaves England, 238.
- His route—Brussels, Waterloo, &c., 243.
- Takes up his abode at the Campagne Diodati, 246.
- Finishes, June 27, the third canto of 'Childe Harold,' 247.
- Writes, June 28, 'The Prisoner of Chillon,' 285.
- Writes, in July, 'Monody on the Death of Sheridan,' 'the Dream,' 'Darkness,' 'Epistle to Augusta,' 'Churchill's Grave,' 'Prometheus,' 'Could I remount,' 'Sonnet to Lake Leman,' and part of 'Manfred,' 287.
- August, an unsuccessful negotiation for a domestic reconciliation, 284.
- Sept., makes a tour of the Bernese Alps, 256.
- His intercourse with Mr. Shelley, 269.
- Oct., proceeds to Italy—route, Martiguy, the Simplon, Milan, Verona, 297-308.
- Nov., takes up his residence at Venice, 311,
- Marianna Segati, 311.
- Studies the Armenian language, 312.
-
- 1817. Feb., finishes 'Manfred,' iii. 345.
-
-
- March, translates from the Armenian, a correspondence between
- St. Paul and the Corinthians, 370.
- April, visits Ferrara, and writes 'Lament of Tasso,' iv. 11.
- Makes a short visit to Rome, and writes there a new third act to 'Manfred,' 13.
- July, writes, at Venice, the fourth canto of 'Childe Harold,' 48.
- Oct., writes 'Beppo,' 66.
-
- 1818. The Fornarina, Margaritta Cogni, iv. 112.
-
-
- July, writes 'Ode on Venice,' 125.
- Nov., finishes 'Mazeppa,' 137.
-
- 1819. Jan., finishes second canto of 'Don Juan,' iv. 139.
-
-
- April, beginning of his acquaintance with the Countess Guiccioli, 143.
- June, writes 'Stanzas to the Po,' 155.
- Dec., completes the third and fourth cantos of 'Don Juan,' iv. 262.
- Removes to Ravenna, 270.
-
- 1820. Jan., domesticated with Countess Guiccioli, iv. 276.
-
-
- Feb., translates first canto of the 'Morgante Maggiore,' 279.
- March, finishes 'Prophecy of Dante,' 291.
- Translates 'Francesa of Rimini,' 293.
- And writes 'Observations upon an Article in Blackwood's Magazine,' 308.
- April-July, writes 'Marino Faliero,' 333.
- Oct.-Nov., writes fifth canto of 'Don Juan,' v. 37.
-
- 1821. Feb., writes 'Letter on the Rev. W.L. Bowles's Strictures on the Life of Pope,' v. 99.
-
-
- March, 'Second Letter,' &c. 143.
- May, finishes 'Sardanapalus,' 187.
- July, 'The Two Foscari,' 197.
- Sept., 'Cain,' 239.
- Oct., writes 'Heaven and Earth, a Mystery,' 282.;
- and 'Vision of Judgment,' 261.
- Removes to Pisa, 269-280.
-
- 1822. Jan., finishes 'Werner,' v. 310.
-
-
- Sept, removes to Genoa, v. 355.
- His coalition with Hunt in the 'Liberal,' vi.
[003](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg003).
-
- 1823. April, turns his views towards Greece, vi.
[042](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-1.htm.html#pg042).
-
-
- Receives a communication from the London committee,
[049](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-1.htm.html#pg049).
- May, offers to proceed to Greece, and to devote his resources to the object in view,
[049](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-1.htm.html#pg049).
- Preparations for his departure,
[054](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-1.htm.html#pg054).
- July 14., sails for Greece,
[062](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-2.htm.html#pg062).
- Reaches Argostoli,
[071](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-2.htm.html#pg071).
- Excursion to Ithaca,
[073](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-2.htm.html#pg073).
- Waits, at Cephalonia, the arrival of the Greek fleet,
[082](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-2.htm.html#pg082).
- His conversations on religion with Dr. Kennedy at Mataxata,
[085](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-2.htm.html#pg085).
- His letters to Madame Guiccioli,
[090](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg090).
- His address to the Greek government,
[095](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg095).
- And remonstrance to Prince Mavrocordati,
[096](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg096).
- Testimonies to the benevolence and soundness of his views,
[110](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg110).
- Instances of his humanity and generosity while at Cephalonia,
[112](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg112).
-
- 1824. Jan. 5., arrives at Missolonghi, vi.
[124](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-4.htm.html#pg124).
-
-
- Writes 'Lines on completing my thirty-sixth year,'
[137](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-4.htm.html#pg137).
- Intended attack upon Lepanto,
[147](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-4.htm.html#pg147).
- Is made commander-in-chief of the expedition,
[148](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-4.htm.html#pg148).
- Rupture with the Suliotes,
[157](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-5.htm.html#pg157).
- The expedition suspended,
[157](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-5.htm.html#pg157).
- His last illness, vi.
[158](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-5.htm.html#pg158).
- His death, vi.
[211](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-7.htm.html#pg211).
- His funeral, vi.
[222](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-7.htm.html#pg222).
- Inscription on his monument, vi.
[233](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-8.htm.html#pg233).
- His will, vi.
[284](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-10.htm.html#pg284).
- His person, i. 137. 218.; vi.
[253](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-8.htm.html#pg253), [254](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-8.htm.html#pg254).
- His sensitiveness on the subject of his lameness, i. 14. 38. 138. 224. 256.; ii. 196. 319.; iii. 41. 241.; vi.
[013](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg013).
- His abstemiousness, i. 347.; ii. 264. 300.; iii. 281.; v. 30.
- His habitual melancholy, i. 264.; ii. 151.; iii, 209.; v. 247. 263.; vi.
[260](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-9.htm.html#pg260).
- His tendency to make the worst of his own obliquities, i. 190.; ii. 136.; iv. 291.; v. 60. 69.
- His generosity and kind-heartedness, i. 136. 254. 280 n.; ii. 108. 265.336.; iii. 25. 183 n.; iv. 235.; v. 86. 92. 215. 272.; vi.
[074](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-2.htm.html#pg074). [112](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg112). [134](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-4.htm.html#pg134).
- His politics, ii. 311. 334.; iii. 34. 163.
- His religious opinions, ii. 112.; iii. 163.
- His tendency to superstition, i. 136.
- Portraits of him, ii. 175. 180. 187. 280. 324.; iii. 97. 98. 104. 109. 139. 141.; iv. 7. 33. 95.; v. 200. 322. 336. 343. 354. 355. 373.; vi.
[029](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg029).
- Byron, Lady, ii. 57.; iii. 171. 175. 178 n. 189. 203. 204. 214.; iv. 251. 270. 272. 282.; v. 4.; vi.
[026](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg026). [028](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg028). [114](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg114).
-
- Her remarks on Mr. Moore's Life of Lord Byron, vi.
[275](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-9.htm.html#pg275).
- Lord Byron's letters to, v. 258.; vi.
[030](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-1.htm.html#pg030).
- ——, Honourable Augusta Ada, iii. 195. 202. 297. 298. 328. 332.; iv. 79. 164. 351.; v. 292. 370; vi.
[025](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg025). [030](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-1.htm.html#pg030). [113](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg113).
- Byron, (George) seventh lord, ii. 285. 288.; iv. 26.
- ——, Eliza, ii. 254. 258.
- ——, Henry, ii. 254.
C.
- Cadiz, described, i. 279. 282.
- Cæsar, Julius, his times, v. 104.
- Cahir, Lady, iii. 81.
- 'CAIN, a Mystery,' alleged blasphemies, v. 305. 313. 324. 338.
-
- See also, v. 88. 230. 280. 308. 309. 318.
- Caledonian meeting, 'Address intended to be recited at', iii. 85.
- Calvert, Mr., Lord Byron's schoolfellow at Harrow, i. 91.
- Cambridge, Lord Byron's entry into Trinity College, i. 92.
-
- A chaos of din and drunkenness, i. 174.
- Lord Byron's distaste to, 126. 196. 238.
- Camoens, distinguished himself in war, i. 64 n.
- Campbell, Thomas, esq., his first introduction to Lord Byron, ii. 91.
-
- Coleridge lecturing against him, 95. 98.
- His 'Pleasures of Hope', 240.
- The best of judges, 292.
- His unpublished poem on a scene in Germany, iii. 109.
- Inadvertencies in his 'Lives of the Poets', iv. 311.; v. 68, 69.
- His 'Gertrude of Wyoming' full of false scenery, v. 70.
- See, also, ii. 101. 293.; ii. 9.
- Canning, Right Hon. George, ii. 222.
-
- His oratory, ii. 208.
- ——, Sir Stratford, his poem entitled 'Buonaparte', iii. 69. 109.
- Canova, vi.
[363](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg363).
-
- His early love, i. 26.
- Cant, 'the grand primum mobile of England', vi.
[353](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg353).
- Cantemir, Demetrius, his 'History of the Ottoman Empire,', i. 141.
- Carlile, Richard, folly of his trial, iv. 258.
- Carlisle (Frederick Howard), fifth Earl of, becomes Lord Byron's guardian, i. 33. 39.
-
- His alleged neglect of his ward, i. 228. 234. 267. 330.
- Proposed reconciliation between Lord Byron and, iii. 30. 44. 51. 93.
- Caroline, Queen of England, iv. 341.; v. 2. 27. 29. 36. 228. 230.
- Carmarthen, Marchioness of, i. 7.; ii. 244.
- Caro, Annibale, his translations from the classics, v. 72.
- Carpenter, James, the bookseller, i. 172.
- Carr, Sir John, the traveller, i. 279.; iii. 112.
- Cartwright, Major, iv. 171.
- Cary, Rev. Henry Francis, his translation of Dante, iv. 166.
- Castanos, General, i. 284.
- Castellan, A.L., his 'Moeurs des Ottomans', ii. 238.
- Castlereagh, Viscount, (Robert Stewart, Marquis of Londonderry), iii. 172. 174, 251.; iv. 138. 141.
- Catholic emancipation, ii. 147.
- 'Cato,' Pope's prologue to, ii. 165.
- Catullus, his 'Atys' not licentious, vi.
[400](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-15.htm.html#pg400).
- 'Cavalier Servente', iv. 100. 177.
- Cawthorn, Mr., the bookseller, i. 242.; ii. 96.
- Caylus, Count de, iv. 179.
- 'Cecilia,' Miss Burney's, ii. 97, 97 n.
- Celibacy of eminent philosophers, iii. 134.
- Centlivre, Mrs., character of her comedies, iv. 297.
-
- Drove Congreve from the stage, v. 116.
- 'Cenci,' Shelley's, v. 115.
- Chamouni, remarks on the scenery of, iii, 253. 257. 274.
- Charlemont, Lady, Lord Byron's admiration of, ii. 258.; vi.
[362](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg362).
- ——, Mrs., iii. 202.; iv. 2.; vi.
[276](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-9.htm.html#pg276).
- Charles the Fifth, iii. 22.
-
Charlotte, the Princess, attacks upon Lord Byron in consequence of his verses to, iii. 1. 72.
Death of, iv. 74.
- Chatham, Lord, a notice of, in one of Lord Byron's early poems, i. 131.
-
- His oratory, ii. 209.
- Chatterton, Thomas, self-educated, i. 145.
-
- Never vulgar, vi.
[413](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-15.htm.html#pg413).
- Chaucer, Geoffrey, character of his poetry, i. 148.
- Chauncy, Captain, v. 336.
- Chaworth, Mary Anne (afterwards Mrs. Musters), Lord Byron's early attachment to, i. 79.
-
- His last farewell of her, 84.
- Her marriage, 86.
- Interview with, after her marriage, 257.
- Cheltenham, Lord Byron at, i. 56.
- Childe Alarique, ii.271.
- 'CHILDE HAROLD'S PILGRIMAGE,' the poem commenced, i. 313.;
-
- first produced to Mr. Dallas, ii. 15.
- The author's false judgment concerning, 16.
- Identification of Lord Byron's character with, 53.
- Mr. Gifford's opinion of the poem, 61.
- Preparations for publication, 79.
- Its progress through the press, 109.
- Mr. Moore's opinion, 113.
- Its publication and instantaneous success, 131.;
- alleged resemblance to Marmion in it, iii. 70.
- The 3d Canto written, 245. 247.
- Progress of the 4th Canto, iv. 40. 47.
- 2500 guineas asked for it, 59. 62.
- The translation confiscated in Italy, 308.
- 'The sublimest poetical achievement of mortal pen', vi.
[033](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-1.htm.html#pg033).
- Chillon, Castle of, iii. 247. 257.; iv. 3. 231.
- 'CHILLON, PRISONER OF, iii. 285.; iv. 27.221.
- Christ, what proved him the Son of God, vi.
[369](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg369).
- 'Christabel', Lord Byron's admiration of, iii. 193. 255. 320. 331.
- Cicero, Antony's treatment of, ii. 257.
- Cid, i. 143.
- Cigars, ii. 296.
- Cintra, the most beautiful village in the world, i. 277. 280.
- Clare (John Fitzgibbon), Earl of, i. 63. 65. 69. 71. 73, 74, 75, 99. 121.; ii. 101.; v. 277. 311. 340. 360.
- Clare, John, the poet, vi.
[404](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-15.htm.html#pg404).
- Clarens, iii. 247. 257. 274.
- Claridge, Mr., i. 63.
- 'Clarissa Harlowe.' ii. 309.
- Clarke, Rev. James Stanier, his 'Naufragia.' ii. 214.
- Clarke, Hewson, i. 245.
- Classical education, i. 197.
- Claudian, the 'ultimus Romanorum.' iv. 139.
- Claughton, Mr., ii. 173 n.; iii. 95. 101. 104. 118.
- Clayton, Mr., i. 63.
- Clitumnus, the river, iv. 31.
- Clubs, iii. 233.
- Coates, Romeo, his Lothario, iii. 102.
- Cobbett, William, ii. 261.; vi.
[076](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-2.htm.html#pg076).
- Cochrane, Lord, iii. 12.; vi.
[187](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-6.htm.html#pg187).
- 'Cockney school' of poetry, vi.
[410](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-15.htm.html#pg410).
- Cogni, Margarita (the Fornarina), story of, iv. 112, 113.
- Coldham, Mr., ii. 122.
- Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, esq., his 'Devil's Walk,' ii. 304.
-
- His 'Remorse,' iii. 158.
- His 'Zopolia,' iii. 190.
- His 'Biographia Literaria,' iv. 65.
- His 'Christabel,' iii. 193. 255. 321. 331.
- Lord Byron's letters to, i. 245, 246.; ii. 225.
- See also, ii. 94, 95. 98. 101.; iii. 50. 158. 181. 183. 190, 191. 321. 331.; iv. 65.
- Colman, George, esq., his prologue to 'Philaster,' ii. 165.
- ——, George, jun., esq., parallel between Sheridan and, ii. 204.; iii. 188. 259.
- Colocotroni, vi.
[156](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-5.htm.html#pg156). 176.
- Colonna, Cape, i. 307. 317.; vi.
[359](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg359).
-
- Columns of, vi.
[359](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg359).
- Comedy more difficult to compose than Tragedy, ii. 300.
- Concanen, Mr., iii. 179.
- Congreve, self-educated, i. 145.
-
- His comedies, iii. 12.; iv. 297.
- Driven from the stage by Mrs. Centlivre, v. 116.
- Constance (a German lady), v. 73.
- Constant, Benjamin de, his 'Adolphe,' iii. 251.
- Constantinople, St. Sophia, i. 329.
-
- The seraglio, 330.
- The first sea view, iv. 5.
- Cooke, George Frederick, tragedian, an American Life of, ii. 231,
-
- The most natural of actors, iii. 77.
- Coolidge, Mr., of Boston, v. 196. 199.
- Copet, iii. 250. 254, 255. 285, 285 n.
- Cordova, Admiral, i. 282.
- ——, Sennorita, i. 282.
- 'Corinne,' notes written by Lord Byron in, iv. 193.
- Corinth, i. 340.
- ——, capture of, vi.
[092](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg092).
-
- See 'SIEGE OF CORINTH.'
- Cork, Countess of, iii. 152.
- Cornwall, Barry (Bryan Walter Proctor), v. 115. 240.
- 'CORSAIR, the; a Tale,' iii. 2. 12. 26. 28. 54, 54 n., 228.
- 'Cosmopolite,' an amusing little volume full of French flippancy, ii. 70.
- Cotin, L'Abbé, i. 231 n.
- Cottin, Madame, vi.
[390](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-14.htm.html#pg390).
- 'Could I remount the river of my years,' iii. 289.
- 'Courier,' its attacks on Lord Byron, iii. 1 n., 2. 40. 46. 48. 93.
- Courtenay, John, esq., anecdotes of, 211.
- Cowell, Mr. John, Letters to, ii. 119. iii. 123.
- Cowley, Abraham, his 'Essays' quoted, i. 89.
-
- His character, ii. 194.
- Cowper, Earl, iii. 93.; vi.
[019](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg019).
- ——, Countess, v. 254.
- ——, William, famous at cricket and football, i. 64 n.
-
- His remark on the English system of education, 65 n.
- His spaniel 'Beau,' 223.
- An example of filial tenderness, ii. 33 n.
- 'No poet,' vi.
[373](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg373).
- His translation of Homer,
[373](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg373).
- Crabbe, Rev. George, the just tribute to, in 'English Bards,' i. 231, 232.
-
- His 'Resentment,' ii. 229 n.
- His quality as a poet, iv. 64. 139.
- 'The father of present poesy,' 80.
- Crebillon, the younger, his marriage, vi.
[391](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-14.htm.html#pg391).
- Cribb, Tom, the pugilist, ii. 277.; vi.
[399](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-15.htm.html#pg399).
- Cricketing, one of Lord Byron's most favourite sports, i. 133.; v. 34.
- 'Critic,' Sheridan's, 'too good for a farce,' ii. 303.
- 'Critical Review,' its praise of Lord Byron's poetry, i. 176.
- Croker, Right Hon. John Wilson, his query concerning the title of the 'Bride of Abydos,' ii. 293.
-
- His 'guess' as to the origin of 'Beppo iv. 95.
- Lord Byron's letter to, ii. 225.
- His 'Boswell' quoted, ii. 31. 50. 355.; iv. 84.; v. 30.
- Crosby, Benjamin, i. 170. 173.
- Crowe, Rev, William, his criticism in 'English Bards,' ii. 213.
- Curioni, Signor, singer, v. 126.
- Curran, Right Hon. John Philpot, Lord Byron's enthusiastic praise, ii. 245.; iii. 234.
- 'Curse of Kebama,' ii. 68. 94.
- 'CURSE OF MINERVA,' ii. 145. 178. 180.
- Curzon, Mr., i. 61. 65. 151.
- Cuvìer, Baron, v. 245.
D.
- Dallas, Robert Charles, commencement of his acquaintance with Lord
- Byron, i. 177.
-
- Childe Harold first shown to him, ii. 15.
- Copywright of the Corsair presented to him, iii. 25. 49.
- His ingratitude, iv. 288.
- See also, i. 190.; ii. 45. 47. 104.
- Lord Byron's letters to, i. 191. 193.; ii. 12. 49. 52. 56. 58. 61. 66. 68. 69. 71.; iii. 47.
- Dalrymple, Sir Hew, i. 280.
- D'Alton, John, esq., his 'Dermid,' iii. 172.
- Dandies, iii. 4. 232.
- Dante, his early passion for Beatrice, i 26 n.
-
- His infelicitous marriage, iii. 127.
- His poem celebrated long before his death, v. 15.
- His popularity, 93.
- His gentle feelings, 93.
- Lord Byron's resemblance to, vi.
[232](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-8.htm.html#pg232).
- See also, i. 64 n.; iii. 127. 220.; vi.
[368](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg368).
- 'PROPHECY OF,' iv. 291. 308.
- D'Arblay, Madame (Miss Burney), 1000 guineas asked for one of her novels, ii. 96. 100.
-
- Her 'Cecilia,' 97.
- See also, ii. 333.
- Darnley, death of, a fine subject for a drama, iii. 287.
- 'DARKNESS,' iii. 59.
- Darwin, Dr. Erasmus, put down by the Anti-Jacobin, v. 13.
- Davies, Scrope, esq., i. 186,; ii. 39, 40. 51. 63, 63 n.; iii. 20. 235.
- Davy, Sir Humphry, iii. 166.; iv. 303. 309.
- Dawkins, Mr., v. 331.
- 'DEAR DOCTOR, I have read your play,' iv. 54.
- Death, iv. 52. 197.; v. 86. 90.
- Death, in the Apocalypse, iii. 263.
- De Bath, Lord, i. 65.
- Deformity, an incentive to distinction, iii. 241.
- D'Egville, John, the ballet-master, i. 213.
- Delaval, Sir Francis Blake, v. 97.
- Delawarr (George-John West), fifth Earl, i. 69. 121.; ii. 101.
- Delia, poetical epistle from, to Lord Byron, iii. 217 n.
- Delladecima, Count, vi.
[111](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg111).
-
- His opinion of Lord Byron's conduct in Greece,
[111](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg111) n.
- Delphi, fountain of, i. 304. 317.
- Demetrius, ii. 183.
- Denham, his 'Cowper's Hill,' ii. 193.
- Dent de Jument, iii. 258.
- Dervish Tahiri, Lord Byron's faithful Arnaout guide, iii. 194 n.
- 'Devil's Drive,' the, ii. 304.
- Devil's Walk,' Porson's, ii. 304.
- Devonshire, Duchess of (Lady Elizabeth Foster), her character of the Roman government, v. 206 n.
- 'Diary of an Invalid,' Matthews's, its merit, iv. 342.
- Dibdin, Thomas, play-wright, v. 190.
- Dick, Mr., i. 182.
- Diderot, his definition of sensibility, iii. 128.
- Digestion, iii. 5.
- Dioclesian, iii. 22.
- Dionysius at Corinth, iii. 22.
- D'Israeli, J., esq. his 'Essay on the Literary Character,' i. 63.; ii. 7 n.; iii. 134.
-
- His 'Quarrels of Authors,' iii. 15. 171.
- His remark on the effect of medicine upon the mind and spirits, v. 264 n.
- 'Distrest Mother,' excellence of the epilogue to, ii. 165.
- D'Ivernois, Sir Francis, iii. 233.
- Divorce, ii. 310.
- Dogs, fidelity of, i. 223.; iii. 143.
- ——-, Lord Byron's fondness for, i. 134.
-
- His epitaph on 'Boatswain,' 222.
- Don, Brig of, i. 36.
- Donegal, Lady, iii. 9.
- 'DON JUAN,' a scene in it adapted from the 'Narrative of the Shipwreck of the Juno, in 1795,' i. 49.
-
- Commencement of the poem, iv. 121.
- The 1st canto finished, 134.
- 50 copies to be printed privately, 138.
- 2nd canto, 141.
- 'Nonsensical prudery' against it, 171.
- Mr. Murray in a fright about it, 177.
- The papers not so fierce as was anticipated, 179.
- Authorship to be kept anonymous, 186. 195. 351.; v. 34.
- General outcry against the poem, iv. 238. 250.
- Spurious 3rd cantos. 253.
- Mr. Murray going to law, 260.
- The author hurt but not frightened, 304.
- A French lady's compliments, 354.
- Third canto, v. 118.
- The fifth canto hardly the beginning of the poem, 126.
- The Countess Guiccioli's intercession for its discontinuance, 201. 238.
- Shelley's opinion of it, 220.
- The poem all 'real life', 226.
- Errors of the press, 231.
- Partiality of the Germans for, 336.
- Permission from the Countess to continue it, 348.
- Three more cantos, 351.
- Another, 354.
- The 'Quarterly' Review of the poem, 371
- An epitome of the author's character, vi.
[034](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-1.htm.html#pg034).
- Donna Bianca, or White Lady of Colalto the story of her supernatural appearance, v. 31.
- D'Orsay, Count, vi.
[013](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg013).
-
- His 'Journal',
[018](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg018). [022](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg022).
- Lord Byron's letter to,
[024](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg024).
- Dorset (George-John Frederick), fourth Duke of, i. 69. 151.; ii. 151. 153.
-
- 'LINES occasioned by the death of', iii. 151.
- Dorville, Mr, iv. 171.
- Dovedale, Lord Byron's eulogy of the scenery of, iii. 369.
- Dramatists, old English, 'full of gross faults', v. 115.
-
- 'Not good as models', 145.
- 'DREAM,' The, its production, iii. 287.
-
- The most mournful and picturesque story that ever came from the pen and heart of man, 288.
- 'One of the most interesting' of Lord Byron's poems, i 83.
- Dreams, ii. 270.
- Drummond, Sir William, ii. 95.
-
- His 'OEdipus Judaicus', ii. 97.
- ——, Mr., Lord Byron's schoolfellow at Harrow, i. 91.
- Drury, Rev. Henry, Lord Byron's letters to, i. 200. 270. 315. 325. 358.; ii. 122.
- ——, Rev. Dr. Joseph, his account of Lord Byron's disposition and capabilities while at Harrow, i. 57.
-
- Lord Byron's character of, i. 64.
- His retirement from the mastership of Harrow, i. 86.
- Drury, Mark, i. 87.
- Drury Lane Theatre, ii. 171. 174. 176.; iii. 181. 183.
-
- 'ADDRESS, spoken at the opening of', ii. 161.; iii. 181. 183.
- Dryden, his praise of Oxford, at the expense of Cambridge, i. 198.
-
- Eulogy of his 'Fables' by Lord Byron, v. 18.
- 'Duenna,' Lord Byron's partiality for the songs in, i. 101.
- Duff, Colonel (Lord Byron's god-father), i. 101.
- ——, Miss Mary (afterwards Mrs. Robert Cockburn), Lord Byron's boyish attachment for, i. 26.; ii. 261.
- Dulwich, Lord Byron at school there, i. 44.
- Dumont, M, iv. 202.
- Duncan, Mr., Lord Byron's writing-master at Aberdeen, i. 19.
- Dwyer, Mr, i. 318.
- Dyer's 'Grongar Hill', vi.
[365](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg365).
E.
- Eagles, a flight of, iii. 17.
- Eboli, Princess of, epigram on her losing an eye, vi.
[390](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-14.htm.html#pg390).
- Eclectic Review, its strictures on 'Hours of Idleness', i. 192.
- Eddleston, the Cambridge chorister, Lord Byron's protegé, i. 93. 160-161, 162. 164 n.; ii. 76.
- Edgecombe, Mr, iv. 155. 173.
- Edgehill, Battle, seven brothers of the Byron family at, i. 6.
- Edgeworth, Richard Lovell, esq., sketch of, v. 78.
- ——, Maria, v. 78-80.
- Edinburgh Annual Register, ii. 78.
- Edinburgh Review, its memorable critique on the 'Hours of Idleness'. i. 204, 205.
-
- Its effect on the author, 290.; ii. 266.; v. 144. 146.
- Its review of the 'Corsair' and 'Bride of Abydos', iii. 96.
- Education, English system of, i. 65. 199.
- Elba, Isle of, Lord Byron's 'Ode to Napoleon Buonaparte' on his retreat to, iii.65.
- Eldon, Earl of, i. 236, 237.; ii. 129.
-
- Anecdote of, ii. 149.
- Elgin, Earl of, severe treatment of, in 'English Bards', ii. 29.
-
- The 'Curse of Minerva' levelled against him, iii. 145.
- Ellice, Edward, esq., letter to, v. 342.
- Ellis, George, esq., ii. 259.
- Ellison, Lord Byron's school-fellow at Harrow, i. 91.
- Elliston, Robert William, comedian, Lord Byron's wish that he should speak his 'Address' at Drury Lane theatre, ii. 162. 166.
- Eloquence, state of, in England, ii. 209.
- Endurance, of more worth than talent, iii. 296.
- ENGLISH BARDS AND SCOTCH REVIEWERS, the groundwork laid before the appearance of the critique in the 'Edinburgh Review', i. 175.
-
- Sent to Mr. Harness, 238.
- Success of the satire, 242.
- The author's regret in having written it, 244.; ii. 13. 145. 236. 259. 280.; iii. 159.; vi.
[348](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-12.htm.html#pg348). [350](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-12.htm.html#pg350).
- Refusal to republish it, iv. 69.
- Attempted publication of, in Ireland, iii. 110.; v. 128.
- Englishman, Otway's three requisites for an, ii. 51.
- Envy, vi.
[371](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg371).
- Ephesus, ruins of, i. 313.
- EPIGRAM on Moore's Operatic Farce, or Farcical Opera, ii. 65.
- Erskine, Lord, his eloquence, ii. 209.;
-
- his famous pamphlet, iii. 10. 17.
- See, also, ii. 157.
- Essex (George-Capel), fifth Earl of, iii. 93. 170.
- Euxine, or Black Sea, description of, vi.
[358](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg358).
- Ewing, Dr., i. 55.
- Exeter 'Change, visit to, ii. 256.
F.
- Faber, Rev. George, ii. 232 n.
- Fainting, sensation of, iii. 254.
- Falconer, his 'Shipwreck', vi.
[357](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg357). [365](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg365).
- Falkland (Lucius Gary), Viscount, killed in a duel by Mr. Powell, i. 233.
- 'Father of Light! Great God of Heaven!', i. 154.
- Falkner, Mr., Lord Byron's letter to, with a copy of his poems, i. 128.
- Fall of Terni, iv. 31.
- Falmouth, i. 272.
- Fame, first tidings of, to Lord Byron, ii. 288.
-
- See. also, 301.; iv. 160.; v.55. 76. 199.
- 'FARE THEE WELL, and if for ever', iii. 229.
- Farrell, D., esq., i. 182. 185.
- Fatalism, ii. 272.
- 'Faust,' Goethe's, iii. 375.; iv. 67.
- 'Faustus,' Marlow's, iv. 67.
- Fawcett, John, comedian., v. 112.
- 'Fazio,' Milman's tragedy of, iv. 92.
- Fear, v. 89. 90.
- Ferrara, Lord Byron's visit to, iv. 158.
- Fersen, Count, iii. 317.
- Fidler, Ernest, i. 21.
- Fielding, 'the prose Homer of human nature.' v. 55.
- Finlay, Kirkman, esq., vi.
[089](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg089).
- Fitzgerald, Lord Edward, iii. 11.
- ——, William Thomas, esq., poetaster, iii. 29. 50.
- Flemish school of painting, iii. 300.
- Fletcher, William (Lord Byron's valet), i. 268. 296. 300. 314. 329. 331. 338. 350. 357.; iii. 10.; vi.
[216](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-7.htm.html#pg216), [217](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-7.htm.html#pg217).
- Flood, Right Hon. Henry, his debut in the House of Commons, ii. 211.
- 'Florence,' the lady addressed under this title in 'Childe Harold' (Mrs., Spencer Smith), i. 286.
- Florence, Lord Byron's visits to the picture gallery, iv. 12.; v. 279.
- Foote, Miss, the actress (afterwards, Countess of Harrington), her debut in the 'Child of Nature', iii. 80.
- Forbes, Lady Adelaide, ii. 219.; iv. 28.
- Forresti, G., ii. 183.
- Forsyth, Joseph, esq., his 'Italy', iv. 342.
- Fortune, Lord Byron attributed everything to, ii. 27 n.
-
- See, also, iii. 119. 338.; vi.
[391](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-14.htm.html#pg391).
- 'Foscari, the Two; an Historical Tragedy', v. 197.
- Foscolo, Ugo, iv. 141, 142. 348. 350.
-
- His 'Essay on Petrarch', iii. 132.; vi.
[232](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-8.htm.html#pg232).
- Fountain of Arethusa, Lord Byron's visit to, vi.
[073](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-2.htm.html#pg073)
- Fox, Right Hon. Charles James, notice of, in one of Lord Byron's early poems, i. 131.
-
- His Oratory, ii. 208.
- ——, Henry, ii. 280. 292.; iv. 25.; vi.
[012](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg012).
- 'Frament, A,' in prose, by Lord Byron, vi.
[339](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-12.htm.html#pg339).
- 'FRANCESCA OF RIMINI; from the Inferno of Dante', iv. 293.; v. 89.
- Francis, Sir Philip, the probable author of 'Junius', iv. 92.
- 'Frankenstein,' Mrs. Shelley's, iii. 282.; iv. 149.; vi.
[339](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-12.htm.html#pg339).
- Franklin, Benjamin, ii. 273.
- Frederick the Second, 'the only monarch worth recording in Prussian annals', i. 141.
- Free press in Greece, vi.
[152](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-5.htm.html#pg152).
- Frere, Right Hon. John Hookham, his 'Whistlecraft,' iv. 67.
- Fribourg, iii. 267.
- Friday, supposed unluckiness of, vi.
[062](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-2.htm.html#pg062).
G.
- Galignani, M., v. 25, 26. 31. 117. 125.
- Gait, John, esq., his life of Lord Byron, i. xiv.
-
- See, also, ii. 289. 300.
- Gamba, Count Pietro, the Countess Guiccioli's letter to, introducing Mr. Moore, iv. 242.
-
- His friendship with Lord Byron, v. 43. 242.
- His arrest at Ravenna, 205.
- His notices of Lord Byron on his departure for Greece, vi.
[063](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-2.htm.html#pg063). [073](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-2.htm.html#pg073). [084](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-2.htm.html#pg084). [113](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg113). [115](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg115). [138](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-4.htm.html#pg138). [194](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-6.htm.html#pg194).
- Remarks on Lord Byron's death,
[215](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-7.htm.html#pg215).
- Garrick, Sheridan's Monologue on, ii. 303.
- Gay, Madame Sophie, iv. 314.; v. 1.
- ——, Mlle. Delphine, v. 1 n.
- Gell, Sir William, i. 230.; ii. 295.
- Review of his 'Geography of Ithaca,' and 'Itinerary of Greece', vi.
[296](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-10.htm.html#pg296)
- Geneva, Lake of, iii. 268.
- George the Third, granted a pension to Mrs. Byron, i. 43.
- George the Fourth, his interview with Lord Byron, ii. 153.
-
- His indignation against 'Cain', v. 309.
- The 'Vault reflection', iii. 55.
- 'Georgics,' a finer poem than the Æneid, vi.
[369](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg369).
- Germany and the Germans, v. 73.
- Ghost, the Newstead, iii. 108.
- 'Giaour, The; a Fragment of a Turkish Tale', the author's fears for it, ii. 214.
-
- First publication of, and its brilliant success, 188.
- Additions to, 226. 238. 242.
- The author's endeavours to 'beat' it, 325.
- The story on which it is founded, 189. 293.
- Gibbon, Edward, esq., his remark on public schools, i. 86 n. 90.
-
- His acacia, iii. 246.
- His remark on his own History, v. 310.
- Gifford, William, esq., his opinion of 'English Bards', i. 243.
-
- Lord Byron's disinclination that 'Childe Harold' should be shown to him, ii. 55, 56. 61. 64. 67.
- Influence of his opinion on Lord Byron, 144. 181.; iii. 32. 36. 227. 252. 298. 335. 344.; iv. 10. 338.; v. 203. 232. 248. 306.; vi.
[164](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-5.htm.html#pg164), [165](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-5.htm.html#pg165).
- And Jeffrey, monarch-makers in poetry and prose, ii. 259.
- The 'Bride of Abydos' submitted to, 318.
- Lord Byron's letters to, 215. 318.
- Gilchrist, Octavius, vi.
[346](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-12.htm.html#pg346). [250](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-8.htm.html#pg250). [254](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-8.htm.html#pg254). [383](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-14.htm.html#pg383). [387](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-14.htm.html#pg387). [393](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-14.htm.html#pg393). [401](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-15.htm.html#pg401). [407](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-15.htm.html#pg407).
- Gillies, R.P., the author of 'Childe Alarique,' ii. 271.
- Giordani, Signor, vi.
[262](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-9.htm.html#pg262),
- Giorgione, iv. 241. 286,
-
- His 'picture of his wife, 241.
- His judgment of Solomon, 286.
- Giraud, Nicolo, Lord Byron's Greek protégé, i. 349.; ii. 43.
- 'Glenarvon,' Lady Caroline Lamb's, iii. 249. 251. 314. 373.; iv. 51.
- Glenbervie (Sylvester Douglas), first Lord, his treatise on timber, ii. 295.
-
- His 'Ricciardetto,' v. 328.
- Glennie, Dr. (Lord Byron's preceptor). i. 44.
-
- His account of his pupil's studies, 46.
- Glover, Mrs., actress, iii. 185.
- Godwin, William, Lord Byron's munificence to, iii. 223.
- Goethe, his 'Kennst du das Land,' &c. imitated, ii. 314 n.
-
- His saying of Lord Byron; iii. 240.; v. 336.
- His 'Faust; iii. 275.; iv. 67.; v. 313.
- His remarks on 'Manfred.' iv. 322.
- Dedication of 'Marino Faliero' to, 355.
- His 'Werther.' 357.
- His 'Giaour' story, v. 293 n.
- Lord Byron's letter to, vi.
[070](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-2.htm.html#pg070).
- His tribute to the memory of Byron,
[068](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-2.htm.html#pg068).
- Goetz, Countess, iii. 375.
- Gordon, Sir John, of Bogagicht, v. 2.
- ——, Sir William, grandson of James I., an ancestor of Lord Byron's, i. 6.
- ——, Duchess of, i. 169.
- ——, Mr., vi.
[111](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg111).
- ——, Lord Alexander, i. 169.
- ——, Pryce, esq., iii. 243.
- Gordons of Gight, i. 6.
- Gower, Lord Granville Leveson (now Earl and Viscount Granville), ii. 299.
- 'Gradus ad Parnassum,' Lord Byron's triangular, ii. 276.
- Grafton (George Henry Fitzroy), fourth Duke of, ii. 148.
- Grainger, his 'Ode to Solitude.' vi.
[359](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg359).
- Grant, David, his 'Battles and War Pieces.' i. 17.
- Grattan, Right Hon. Henry, his oratory, ii. 208.
-
- Curran's mimicry of him, iii. 234.
- Gray, his description of Cambridge. i. 196.
-
- His preference for his Latin poems, ii 18 n.
- An example of filial tenderness, 33 n.
- His 'Elegy.' v. 15. 109.; vi.
[362](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg362). [369](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg369).
- ——, May (Lord Byron's nurse), i. 13. 34. 37. 54.
- Greece, past and present condition of, v. 242.
- Small extent of, i. 304.
- Greek islands, resources for an emigrant population in, vi.
[048](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-1.htm.html#pg048).
- Greeks, character of the, i. 318.
-
- Cause of the purity with which they wrote their own language, i. 145 n.
- Gregson, the pugilist, i. 225.; vi.
[399](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-15.htm.html#pg399).
- Grenville (William Wyndham), Lord, ii. 129, 130. 208.
- Greville, Colonel, challenges Lord Byron for an insinuation in 'English Bards.' ii. 139.
- Grey, Charles (afterwards Earl Grey), his oratory, ii. 208.
-
- See also iii. 19.; v. 76.
- Grey de Ruthven, Lord, Newstead Abbey let to him, i. 79. 215.
- Grillparzer, his tragedy of Sappho. v. 72.
- Character of his writings, 73.
- Grimaldi, Joseph, Covent Garden clown, i. 213.
- Grimm, Baron, ii. 252.; v. 81. 95, 96. 102.
-
- His 'Correspondence' as valuable as Muratori or Tiraboschi, 96.
- Grindenwald, the, iii. 253. 265.
- 'Grongar Hill,' Dyer's, vi.
[365](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg365).
- Guerrino, a picture of his at Milan, iii. 300.
- Guiccioli, Count, iv. 144. 165. 170. 200. 256. 262. 312. 315. 328.
- ——, Countess, her first introduction to Lord Byron, iv. 144.;
-
- attacked with fever; 165. 170. 174.;
- sincerity of Lord Byron's attachment to her, 174.;
- accompanies Lord Byron to Venice, 200.;
- disinterestedness of her conduct, and, 232. and i. xiv.;
- returns with the Count to Ravenna, 262.;
- Lord Byron follows her, 270. 274.;
- efforts for a separation, 315. 319. v. 85.;
- the Pope pronounces for it, 328.;
- the Countess retires to her father's villa, 331;
- arrest of her father and brother, v. 205.;
- Shelley's opinion of her connexion with Lord Byron, 217. 219l
- her intercession for the discontinuance of Don Juan, 238.;
- Lord Byron's unwilling departure for Greece, vi.
[056](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-1.htm.html#pg056).;
- his letters to the Countess from Greece,
[091](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg091).
- See also, iv. 295.; v. 51. 141. 271.
- Guildford, Earl of, v. 296.; vi.
[182](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-6.htm.html#pg182).
- Guinguene, P.L., ii. 253.; v. 96.
- Gulley, John, the pugilist (in 1832 M. P. for Pontefract), vi.
[399](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-15.htm.html#pg399).
H.
- Hafiz, the oriental Anacreon, i. 146.
- Hailstone, Professor, i. 115
- Hall, Captain Basil, Lord Byron's attention to, iv. 129.;
-
- his letter to, 131.
- Hamilton, Lady Dalrymple, iv. 150.
- Hancock, Charles, esq,. iv 114.
-
- Lord Byron's letters to, 121. 127. 131. 133. 139. 177.
- Hannibal, saying of, ii. 94.
- Hanson, John, esq. (Lord Byron's solicitor), i. 57. 221. 300. 314. 357.; iii. 10.; iv. 53. 126.; vi.
[010](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg010).
- ——, Miss (afterwards Countess of Portsmouth), i. 134.;
-
- Lord Byron's presence at her marriage, iii. 10, 11.; vi.
[010](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg010).
- 'Hardyknute,' the fine poem so called, its effect on Lord Byron, iii. 163.
- Harrington, Earl of. See Stanhope.
- ——, Countess of. See Foote.
- Harley, Lady Charlotte (the 'lanthe' to whom the first and second cantos of 'Childe Harold' are dedicated), ii. 186, 186 n.
- ——, Lady Jane, iii. 186.
- Harness, Rev. William, i. 70.; ii. 98. 107. 138.
-
- His sermons quoted, i. 177 n.;
- Lord Byron's letters to, i. 202. 238.; ii. 93, 94. 100.
- Harris, his 'Philosophical Inquiries,' i. 306 n.
- Harrow, Lord Byron's entrance at, i. 54.;
-
- his first Harrow verses, 61.;
- his magnanimity in behalf of his friend Peel, 68.;
- 'Byron's tomb,' 77.; v. 334.;
- his attachment to Harrow, 182. 196.; ii. 94.
- Harrowby, Earl of, ii. 129.
- Harrowgate, Lord Byron's visit to, i. 112.
- Hartington, Marquis of (afterwards sixth Duke of Devonshire), i. 165.
- Harvey, Mrs. Jane, iv. 150.
- Hatchard, Mr. John, i. 242.
- Hawke (Edward Harvey), third Lord, iii. 123.
- Hay, Captain, iii. 123.
- Hayley, his 'Triumphs of Temper,' Lord Byron's eulogy of, v. 12.
- Hayreddin, ii. 266.
- Hazlitt, William, his style, v. 91.
- Headfort, Marchioness of, i. 173.
- 'HEBREW MELODIES,' iii. 141. 150. 190.
- Helen, 'LINES on Canova's bust of,' iii. 323.
- Hellespont, Lord Byron's swimming feat from Sestos to Abydos, i. 316. 323.; v. 129-134.
- Hemans, Mrs., her 'Restoration,' iii. 255.
-
- Character of her poetry, iv. 321. 343.
- Henley, Orator, i. 272.
- Herbert of Cherbury, Lord, his life much interested Lord Byron, i. 92.
- Hero and Leander, i. 316. 323, 324.
- Hill, Aaron, v. 55.
- 'Hills of Annesley, bleak and barren.' i. 84.
- 'HINTS FROM HORACE,' written at Athens, i. 350.;
-
- first produced to Mr. Dallas, ii. 13, 14.;
- singular preference given by the author to them, iv. 296.
- See also, ii. 70. 78.; iv. 340.; v. 34.
- Hippopotamus at Exeter Change, ii. 256.
- Historians, list of, perused by Lord Byron at nineteen, i. 140.
- Hoare, Mr., Lord Byron's schoolfellow at Harrow, i. 91.
- Hobbes, Thomas, i. 143.
- Hobhouse, Right Hon. Henry, i. 186.
- ——, Right Hon. Sir John Cam, Bart., his 'Journey through Albania' quoted, i. 297.; ii. 9.
-
- His 'Historical Notes to Childe Harold,' i. 95. 181-183. 185, 185. 188. 243. 349.; ii. 39. 49. 56. 63. 98. 119.; iii. 2. 4. 11. 253, 254. 345.; iv. 2, 3. 59, 62. 72, 123. 273.; v. 250.
- Hodgson, Rev. Francis, Lord Byron's well-timed assistance to, i. 380 n.; ii. 108.
-
- His 'Friends,' iv. 143.
- Lord Byron's letters to, i. 222. 225. 272. 277, 278. 312. 343. 354.; ii. 77. 97. 99. 118. 129.; iii. 40.
- See also, i. 222. 227, 227 n.; ii. 69. 73. 83. 87. 108. 227. 234. 255. 262. 287, 287 n. 323.; iii. 5, 6. 100. 123. 313.; v. 153.
- Hogg, James, the Ettrick shepherd, iii. 99. 101. 109, 110.; iv. 352.
- Holerott, Thomas, his 'Memoirs,' iii. 296.
- Holderness, Lady, i. 53.
- Holland, Lord, the allusion to, in English Bards, i. 246.; ii. 259.;
-
- commencement of Lord Byron's acquaintance with, ii. 120. 129.;
- his oratory, 208.
- Lord Byron's letters to, ii. 122. 130. 154. 159. 162, 163. 165. 167. 176.
- Holland, Lady, ii. 259. 283.; iii. 93.
- ——, Dr., i. 295.; ii. 242.
- Holmes, Mr., the miniature painter, v. 141. 224.
- Homer, geography of, Visit to the school of, v. 70.
- Hope, Thomas, esq., his 'Anastasius,' iv. 342.
- Hoppner, R B., esq., his account of Lord Byron's mode of life at Venice, iv. 82. 224.
-
- 'LINES on the birth of his son,' iv. 86.
- Lord Byron's letters to, iv. 61. 75. 87. 158. 168. 171. 244. 247. 249. 252. 268. 271. 275, 276. 298. 303. 217.;
- see also, v. 141. 174. 185. 189. 209.
- Horace, Lord Byron's early dislike to, i. 198.
-
- Quoted, iii. 4.
- 'Horace in London,' ii. 184.
-
- See 'Hints from Horace,' 61.
- Horestan Castle, Derbyshire, held by Lord Byron's ancestors, i. 1.
- 'Horsæ Ionicæ, ii. 62.
- Homer, Francis, esq., ii. 282.
- 'HOURS OF IDLENESS,' first publication of, i. 129.;
-
- a review of, 168.;
- another in the 'Critical Review,'176.;
- furious philippic in the 'Eclectic,' 192.;
- Critique of the Edinburgh Review, 204.
- Howard, Hon. Frederick, iii. 174.
- Hume, David, his Essays, i. 177 n.
-
- His 'Treatise of Human Nature,' 208 n.
- Hunt, John, v. 371,; vi.
[002](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg002).
- ——, Leigh, Lord Byron's first acquaintance with, ii. 204.
-
- Described, ii. 286.; iv. 103.
- His 'Rimini,' iii. 190, 191. 201, 201 n.
- His 'Foliage,' iv. 103.
- His 'Byron and some of his Contemporaries,' vi.
[005](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg005).
- See also, ii. 221. 286.; iii. 190, 191. 201. 369.; iv. 3. 6. 33. 103.; v. 299. 317. 349, 354,; vi.
[001](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg001). [003](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg003). [005](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg005). [015](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg015). [411](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-15.htm.html#pg411).
- Hunter, P., esq., i. 61. 65.
- Hurd, Bishop, his remark on academical studies, i. 197.
- Hutchinson, Colonel, his Memoirs, i. 6.
- 'Huzza! Hodgson, we are going,' i. 273.
- Hymettus, vi.
[359](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg359).
- Hypochondriacism, vi.
[396](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-14.htm.html#pg396).
I
- Ida, mount, i. 317.
- Imagination, vi.
[370](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg370).
- Immortality of the soul, ii. 216.; v. 86. 308.; vi.
[257](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-9.htm.html#pg257).
- Improvisatore, account of one at Milan, iii. 307.
- 'Ina,' Mrs. Wilmot's tragedy of, iii. 167.
- Inchbald, Mrs., her 'Simple Story,' ii. 298.
-
- Her 'Nature and Art,' 289.
- Incledon, Charles, singer, iv. 192.
- 'INEZ,' Stanzas to, ii. 110.
- Interlachen, iii. 262. 266.
- Invention, vi.
[370](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg370).
- Iris, the, iii. 297.
- 'IRISH AVATAR,' v. 241. 243, 244.
- Irving, Washington, esq., v. 196.
- Italian manners, iv. 283.
- Italians, bad translators, except from the classics, v. 72.
- Italy, the only modern nation in Europe that has a poetical language, v. 15.
- Ithaca, excursion to, vi.
[073](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-2.htm.html#pg073).
J.
- Jackson, 'John, the professor of pugilism, i. 213. 277.; iii. 137. 353.
- Lord Byron's letters to, i. 214, 215.
- Jacobson, M., v. 198.
- 'Jacqueline,' Mr. Rogers's, iii. 92.
- Jeffrey, Francis, esq., allusion to in 'English Bards,' i. 245.;
-
- his duel with Mr. Moore, ii. 80.;
- his review of the 'Giaour,' 231. 234.;
- his criticisms on Lord Byron's works, iii. 16. 61. 105. 107. 190. 357. 373.; iv. 68.; v. 299. 333. 340.;
- his review of Coleridge's 'Christabel,' iii. 320. 345. 350.
- Jersey, Earl of, ii. 157.
- ——, Countess of, ii. 147.; iii. 101. 148. 231. 313. 323.; iv. 13.
- Jesus Christ, iv. 369.
- Job, ii. 259.; iii. 249.
- Jocelyn, Lord, (afterwards Earl of Roden), i. 64.
- Johnson, Dr., ii. 11. 59.; iv. 169.
-
- His prologue on opening Drury Lane theatre, ii. 165.
- His 'Vanity of Human Wishes,' v. 66.
- His melancholy, iv. 397.
- His 'Lives of the Poets,' 376 n.
- His 'London,' 392.;
- Lord Byron's high opinion of him, v. 20.
- Jones, Mr., tutor at Cambridge, i. 184.
- ——, Richard, comedian, iii. 12.
- Jordan, Mrs., actress, iii. 12.
- Joukoffsky, the Russian poet, vi.
[110](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg110). [110](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg110) n.
- Joy, Henry, esq., his visit to Byron, iv. 57.; vi.
[225](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-7.htm.html#pg225).
- Juliet's tomb, iii. 308. 322. 375.
-
- See Romeo.
- Julius Cæsar, his times, v. 104.
- Jungfrau, the, iii. 253. 262. 264. 361. 374.
- Junius's letters, ii. 269.; iv. 92.
- 'Juno,' shipwreck of the, i. 49.
- Jura mountains, iii. 260.
- Juvenal, iii. 22.
K.
- Kay, Mr., painter, i. 55.
- Kayo, Sir Richard, i. 4.
- Kean, Edmund, tragedian, his Richard the Third, iii. 5.
-
- Lord Byron's enthusiastic admiration of, 77.
- Effect of his Sir Giles Over-reach on, 77.; 158.
- Keats, John, his poems, iv. 352, 353.; v. 34.
-
- Died through bursting a blood-vessel on reading the article on his 'Endymion' in the Quarterly Review, v. 21 n. 144. 146. 179. 212.
- His depreciation of Pope, v. 23.; vi.
[411](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-15.htm.html#pg411).
- Kelly, Miss, actress, iii. 180.
- Kemble, John Philip, esq., his Coriolanus, ii. 101.
-
- His Hamlet, iii. 5.
- Intreats Lord Byron to write a tragedy, 33.
- His acting described, 77 n.
- His Othello, 80.
- His Iago, 81.
- Kennedy, Dr., his 'Conversations on religion with Lord Byron in Cephalonia,' vi.
[085](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-2.htm.html#pg085).
-
- Lord Byron's letters to, vi.
[172](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-5.htm.html#pg172). [179](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-6.htm.html#pg179).
- Kent, Mr., his taste in gardening formed by Pope, vi.
[408](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-15.htm.html#pg408).
- Kidd, Captain, i. 270. 276.
-
- Strange story related to Lord Byron by, 276 n.
- Kien Long, his 'Ode to Tea,' i. 147.
- Kinnaird, Hon. Douglas, ii. 99.; iii. 137. 170. 186. 252.; vi.
[103](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg103). [107](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg107).
-
- Lord Byron's letters to, v. 302.; vi.
[103](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg103). [163](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-5.htm.html#pg163).
- Klopstock, i. 64 n.
- Knight, Galley, esq., i. 182.
-
- His 'Persian Tales,' ii. 313.; iii. 56.
- Knox, Captain (British resident at Ithaca), vi.
[073](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-2.htm.html#pg073).
- Kosciusko, General, v. 94.
- Koran, sublime poetical passages in, i. 146.
L.
- La Bruytère, vi.
[227](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-7.htm.html#pg227).
- Lachin-y-gair, i. 22.
- Lago Maggiore, iii. 299.
- Lake Leman, iii. 259.
- Lake School of Poetry, iv. 80. 339.
- 'Lakers,' the, vi.
[410](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-15.htm.html#pg410).
- 'Lalla Rookh,' ii. 250.; iii. 359. 365.; iv. 63.; v. 194. 213.
- Lamartine, M., iv. 318. 330.
- Lamb, Hon. George, i. 245.; iii. 187.
- ——, Lady Caroline, ii. 151. 153. 299.; iv. 54.
-
- Her 'Glenarvon,' iii. 249.
- 'LAMENT OF TASSO,' iv. 11. 14.
- Lansdowne, (Henry Fitzmaurice Pitty), fourth Marquis of, ii. 157. 208.
- 'LAKA; a Tale,' iii. 89. 92, 93. 110. 228.
- Lauderdale, Earl of, his oratory, ii. 290.
- Laura, her portrait, iv. 8.
- La Valière, Madame, vi.
[390](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-14.htm.html#pg390).
- Lavender, the Nottingham empiric, i. 41.
- Lawrence, Sir Thomas, v. 76.
- Leacroft, Mr., i. 98. 117.
- ——, Miss, i. 100.
- Leake, Colonel, i. 294. 316.; ii. 9.
-
- His 'Outlines of the Greek Revolution,' vi.
[079](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-2.htm.html#pg079).
- Leandor and Hero, i. 316. 323, 324.; v. 129.
- Leckie, Gould Francis, esq., ii. 139. 141.
- Leigh, Mr., Lord Byron's schoolfellow at Harrow, i. 91.
- ——, Colonel, iii. 154.
- ——, Hon. Augusta (Lord Byron's sister), i. 7.; ii. 48. 131. 273.; iii. 20. 37. 134 n. 291. 351.; iv. 26.
- Leinster, Duke of, i. 165.
- Leman, Lake, iii. 259.
- Le Man, Mr., v. 97.
- Leoni, Signor, his translation of Childe Harold, iv. 308.
- Lepanto, Gulf of, i. 304.; iii. 18.
- Lerici, v. 366.
- Leveson-Gower, Lady Charlotte (afterwards Countess of Surrey), iii. 19.
- Levis, Due de, iii. 61.
- Lewis, Matthew Gregory, esq., ii. 255. 285. 309.; iii. 189. 295. 375.; iv. 46.; v. 111.
- 'Liberal,' the, v. 317. 347. 366. 372.; vi.
[003](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg003). [007](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg007), [008](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg008). [053](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-1.htm.html#pg053).
- Liberty, v. 68.
- Life, ii. 297.; v. 67. 86. 199. 315.; vi.
[263](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-9.htm.html#pg263).
- Likenesses, iii. 186.
- Lisbon, i. 277, 278.; ii. 69.; iv. 5.
- 'Lisbon packet,' i. 273.
- Liston, Sir Robert, ii. 183.
- ——, John, comedian, ii. 114.; iv. 247.
- Little's Poems, i. 119.; iv. 250.; v. 372.
- Liverpool, Earl of, ii. 256. 308.
- Livy, ii. 196.
- Lloyd, Charles, esq., ii. 94.
- Lobster nights, Pope's and Lord Byron's, iii. 83.
- Loch Leven, i. 37.; iv. 355.
- Locke, his treatise on education, i. 89 n.
-
- His contempt for Oxford, i. 197 n.
- Lockhart, J.G., esq., his 'Life of Burns,' i. 139 n.
-
- His marriage with Miss Scott, v. 301.
- ——, Mrs., v. 301.
- Lodburgh, his 'Death Song,' i. 147.
- Lofft, Capel, ii. 25.
- Londo, Andrea, the Greek patriot, vi.
[151](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-5.htm.html#pg151). [184](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-6.htm.html#pg184).
-
- Account of,
[151](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-5.htm.html#pg151) n.
- Lord Byron's letter to, vi.
[151](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-5.htm.html#pg151).
- Londonderry (Robert Stewart), second Marquis of, v. 354.; vi.
[053](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-1.htm.html#pg053).
- Long, Edward Noel, esq., Lord Byron's schoolfellow at Harrow, i. 65. 91. 94. 182.; ii. 76 n.
- Long, Miss (afterwards Mrs. Long Pole Wellesley).ii. 95.
- Longevity, v. 261.
- Longmans, Messrs., ii. 29.; iii. 102. 154.
- Love, 'Not the principal passion for tragedy.' v. 115.
-
- Success in, dependent on fortune, vi.
[391](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-14.htm.html#pg391).
- Woman's, v. 34.; vi.
[391](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-14.htm.html#pg391).
- Low spirits, v. 284.
- Lowe, Sir Hudson, iii. 234.
- Lucretius, ii. 262. 370.; vi.
[370](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg370).
- Luc, Jean André de, iv. 3.
- Ludlow, General, the regicide, his monument, iii. 256.
- His domal inscription, v. 53 n.
- Lushington, Dr., his letter to Lady Byron, vi.
[279](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-9.htm.html#pg279).
- Lutzerode, Baron, v. 336.
- Luxembourg, Maréchal, vi.
[390](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-14.htm.html#pg390).
- Lyttleton, George, Lord. i. 190.
-
- Lord Byron compared to, i. 191.
- ——, Thomas, Lord, i. 190.
M.
- Machinery, effects of, ii. 123.
- Mackenzie, Henry, esq., his notice of Lord Byron's early poems, i. 126, 127. 157.
- Mackintosh, Sir James, brightest of northern constellations, ii. 238. 242.
-
- his review of Rogers in the Edinburgh Review; 281.;
- a rare instance of the union of very transcendent talent and great good nature; 284.;
- his letter in the 'Morning Chronicle; iii. 14.;
- high expectation of his promised history; 17.;
- strong impression made by him on Lord Byron, 295.
- Macnamara, Arthur, esq, i. 182.
- Mafra, the palace of, the boast of Portugal, i. 281.
- Mahomet, ii. 266.
- Maid of Athens, i. 307. 320.
-
- Account of, 308.
- Maintenon, Madame, verses written by Lord Byron in a volume of her letters, i. 85.
- Malamocco, wall of, vi.
[366](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg366).
- 'MANFRED; A DRAMATIC POEM,' finished; iii. 345.;
-
- extracts sent to Mr. Murray; 34.;
- offered to him for 300 guineas; 354. 366.; iv. 50.;
- a sort of mad Drama; instructions for its title; iv. 4.;
- the third act to be re-written; 10. 15.;
- new third act sent to Mr. Murray; 13.;
- a critique on; omission of a line; 52.;
- critique of the 'Edinburgh Review; 67.;
- a menaced version of the poem; 87.;
- Goethe's remarks on, iv. 322.
- Mansel, Dr., Bishop of Bristol, i. 115. 188.; ii. 93.
- Manton gun, Lord Byron's, ii. 9.
- 'Manuel,' Mathurin's, iv. 5. 35. 47.
- Marden, Mrs., actress, iii. 176.
- Marianna Segati, iii. 311. 318. 323. 330.; iv. 26.
- 'MARINO FALIERO, DOGE of VENICE; an Historical Tragedy.' Intention to write the tragedy; iii. 348. 371.;
-
- commenced; iv. 301.;
- advanced into the second act.; 311.;
- completed; 333.;
- not intended for the stage.; 342.; v. 71. 80. 117. 120-122. 136.;
- Mr. Gifford's opinion of it; 343. 348.;
- a note to be introduced; 352.;
- the author's talent 'especially undramatic; v. 115.;
- a phrase to be altered; 124.;
- the poem not popular; 127.;
- lines to be introduced; 140.
- reported representation of the play and its condemnation; 176. 180. 190.;
- a note for the next edition, 211.
- Marlow, his 'Faustus.' iv. 67.
- 'Marmion.' iii. 227.
- Marriage ceremony, iii. 11.
- Marriages, great cause of unhappy ones, iii. 212.
- 'Mary,' Lord Byron's love for the name, vi.
[415](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-15.htm.html#pg415).
- —— of Aberdeen, i. 123 n.
- Massaniello, v. 88.
- Materialism, vi.
[259](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-9.htm.html#pg259).
- Mathews, Charles, comedian, iii. 164.
- Mathurin, Rev. Charles, iii. 184. 224, 225. 263. 369. 372.; iv. 5. 47.
-
- His 'Bertram.' iii. 184.; iv. 65.
- His 'Manuel,', iv. 5. 35. 47.
- Matlock, Lord Byron at, i. 81.
- Matter, vi.
[258](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-9.htm.html#pg258).
- Matthews, John, esq., of Belmont, some account of, ii. 40.
- ——, Charles Skinner, esq., i. 96. 181.; ii. 38, 38 n., 39, 39 n., 40. 49. 51. 58. 63.
-
- Lord Byron's account of, i. 181.; ii. 38 n., 39. 63.
- His visit to Newstead, i. 247.
- Tributes to his memory. ii. 40.
- ——, Henry, esq., ii. 40 n.
-
- His 'Diary of an Invalid,' iv. 342.
- Account of, v. 30.
- ——, Rev. Arthur, ii. 40 n.
- Matthison, Frederic, his 'Letters from the Continent' iii. 250.
- Maugiron, epigram on the loss of his eye, vi.
[390](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-14.htm.html#pg390).
- Mavrocordato, Prince, vi.
[096](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg096). 105. 109. 168.
-
- Lord Byron's letters to, vi.
[096](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg096).
- Proclamation issued by him, on Lord Byron's death, vi.
[213](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-7.htm.html#pg213).
- Mawman, Joseph, bookseller, v. 233. 238.
- Mayfield, Mr. Moore's residence in Staffordshire, ii. 223.
- 'MAZEPPA' iv. 137.
- Medicine, effects of, on the mind and spirits, v. 263, 264 n.
- Medwin, Captain, his acquaintance with Lord Byron at Pisa, v. 358, 359.
- Meillerie, iii. 247. 274. 282.
- Melbourne, Lady, ii. 260. 275.; iv. 101.; v. 254.
- Mendelsohn, his habitual melancholy, vi.
[397](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-14.htm.html#pg397).
- Mengaldo, Chevalier, iv. 158.; v. 131.
- Merivale, J.H., esq., ii. 337.; iii. 9.
-
- His 'Roncesvalles,' ii. 337.
- His review of 'Grimm's Correspondence,' iii. 9.
- Lord Byron's letter to, ii. 337.
- Metastasio, ii. 252.
- Meyler, Richard, esq., iii. 235.
- Mezzophanti, 'a monster of languages', vi.
[262](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-9.htm.html#pg262).
- Milan cathedral, iii. 299.
-
- Ambrosian library at, 300.
- Brera gallery, 300.
- Napoleon's triumphal arch, 301.
- State of society at, 307.
- Milbanke, Sir Ralph, iii. 121. 146. 175. 202.
- ——, Lady. See Noel.
- ——, Miss (afterwards Lady Byron), ii. 285. 338.; iii. 15. 113. 117. 120, 121.
-
- See Byron.
- Miller, Rev. Dr., his 'Essay on Probabilities', iii. 119.
- ——, William, bookseller, refuses to publish Childe Harold. ii. 29.
- Millingen, Mr., His account of the consultation on Lord Byron's last illness, 283.
- Milman, Rev. Henry Hart, now Dean of St. Paul's, his 'Fazio' iv. 92.
- Milnes, Robert, esq., i. 182.; ii. 209.
- Milo, iii. 20.
- Milton, his imitation of Ariosto, ii. 111.
-
- His practice of dating his poems followed by Lord Byron, i. 153 n.
- His dislike to Cambridge, i. 196. 198.
- His infelicitous marriage, iii. 135 n.
- His disregard of painting and sculpture, iv. 210.
- His politics kept him down, v. 15.
- His 'material thunder.' vi.
[370](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg370).
- Mirabeau, his eloquence, ii. 209.
- 'Mirra,' of Alfieri, effect of the representation of, on Lord Byron, iv. 180, 180 n.
- Missiaglia, Venetian bookseller, iv. 97.
- Mistress, 'cannot be a friend, ii. 275.
- Mitchell, T., esq., his translation of Aristophanes, ii. 206.; iv. 345.
- 'Mobility', vi.
[236](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-8.htm.html#pg236).
- Modern gardening, Pope the chief inventor of, vi.
[408](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-15.htm.html#pg408).
- Moira, Earl of (afterwards Marquis of Hastings), ii. 148.
- Molière, v. 81.
- Monçada, Marquis, iv. 72.
- 'Monk,' Lewis's, 'The philtered ideas of a jaded voluptuary', ii. 296.
- Mont Blanc, iii. 253.
- Montague, Edward Wortley, ii. 266.
- ——, Lady Mary Wortley, proposed Italian translation of her letters and new life of, iv. 73.;
-
- three pretty notes by her, 126.;
- Pope's lines on her, vi.
[395](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-14.htm.html#pg395). [415](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-15.htm.html#pg415), [416](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-15.htm.html#pg416).
- Montbovon, iii.258.
- 'Monthly Literary Recreations,' Lord Byron's review of Wordsworth's poems in, vi.
[293](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-10.htm.html#pg293).
- Monti, his Aristodemo, iii. 6.
- ——, account of, iii. 306.
- Moore, Thomas, esq., his prefaces to his 'Life of Lord Byron,' i. 10. 11.
-
- His first acquaintance with Lord Byron, ii. 79.
- Duel between Mr. Jeffrey and, ii. 80.
- His person and manners described, ii. 268.
- His poetry, 276.
- 'LINES on his last Operatic Farce or Farcical Opera,' ii. 65. n.
- His 'Lalla Rookh,' iii. 359. 365.; iv. 63,; v. 194. 213.
- His 'Loves of the Angels,' vi.
[014](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg014).
- Lord Byron's letters to, ii. 84. 87. 88. 90. 107. 114. 151, 152. 198. 216, 217. 218. 221. 223, 224. 230. 235. 238. 240, 241, 243. 245. 247, 248. iii. 26. 28, 29. 31. 41. 45. 50. 52. 55. 59. 64. 78. 80-82. 84. 86, 87. 94, 95. 100. 104. 107. 112. 114, 115. 118. 120. 138. 142, 143, 145. 147. 149. 151. 153. 155. 167. 169. 173. 180. 187. 189. 195. 200. 204. 304. 311. 315. 337. 348. 357. 359. 368. iv. 4. 27. 44. 79. 93. 102. 132. 272. 313. 317. 325. 327. 335. v. 1. 26. 35. 37. 39. 110. 121. 135. 147. 149. 177. 184. 190. 194. 196. 213. 229. 231. 233. 241, 242, 246. 253. 259, 260. 263, 269. 283. 293, 306. 308, 309, 310. 312. 314. 323, 333. 339. 348. 350. 352. vi. i.
[12.](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg012)
[109.](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg109)
[169.](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-5.htm.html#pg169)
- See also, ii. 95. 97. 99. 113. 243. 249. 268. 276. 298. 301.; iii. 6. 105. 122. 169. 171. 233.; v. 75, 76. 103. 270.; vi.
[009](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg009).
- Moore, Peter, esq., iii. 186.
- Morgan, Lady, iv. 86. 336.
-
- Her 'Italy,' v. 227. 229.
- ——, Lord Byron's school-fellow at Harrow, i. 64.
- 'MORGANTE MAGGIORE, of Pulci.' translation of the first canto commenced, iv. 279.;
-
- finished, 283.;
- not a line to be omitted, 305. 308.;
- the author's opinion of it, 343.; v. 118. 240.
- 'Morning Post,' its attacks on Lord Byron, iii. 1. 40. 46. 48.
- Morosini. his siege of Athens, iii. 11.
- Mosaic chronology, vi.
[259](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-9.htm.html#pg259).
- Mosti, Count, iv. 158.
- Mother, future conduct of a child dependent on the, ii. 35.
- Muir, Mr., letter to, vi.
[118](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg118).
- Mule, Mrs., Lord Byron's housemaid, iii. 7, 7 n. 146.
- Müller, the historian, iii. 250.
- Muloch, Muley, v. 36.
-
- His 'Atheism answered,' iv. 289.
- Murat, Joachim, death of, iii. 290.
- Muratori, v. 96.
- Murillo, Lord Byron's opinion of, iv. 9.
- Murray, John, esq, his first connection with Lord Byron, ii. 30.;
-
- Childe Harold placed in his hands, 30. 55.;
- shows the poem to Mr. Gifford, 61. 64. 66. 70.;
- purchases the copyright, 138.
- 'The [Greek: anax] of publishers,' 217.;
- recommended by Lord Byron to Mr. Moore as 'among the first of the trade,' 243.;
- offers 1000 guineas for the 'Giaour' and 'Bride of Abydos,' 264. 324., iii. 47.;
- Lord Byron's high compliment to,192.;
- pays 1000 guineas for the 'Siege of Corinth' and 'Parisina,' 221.;
- the 'Mokanna' of publishers,' iv. 44.;
- offers 1500 guineas for the 4th canto of 'Childe Harold,' 59.;
- poetical epistle to, 76.;
- 'Strahan, Tonson, Lintot, of the times,' 96.;
- conduct to Mr. Moore, v. 223.;
- Lord Byron's last letter to, vi.
[165](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-5.htm.html#pg165).;
- letters and allusions to, passim.
- Music, Lord Byron's love of simple, i. 101. 132.
-
- See, also, v. 97, 97 n.
- Musters, Mr. John, his marriage to Miss Chaworth, i. 86.
- Musters, Mrs., i. 258.
-
- See Chaworth.
- 'MY BOAT is on the shore,' iii. 237 n.;
- 'MY DEAR Mr. Murray,' iv. 76.
N.
- Napier, Colonel, vi.
[099](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg099), [109](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg109). [111](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg111), [112](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg112).
-
- His testimony to the benevolence and soundness of Lord Byron's views with regard to Greece,
[110](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg110).
- Naples, 'the second best sea view, iv. 5.
- Napoleon. See Buonaparte.
- Nathan, his 'Hebrew nasalities,' iii. 153.
- Nature, vi.
[362](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg362), [363](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg363).
- ——, 'PRAYER of.' i. 154.
- 'Naufragia,' Clarke's, ii. 214.
- Nelson, Southey's Life of, ii.268.
- Nepean, Mr., iii. 283.
- ——, Sir Evan, ii. 142.
- Nerni, iii. 283.
- Newstead, granted by Henry VIII. to Sir John Byron, i. 3.
- A prophecy of Mother Shipton's respecting, 33.
- Let to Lord Grey de Ruthen, 79.
- Lord Byron's affection for, 79, 234. 353.; ii. 233.
- Description of, and of the noble owner, 247.
- Attempted sale of, 173. 260.; iii. 112.
- Nicopolis, ruins of, i. 295.
- Night, vi.
[259](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-9.htm.html#pg259).
- Nobility of thought and style defined, vi.
[414](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-15.htm.html#pg414).
- Noel, Lady, iii. 202.; iv. 2. 10. 337.; v. 190. 306. 336.; vi.
[278](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-9.htm.html#pg278), [279](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-9.htm.html#pg279).
- Norfolk (Charles Howard), twelfth Duke of, ii. 148.
- Nottingham frame breaking bill, ii. 121.
- ——, Lord Byron's residence at, i. 41. 79.
- 'Nourjahad,' a drama, falsely attributed to Lord Byron, ii. 280. 283.
- Novels, ii. 295.
O.
- Oak, the Byron, i. 148.
- 'ODE ON VENICE,' iv. 125.
- O'Donnovan, P.M., his 'Sir Proteus.' iii. 91.
- 'OH! banish care.' ii. 73.
- 'OH! Memory, torture me no more.' i. 85.
- O'Higgins, Mr., his Irish tragedy, iii. 182. 185.
- Olympus, iii. 196.
- O'Neil, Miss, actress, iii. 77.
- Orators, only two thorough ones, in all antiquity, ii. 210.
-
- 'Things of ages.' 210.
- Orchomenus, i. 309.
- Orrery, Earl of, his Life of Swift quoted, iii. 133 n.
- Osborne, Lord Sidney, v. 85.
- 'Otello,' Rossini's, iv. 92.
- Otway, his three requisites for an Englishman, ii. 51.
- His 'Beividera.' iii. 371.
- Ouchy, iii. 284.
- Owenson, Miss, iii. 9.
-
- See Morgan, Lady.
- Oxford, Gibbon's bitter recollections of, i. 196.
-
- Dryden's praise of, at the expense of Cambridge, 198.
- Oxford, Earl of, ii. 173. 180, 181. 213. 217.
- ——, Countess of, ii. 173. 181. 217.
P.
- 'PARISINA,' 1000 guineas offered for it and the 'Siege of Corinth,' by Mr. Murray, iii. 221.
-
- Fancied resemblance between part of the poem and a similar scene in 'Marmion.' 227.
- Parker, Sir Peter, stanzas written by Lord Byron on his death, iii. 120.
- ——, Lady, i. 212.
- ——, Margaret, Lord Byron's boyish love for, i. 52.
- Parkins, Miss Fanny, iii. 108.
- PARLIAMENT, Lord Byron's Speeches in, ii. 128. 147. 207. 256.; vi. 314, 321. 335.
- Parnassus, Lord Byron's visit to, and stanzas upon, i. 303.
- Parr, Dr., iv. 135.; v. 79.
- Parry, Captain, vi.
[139](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-4.htm.html#pg139). [175](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-5.htm.html#pg175) n. [187](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-6.htm.html#pg187). [195](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-6.htm.html#pg195). [217](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-7.htm.html#pg217).
- Parruca, Signor, letter to, vi 177.
- Parthenon, vi.
[359](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg359), [360](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg360).
- Pasquali, Padre, iii. 330. 334.; iv. 78.
- Past, 'the best prophet of the future.' v. 89.
- Paterson, Mr. (Lord Byron's tutor at Aberdeen), i. 18.
- Patrons, 8. 340.
- Paul, St., translation from the Armenian, of correspondence between the Corinthians and, vi.
[271](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-9.htm.html#pg271).
- Paul's, St., Cathedral, comparison with St. Sophia's, i. 329.
- Pausanias, his 'Achaics' quoted, vi.
[391](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-14.htm.html#pg391).
- Payne, Thomas, bookseller, ii. 67, 67 n.
- Peel, Right Hon. Sir Robert, i. 61 n.
-
- Lord Byron's form-fellow at Harrow, 62.; ii. 209.; iii. 322.; iv. 346.
- ——, William, Esq., one of Lord Byron's friends, i. 99.
- Penelope, baths of, Lord Byron's visit to, vi.
[074](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-2.htm.html#pg074).
- Penn, Granville, esq., his 'Bioscope, or Dial of Life, explained, ii. 170.
- ——, William, the founder of Quakerism, ii. 273.
- Perry, James, esq, v. 136.
- Petersburgh, ii. 233.
- Petrarch, his literary and personal character interwoven., i. x.
-
- His severity to his daughter, iii. 127.
- In his youth a coxcomb., 233 n.
- His portrait in the Manfrini palace, iv. 8.;
- his popularity, v. 15.
- See also, ii. 116 n.
- Phillips, Ambrose, his pastorals, vi.
[371](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg371).
- ——, S.M., esq, ii. 283.
- ——, Thomas, esq., R.A, iii. 97, 98.
- Philosophers, celibacy of eminent, iii. 134.
- Phoenix, Sheridan's story of the, ii. 163.
- Physic, its effect in raising the spirits, v. 264.
- Pictures, iv. 9.
- Pierce Plowman, i. 148.
- Pigot, Miss,, i. 97. 111. 269.; v. 256, 257 n.
-
- Account of her first acquaintance with Lord Byron, i. 98.
- Lord Byron's letters to, i. 100. 105. 108, 109. 113. 159, 160, 162, 165. 168. 171. 173.
- Pigot, Dr, i. 112.
-
- His account of Lord Byron's visit to Harrowgate, 113.
- Lord Byron's letters to; i. 104. 107, 108. 123. 158.; ii. 31.
- Pigot, Mrs., Lord Byron's letter to, i. 164.
- Pigot, family, i. 28.
- Pindemonte, Ippolito, Lord Byron's portrait of, iv. 32.
- Pitt, Rt. Hon. William, ii. 208.
- Plagiarism, ii. 314.; iii. 177.; iv. 236.; v. 225, 225 n.
- Players, an impracticable people, iii. 185.
- 'Pleasures of Hope.', ii. 98. 240.
- 'Pleasures of Memory.', ii. 240.
- Plethora, abstinence the sole remedy for, iii. 337.
- Poetry, distasteful to Byron when a boy., ii. 7 n.
-
- When to be employed as the interpreter of feeling, iii. 231.
- Addiction to, whence resulting, 241.
- New school of, iv. 63. 99. 297.
- 'The feeling of a former world and future', v. 89.
- Descriptive, vi.
[367](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg367).
- Ethical, 'the highest of all,
[369](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg369).
- See also, iv. 105. 306.; v. 89. 285.
- Poets, self-educated ones, i. 145.
-
- Lord Byron's list of celebrated poets of all nations, i. 146.;
- Unfitted for the calm affections and comforts of domestic life, iii. 125.
- Querulous and monotonous lives of, ii. 227.
- Female, 278.
- See also, v. 95.; vi.
[368](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg368). [376](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-14.htm.html#pg376).
- Polidori, Dr., iii. 247, 248. 275, 276. 285. 301. 306. 342.; iv. 5. 7. 38, 39. 72. 147. 150. 152.
-
- Some account of, iii. 275.
- Anecdotes of, 278. 301. 306.
- His 'Vampire, 282 n.; iv. 147.
- His tragedy, 54.
- Political consistency, vi.
[237](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-8.htm.html#pg237).
- Politics, ii. 311.
- Pomponius Atticus, ii. 266.
- Pope, Alexander, a self-educated poet, i. 145.
- Lord Byron's enthusiastic admiration of, 226.
- His youth and Byron's compared, 265.
- An example of filial tenderness, ii. 33 n.
-
- His Prologue to Cato, 165.
- His ineffable distance above all modern poets, iv. 64. 139.
- The parent of real English poetry, 143.
- Atrocious cant and nonsense about, 297.
- The Christianity of English poetry, v. 13.
- Ten times more poetry in his 'Essay on Man' than in the 'Excursion,' 18.
- Keats' depreciation of, 22.
- The most faultless of poets, 26.
- His imagery, 139.
- The greatest name in our poetry, 150.
- His Essay upon Phillips's Pastorals a model of irony, vi.
[371](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg371).
- The principal inventor of modern gardening,
[408](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-15.htm.html#pg408).
- His 'Homer,' v. 138.; vi.
[373](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg373). [376](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-14.htm.html#pg376). [413](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-15.htm.html#pg413).
- 'LETTER ON BOWLES'S STRICTURES ON THE LIFE AND WRITINGS OF,' vi.
[346](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-12.htm.html#pg346).
- SECOND LETTER, vi.
[382](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-14.htm.html#pg382).
- See, also, i. 223.; iii. 219.; v. 33.
- Porson, Professor, his 'Devil's Walk,' ii. 40. 304.
-
- Lord Byron's recollection of, iv. 84,
- Portrait painter, agonies of a, vi.
[363](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg363).
- Pouqueville, M. de, iv. 322.
- Powerscourt, Lord, one of Lord Byron's friends, i. 99. 203.
- Pratt, Samuel Jackson, i. 209. 243.; ii. 54.
- Priestley, Dr., his Christian materialism, vi.
[259](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-9.htm.html#pg259).
- Prince Regent, iii. 41.; iv. 185.
-
- Lord Byron's introduction to, ii. 155.
- See George IV.
- Prior's Paulo Purgante, iv. 183.
- 'PRISONER OF CHILLON,' iii. 285.; iv. 27.
- Probabilities, Dr. Miller's Essay on, iii. 119.
- Probationary Odes, ii. 169.
- Prologues, 'only two decent ones in our language,' ii. 165.
- 'PROMETHEUS,' of Æschylus, iv. 67.
- 'PROPHECY OF DANTE, in four cantos,' iv. 291. 308.
- Prophets, v. 8. 89.
- Pulci, his 'Morgante Maggiore,' iv. 279. 283. 305. 308. 343.
-
- 'Sire of the half serious rhyme,' v. 118. 240. 312.
- Punctuation, ii. 327.
Q.
- Quarrels of Authors, D'Israeli's, iii. 15.
- Quarterly Review, ii. 240.
- 'Quentin Durward,' vi.
[115](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg115).
R.
- Rae, John, comedian, iii. 177.
- Rainsford, Lord Byron's schoolfellow at Harrow, i. 61.
- Rancliffe, Lord, iii. 78. 82.
- Raphael, his hair, iv. 25.
- Rashleigh, Lord Byron's schoolfellow at Harrow, i. 91.
- Ravenna, iv. 165. 270.
- Raymond, James Grant, comedian, ii. 162.
- Reading, the love of, i. 139.; iii. 22.
- Regnard, his hypochondriacism, v. 81.
- Reinagle, R.R., his chained eagle, iii. 245.
- 'Rejected Addresses,' 'the best of the kind since the Rolliad,' ii. 179, 180.; vi.
[371](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg371).
- ——, the Genuine, ii. 181 n.
- Republics, ii. 272.
- Reviewers, ii. 240.
- Reviews, i. 60.
- Reynolds, Sir Joshua, 'not good in history,' v. 65.
- Reynolds, J.H., his 'Safie,' iii. 6. 40.
- 'Ricciardetto,' Lord Glenbervie's translation of, iv. 321.; v. 328.
- Rice, Lord Byron's schoolfellow at Harrow, i. 64.
- Richardson, 'the vainest and luckiest of authors,' v. 55.
- Riddel, Lady, her masquerade at Bath, at which Lord Byron appeared, i. 78.
- Ridge, printer, i. 106-108. 111. 166.; iii. 38, 39.
- Riga, the Greek patriot, vi.
[151](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-5.htm.html#pg151) n.
- Roberts, Mr. (editor of the British Review), iv. 186.
- Robins, George, auctioneer, ii. 201. in. 170.
- Robinson Crusoe, the first part said to be written by Lord Oxford, ii. 214.
- Rocca, M. de, iii. 251.
- Rochdale estate, in Lancashire, the sale of, i. 32.
- Rochefoucault, 'always right,' ii. 288.
-
- Sayings of, v. 95.
- Rogers, Samuel, esq., his 'Pleasures of Memory,' ii. 240. 267.
-
- His 'Jacqueline,' iii. 92.
- 'The Tithonus of poetry,' iv. 6.
- 'The father of present poesy,' 80.
- His Tribute to the memory of Lord Byron, v. 274.
- Lord Byron's letters to, ii. 121. 185.; ii. 44. 90. 92. 199. 217. 223. 250. 373.; iv. 89.; v. 267.
- See also, i. 231.; ii. 85. 89, 90. 95. 98. 113. 121. 160. 175. 188. 196. 240. 267. 276. 291, 292.; iii. 13. 234. 360. 369.; iv. 5. 64.
- ——, Mr., of Nottingham (Lord Byron's Latin tutor), i. 41.
- Rokeby, Lord Byron's schoolfellow at Harrow, i. 91.
- Roman Catholic religion, v. 142.
- Romanelli, physician, i. 343.
- Rome, 'the wonderful,' iv. 14. 31.
-
- Finer than Greece, 26. 58.
- Romeo and Juliet, the story of, iii. 308. 322. 375.
- Rose, William Stewart, esq., his 'Animali,' iv. 95.
-
- His 'Lines to Lord Byron,' 98.
- Rose glaciers, iii. 253. 265.
- 'Rose-water,' vi.
[399](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-15.htm.html#pg399).
- Ross, Rev. Mr. (Lord Byron's tutor at Aberdeen), i. 18.
- Rossini, his 'Otello,' iv. 92.
- Roscoe, Mr, ii. 210
- Rossoe, Mr., story of, ii. 173.
- Roufigny, Abbé de, i. 92 n.
- Rousseau, Jean Jacques, Lord Byron's resemblance to, i. 217.
-
- Comparison between Lord Byron and, 218.
- His marriage, vi.
[391](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-14.htm.html#pg391).
- His 'Héloïse,' 167. 178.
- His 'Confessions,' 168. 178.
- Force and accuracy of his descriptions, iii. 247.
- Rowcroft, Mr, v. 336.
- Royston, Lord Byron's school-fellow at Harrow, i. 91.
- Rubens, his style, iv. 9.
- Rushton, Robert (the 'little page' in Childe Harold), i. 268. 285.; ii. 110. 115.
-
- Lord Byron's letters to, ii. 115, 116.
- 'Ruminator,' the, by Sir Egerton Brydges, ii. 271.
- Rusponi, Countess, v. 193.
- Russell, Lord John, i. 75 n.; ii. 283.
- Rycaut, his 'History of the Turks' first drew Lord Byron's attention to the East, ii. 7, 8.
-
- See, also, i. 141.
S.
- St. Lambert, his imitation of Thomson, v. 96.
- Sanders, Mr., his portraits of Lord Byron, ii. 175 n. 180. 187.
- 'Sappho,' of Grillparzer, v. 72.
- 'SARDANAPALUS,' outline of the Tragedy sketched, v. 74.
-
- Four acts completed, 187.
- The play finished, 203.
- A disparagement of it, 269
- Sarrazin, General, iii. 195.
- Satan, Lord Byron's opinion of his real appearance to the Creator, vi.
[089](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg089).
- 'Satirist,' ii. 176. 179.
- Scaligers, tomb of the, iii. 309.
- Scamander, i. 317.
- Schiller, his 'Thirty years War,' i. 141.
-
- His 'Robbers,' iii. 6.
- His 'Fiesco,' 6.
- His 'Ghost-seer,' 372.
- Schlegel, Frederick, his writings, v. 90, 91.
-
- Anecdotes of, 214.
- 'School for Scandal,' ii. 303.; iv. 297.
- School of Homer, Lord Byron's visit to, vi.
[073](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-2.htm.html#pg073).
- Scotland, the impressions on Lord Byron's mind by the mountain scenery of, i. 24. 35.
-
- Lord Byron 'Half a Scot by birth and bred a whole one,' i. 34.
- 'A canny Scot till ten years' old,' v. 301.
- Scott, Sir Walter, his dog 'Maida,' i. 223. 345.
-
- His 'Rokeby,' ii. 169. 259.
- The 'monarch of Parnassus,' 275.
- His 'Lives of the Novelists,' 315 n.
- His 'Waverley,' iii. 98.
- His first acquaintance with Byron, 160.
- His 'Antiquary,' 296.
- His review of 'Childe Harold' in the Quarterly, 351, 351 n. 357. 365.; v. 299.
- His 'Tales of my Landlord,' iv. 25. 31. 38.; v. 57.
- 'The Ariosto of the North,' iv. 51. 65.
- The first British poet titled for his talent, iv. 305.
- His 'Ivanhoe,' 325.
- His 'Monastery,' 352.
- His 'Abbot,' 354.; v. 2.
- His imitators, 24.
- The 'Scotch Fielding,' 57.
- His countenance, 72.
- His novels 'a new literature in themselves,' iv. 286. 289.; v. 72.
- His 'Kenilworth,' 147.
- His 'Life of Swift,' vi.
[257](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-9.htm.html#pg257).
- Lord Byron's letters to, ii. 155.; v. 298. 330.
- See, also, ii. 226. 259.; iv. 139.
- Scott, Mr., of Aberdeen, i. 35.
- ——, Mr. Alexander, v. 133.
- ——, Mr. John, ii. 207.; iii. 81.; v. 143.; vi.
[394](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-14.htm.html#pg394).
- 'Scotticisms,' v. 77.
- Scriptures, Lord Byron's knowledge of the, vi.
[086](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-2.htm.html#pg086). [088](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-2.htm.html#pg088).
-
- See, also, Bible.
- 'Scourge,' proceedings against the, for a libel on Mrs. Byron, ii. 32.
- Sculpture, the most artificial of the arts, iv. 12.
-
- Its superiority to painting, 57.
- More poetical than nature, vi.
[362](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg362).
- Sécheron, iii. 269.
- Self-educated poets, i. 145.
- Sensibility, iii. 128.
- Separation, miseries of, ii. 279
- Seraglio at Constantinople, description of, i. 330.
- Sestos, i. 316. 321. 323.; v. 130.
- Settle, Elkanah, his 'Emperor of Morocco,' v. 213.
- 'Seven before Thebes,' iv. 68.
- Seville, i. 278. 281. 283.
- Seward, Anne, her 'Life of Darwin,' v. 103.
- 'Sexagenarian,' Beloe's, iv. 84.
- 'Shah Nameh,' the Persian Iliad, i. 146.
- Shakspeare, his infelicitous marriage, iii. 136 n.
-
- 'The worst of models,' v. 202.
- 'Will have his decline,' vi.
[368](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg368).
- Sharp, William (the engraver, and disciple of Joanna Southcote), iii. 109.
- Sharpe, Richard, esq. (the 'Conversationist'), ii. 274.; iii. 13. 295.; v. 66.
- Sheil, Richard, esq., iv. 36.
- Sheldrake, Mr., i. 44.
- Shelley, Percy Bysshe, esq., his 'Queen Mab,' iii. 269.
-
- His portrait of Lord Byron, iv. 111.
- Particulars concerning, 147.
- His visit to Lord Byron at Ravenna, v. 217.
- His praise of Don Juan, v. 220.
- Lord Byron's letters to, 144. 296.
- His letters to Lord Byron, v. 144. 298.; vi.
[004](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg004).
- See also, iii. 252. 269. 276. 283, 283 n.; iv. 110.; v. 142 n. 217. 313. 315. 320. 350. 353. 365.; vi.
[008](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg008).
- ——, Mrs., iii. 279.
-
- Her 'Frankenstein,' 282.
- Lord Byron's letters to, vi.
[008](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg008).
- Shepherd, Rev. John, his letter enclosing his wife's prayer on Lord Byron's behalf, v. 286.
-
- Lord Byron's answer, 289.
- Sheridan, Right Hon. Richard Brinsley, anecdotes of, ii. 128. 198. 201.
-
- And Colman compared, 204.
- His eloquence, 209.
- His conversation, 210. 257.
- 'Whatever he did, was the best of its kind,' 303.
- Defence of, iv. 125.
- His phoenix story, vi.
[376](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-14.htm.html#pg376).
- 'MONODY on the Death of,' iii. 252, 253. 296.
- 'Shipwreck,' Falconer's, vi.
[357](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg357). [365](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg365).
- Shoel, Mr., vi.
[404](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-15.htm.html#pg404).
- Shreikhorn, iii. 253.
- Shrewsbury, Earl of, his letter to Sir John Byron's grandson, i. 4.
- Siddons, Mrs., her performance of the character of Isabella, i. 8.
-
- Lord Byron's praise of, iii. 77.
- Effect of her acting at Edinburgh, 160 n.
- An allusion to, iv. 94.
- 'SIEGE OF CORINTH,' iii. 193. 221, 222. 227, 228. 335.
- Sigeum, Cape, vi.
[357](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg357).
- Simplon, the, iii. 299.
- Sinclair, George, esq., 'the prodigy' of Harrow School, i. 62. 91.
- Sirmium, iii. 304.
- 'Sir Proteus,' a satirical ballad, iii. 91.
- 'SKETCH,' a, its first publication in the newspapers, iii. 229.
- Skull-cup, i. 183. 266, 266 n.
- Slave trade, v. 53.
- Slavery, v. 53.
- Sligo, Marquis of, i. 338. 340. 346, 347.; ii. 189. 239.
-
- His letter on the origin of the 'Giaour,' 189.
- Smart, Christopher, ii. 217.
- Smith, Sir Henry, i. 188.
- ——, Horace, esq., his 'Horace in London,' ii. 184.
- ——, Mrs. Spencer. See 'Florence.'
- ——, Miss (afterwards Mrs. Oscar Byrne), dancer, iii. 186. 189.
- Smyrna, Lord Byron's stay at, i. 313.
- Smythe, Professor, i. 230. 286.
- Socrates, v. 86. 303.; vi.
[369](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg369).
- Sonnets, 'the most puling, petrifying, stupidly platonic compositions,' ii. 307.
- Sorelli, his translation of Grillparzer's 'Sappho,' v.72.;
-
- Sotheby, William, esq., his tragedies, iii. 59.;
- his 'Ivan' accepted for Drury Lane Theatre, 175. 184.;
- similarity of a passage in 'Ivan' to one in the 'Corsair,' 177. 180.;
- a 'row' about 'Ivan,' 229.;
- the Æschylus of the age, iv. 36.;
- his 'Orestes,' 55.
- See also, ii. 268.; iii. 236; iv. 5. 190.; v. 23.;
- Lord Byron's letters to, iii. 175, 176. 233.
- Southcote, Joanna, iii. 109, 110 n., 111.
- Southey, Robert, esq., LL.D., his person and manners, ii. 243. 267.
-
- His prose and poetry, 268.
- His 'Roderick,' iii. 143 n.;
- his 'Curse of Kehama,' ii. 67. 94.;
- Lord Byron's intention to dedicate 'Don Juan' to him, iv. 134. 147.;
- his 'Joan of Arc' would have been better in rhyme, v. 20.
- See also ii. 237.; v. 300. 303. 311.
- Southwell, Notts, Lord Byron's residence at, i. 92. 97. 160.
- Southwood, on the Divine Government, vi.
[090](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg090).
- SPEECHES IN PARLIAMENT, Lord Byron's, ii. 128. 147. 207. 256.; vi.
[314](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-11.htm.html#pg314). [321](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-11.htm.html#pg321). [335](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-12.htm.html#pg335).
- Spence's Anecdotes (Singer's edition), v. 117.
- Spencer, Dowager Lady, i. 203.
- ——, William, esq., iii. 233. 236.
- ——, Countess, ii. 151.
- Spenser, Edmund, his measure, ii. 165.
- Stäel, Madame de, her essay against suicide, ii. 218. 220.
-
- Her 'De l'Allemagne,' 262. 291.
- Her personal appearance, iii. 235.
- Her death, iv. 52.
- Notes written by Lord Byron in her 'Corinne,' iv. 193, 194.
- See also, ii. 216. 230. 234. 246. 257. 284. 290. 291. 297. 299. 319.; iii. 4. 30. 232. 250. 255. 284, 285 n. 372. 375.; v. 110-112.
- Stafford, Marquis of (now Duke of Sutherland), ii. 299.
- Stafford, Marchioness of (now Duchess of Sutherland), ii. 230. 299.; iii. 39.
- Stanhope, Hon. Col. Leicester, (now Earl of Harrington), vi.
[040](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-1.htm.html#pg040) n.;
-
- his arrival in Greece to assist in effecting its liberation,
[093](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg093). [108](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg108). [145](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-4.htm.html#pg145). [152](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-5.htm.html#pg152). [191](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-6.htm.html#pg191). [215](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-7.htm.html#pg215).
- His 'Greece in 1823-1824,' vi.
[156](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-5.htm.html#pg156).
- Lord Byron's letters to, vi.
[117](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg117). [181](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-6.htm.html#pg181).
- ——, Lady Hester, Lord Byron taken to task by, i. 348.
- Steele, Sir Richard, iii. 212.
- Stella, Swift's, vi.
[390](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-14.htm.html#pg390).
- Sterne, his affected sensibility, ii. 287.; iii. 127.
- Stephenson, Sir John, iii. 173. 182.
- Stockhorn. iii. 261.
- Storm, aspect of one in the Archipelago, vi.
[357](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg357).
- 'STRAHAN, Tonson, Lintot of the times,' iv. 96.
- Strangford, Lord, his 'Camoens,' i. 119.
- Strong, Mr., Lord Byron's school-fellow at Harrow, i. 91.
- Stuart, Sir Charles (now Lord Stuart de Rothsay), v. 348.
- Suleyman, of Thebes, ii. 183.
- 'Sunshiny day,' vi.
[259](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-9.htm.html#pg259).
- Supernatural appearances, v. 31.
- Suppers, iii. 338.;
-
- lobster nights, iii. 83.
- 'Sweet Florence, could another ever share,' i. 287.
- Swift, Dr. Jonathan, i. 265.
-
- Similarity between the character of Lord Byron and, 265.
- Gave away his copyrights, ii. 138.
- His Stella and Vanessa, vi.
[390](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-14.htm.html#pg390).
- Swoon, the sensation described, iii. 254.
- Sylla, ii. 273.; iii. 22. 63.
- Symplegades, vi.
[358](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg358).
- Switzerland and the Swiss, v. 243.
T.
- Taaffe, Mr., v. 283. 294. 296. 325.
-
- His 'Commentary on Dante,' v. 283.
- Tahiri, Dervise, ii. 183.
- 'Tales of my Landlord,' iv. 25. 31. 38.
- Tasso, an expert swordsman and dancer, i. 64 n.;
-
- an example of filial tenderness, ii. 33 n.;
- his imprisonment, iv. 6.;
- his popularity in his lifetime, v. 15.;
- remade the whole of his 'Jerusalem,' 33.;
- his sensitiveness to public favour, vi.
[002](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg002),
- 'LAMENT of,' iv. 11. 14.
- Tattersall, Rev. John Cecil (Lord Byron's school acquaintance), i. 65.
- 77. 201.; ii. 76.
- Tavernier, the eastern traveller, his château at Aubonne, iii. 268.
- Tavistock, Marquis of, i. 165.
- Taylor. John, esq., Lord Byron's letter to in respect of an allusion to
- Lady Byron in the 'Sun' newspaper, iii. 178.
- Teeth, iv. 91.; v. 32.
- Temple, Sir William, his opinion of poetry, vi.
[413](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-15.htm.html#pg413),
- Tepaleen, i. 291, 291 n.
- Terni, Falls of, iv. 31.
- Terry, Daniel, comedian, iii. 164.
- Theatricals, private, at Southwell, i. 116.
- Thirst, v. 96, 97.
- 'This day of all our days has done,' v. 28.
- Thomas of Ercildoune, i. 148.
- Thompson, Mr., ii. 169, 295.
- Thomson, James, the poet, his 'Seasons' would have been better in rhyme, v. 20.
- Thorwaldsen, the sculptor, his bust of Lord Byron, iv. 33. 286.; v. 200. 323.
- 'THOUGH the day of my destiny's o'er,' iii. 237. 296.
- Thoun, iii. 261.
-
- 'THROUGH life's dull road, so dim and dirty,' v. 82.
- Thurlow (Thomas Hovell Thurlow) second Lord, ii. 197. 199. 276.; iii. 105. 112.
- Thyrza, ii. 75.
- Tiberius, v. 89.
- Tiraboschi, v. 96.
- ''Tis done and shivering in the gale.'
-
- Lord Byron's stanzas to Mrs. Musters on leaving England, i. 259.
- Titian, his portrait of Ariosto, iv. 8.
-
- His pictures at Florence, iv. 12.
- Toderinus, his 'Storia della Letteratura Turchesca,' ii. 238. 241.
- Town life, iii. 53.
- Townshend, Rev. George, his 'Armageddon,' ii. 58.
- Travelling, Lord Byron's opinion of the advantages of, i. 351.
- Travis, the Venetian Jew, iv. 74.
- Trelawney, Edward, esq., v. 358.; vi.
[191](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-6.htm.html#pg191). [217](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-7.htm.html#pg217).
- Troad, the, i. 315. 317.
- Troy, i. 317.; v. 70.
-
- Authenticity of the tale of, v. 70.
- Tuite, Lady, her stanzas to Memory, i. 85.
- Tally's 'Tripoli,' v. 226.
- Turkey, women of, ii. 283
- Turner, W., esq., his 'Tour in the Levant,' v. 129.; vi.
[280](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-10.htm.html#pg280).
- Twiss, Horace, esq., iii. 232. 314.
- Tyranny, v. 53.
U.
- Ulissipont, ii. 69.
- Unities, the, v. 203.
- Usurers; ii. 185, 185 n.
V.
- Vacca, Dr., iii. 343.
- Valentia, Lord (now Earl of Mountnorris), iii. 233.
- Valière, Madame la, vi.
[390](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-14.htm.html#pg390).
- 'VAMPIRE, The, a Fragment,' vi.
[339](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-12.htm.html#pg339).
-
- Superstition, iii. 282.; iv. 147.
- Vanbrugh, his comedies, iii. 12.
- Vanessa, Swift's, vi.
[390](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-14.htm.html#pg390).
- 'Vanity of Human Wishes,' Johnson's, v. 66.
- Vascillie, ii. 183.
- 'Vathek,' iv. 92.
- 'VAULT REFLECTIONS,' iii. 55.
- Velasquez, iv. 9.
- Veli Pacha, i. 290.
- Venetian dialect, iii. 312. 323. 326.
- Venice, the gondolas, iii. 311. 314.
-
- St. Mark's, iii. 322. 353.; iv. 90.
- Theatres, iii. 322. 329.
- Women, 324. 333. 339.; iv. 90. 93. 112. 239.
- Carnival, iii. 320. 328. 332. 339.
- Morals and manners in, iii. 333. 336,; iv. 172. 247.
- Nobility of, iii. 333.
- Riaito, iii. 372.
- Manfrini palace, iv. 8.
- Bridge of Sighs, iv. 40.
- 'VENICE, Ode on,' iv. 125.
- Venus de Medici, more for admiration than love, iv. 12.
- Verona, how much Catullus, Claudian, and Shakspeare have done for it, iii. 304.
-
- Amphitheatre of, 308.
- Juliet's tomb at, 308.
- Tombs of the Scaligers, 309.
- Versatility, vi.
[248](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-8.htm.html#pg248).
- Vestris, Italian comedian, v. 59.
- Vevay, iii. 247. 256.
- Vicar of Wakefield, v. 93.
- Voltaire, gave away his copyrights, ii. 138.
-
- D'Argenson's advice to, iii. 65 n.
- Voluptuary, ii 302.
- Vondel, the Dutch Shakspeare, ii. 78.
- Vostizza, i. 304.; iii. 18.
- Vulgarity of style, vi.
[415](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-15.htm.html#pg415).
W.
- Waite, Mr. (Lord Byron's dentist), iii. 5.; v. 32.
- Wales, Princess of (afterwards Queen Caroline), iii. 19.
- Wallace, the Scottish chief, i. 98.
- Wallace-nook, i. 35.
- Walpole, Sir Robert, his conversation at table, vi.
[392](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-14.htm.html#pg392).
- 'WALTZ, THE; an Apostrophic Hymn,' ii. 178, 179.
-
- The authorship of it denied by Lord Byron, 187.
- Ward, Hon. John William (afterwards Earl of Dudley), his review
- of Horne Tooke's Life in the Quarterly, ii. 180.
-
- His style of speaking, 209.
- Lord Byron's pun on, 284.
- His review of Fox's Correspondence, 311.
- Epigrams on, 330.
- Warren, Sir John, i. 31.
- Washington, George, ii. 273.; iii. 67.; vi.
[039](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-1.htm.html#pg039).
- Waterloo, Lord Byron's verses on the battle of, iii. 245.
- Wathen, Mr., i. 97.
- Watier's club, iii. 233.; vi.
[020](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-0.htm.html#pg020).
- 'Waverley,' character of, iii. 98.
- Way, William, esq., ii. 140.
- Webster, Sir Godfrey, iii. 83.
- Webster, Wedderburn, esq., iii. 52.; iv. 31. 317.
- 'WEEP, daughter of a royal line,' iii. 1, 2.
- Wellesley, Sir Arthur. See Wellington.
- ——, Richard, esq., ii. 292.
- Wellington, Duke of, 'the Scipio of our Hannibal,' iii. 174.
- Wengen Alps, iii. 263, 264.
- Wentworth, Lord, iii. 121. 157. 167.
-
- 'WERNER; or, THE INHERITANCE; a Tragedy,' v. 264. 310. 312.; vi.
[103](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-3.htm.html#pg103).
- 'Werther,' Goethe's effects of, iv. 357.
- Mad. de Stäel's character of, 357.
- West, Mr. (American artist), his conversations with Lord Byron, 343.
- Westall, Richard, esq.. R.A., ii. 186.
- Westminster Abbey, vi.
[366](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-13.htm.html#pg366).
- Westmoreland, Lady, i. 284.
- Wetterhorn, iii. 264.
- 'What matter the pangs,' v. 260.
- 'When man expelled from Eden's bowers,' i. 258.
- 'When Time, who steals our years away,' i. 132.
- Whigs, v. 125.
- 'Whistlecraft,' iv. 66. 69.
- Whitbread, Samuel, esq., ii. 198 n. 208.; iii. 170. 173.
-
- 'The Demosthenes of bad taste,' ii. 208.
- Whitby, Captain, v. 112.
- White, Henry Kirke, esq., ii. 58.
- ——, Lydia, ii. 268. 285.; iv. 103.
- 'White Lady of Avenel,' v. 31.
- 'White Lady of Colalto,' v. 31.
- 'Who killed John Keats?' v. 212.
- 'Why, how now, saucy Tom?' v. 136.
- Wieland, i. 226 n.
-
- His history of 'Agathon,' iv. 236.
- Resemblance between Byron and, 237 n.
- Wilberforce, William, esq., his style of speaking, ii. 209.
-
- Personified by Sheridan, iii. 188.
- Wildman, Thomas, esq., i. 69. 87.
- ——, Colonel, present proprietor of Newstead, i. 266 n.
- Wilkes, John, esq., vi.
[390](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-14.htm.html#pg390).
- Will, Lord Byron's, in 1811; ii. 43.
-
- His last, vi.
[284](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-10.htm.html#pg284).
- Williams, Captain, v. 350. 353.
- Williams, Mrs., the fortune-teller, her prediction concerning Byron, i. 56.
- Wilmot, Mrs., her tragedy, iii. 167.
- Wilson, Professor, iv. 269.
- Windham, Right Hon. William, ii. 208. 274.
- 'WINDSOR POETICS,' iii. 55.
- Wingfield, Hon. John, i. 65. 203.
-
- His death, ii. 38. 58. 63.
- Women, society of, iii. 7.
-
- Cannot write tragedy, 168.
- State of, under the ancient Greeks, v. 59.
- Woodhouselee, Lord, his opinion of Lord Byron's early poems, i. 127.
- Woolriche, Dr., iii. 138 n.
- Wordsworth, William, esq., Lord Byron's review of his early poems, i. 169.; vi.
[293](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-10.htm.html#pg293).
-
- The allusion to, in English Bards, i. 245.
- His 'Excursion,' iii. 106.; v. 18.
- His powers to do 'anything,' iii. 111.
- Influence of his poetry on Lord Byron, 274.
- Never vulgar, vi.
[413](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-15.htm.html#pg413).
- See also, iv. 66.
- Wrangham, Rev. Francis, iii. 90.
- Wright, Walter Rodwell, esq., his 'Horæ Ionicæ,' ii. 62
- Writers, tragic, generally mirthful persons, v. 285.
Y.
- Yanina, i. 290.
- York, Duke of, i. 173.
- Young, Dr. E., iii. 127, 127 n.
- Yussuff, Pacha, vi.
[147](#6798480094604485056_14841-h-4.htm.html#pg147).
- Yverdun, iii. 267.
Z.
- Zitza, i. 290. 296 n.
- Zograffo, Demetrius, ii. 44, 44 n.
THE END.