Coleridge- Darker Reflections

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Coleridge- Darker Reflections Page 72

by Richard Holmes

Bedingfield, Lady, 128

  Behaviourism, 396

  Bell, Andrew, 131, 273, 317

  Bellingham, John, 307–8, 310

  Benevuti, Pietro, 58

  Berkeley, George, Bishop of Cloyne, 409

  Berlin, Sir Isaiah, 462n

  Bernard, (Sir) Thomas, 71, 117, 136, 144, 159, 288

  Berners Street, London, 288, 312–13, 338, 342

  Bernhardi, Sophie (née Tieck), 53

  Bernini, Giovanni Lorenzo, 57

  Bertozzi, Anna-Cecilia, 22–7, 31, 35, 83, 150, 236

  Betham, Mary Matilda, 133, 236

  Bible: SCT rereads, 71, 104; Hazlitt attacks STC’s view of, 442

  Bijou (magazine), 552

  Biographia Literaria: on unifying passion, 5; on willing suspension of disbelief, 130, 385, 456; charges of plagiarism in, 254, 280n, 281n, 400–3, 406; STC describes to Byron, 377; writing and structure, 378–81, 383–6, 390–2, 405–9; autobiographical elements in, 380–1, 395, 402–4; on Wordsworth, 382–5, 388–90, 405, 453; active and passive principles in, 387; on theories of poetry, 388–91, 398; sent for printing, 392–3, 404–5, 408–9; expanded, 393, 398; philosophical content, 393–6, 398–400, 404–8, 460, 483; and creative process, 396–8, 410, 435; employs term “esemplastic”, 403–5, 408; publication, 413, 416, 421, 433, 437, 440, 451; and experience of Paradise, 418; reception, 446, 448, 453–60, 469; issue by Fenner, 446; sales, 504

  biography: STC’s views on, 7, 186

  Birmingham, 289

  Bishop (Calne chemist), 374

  Black Sea, 29

  Blackwood, William, 556

  Blackwood’s Magazine, 453–4, 500, 507–9

  Blake, Catherine, 473

  Blake, William, 223, 442, 460; Songs of Innocence and Experience, 473–4

  Blumenbach, Johann Friedrich, 317

  Boccaccio, Giovanni, 467, 552

  Boehme, Jakob, 53, 207, 250, 399

  Boosey, Thomas, 437

  Bowles, William, 161, 373–4, 377, 380–1

  Bowood House, Calne, Wiltshire, 373–4, 386, 391, 413

  Bowyer, James, 104, 381, 391

  Box, Wiltshire, 349

  Brabant, Dr R.H., 373–5, 390–2, 402, 408, 417–18, 421, 433, 443

  Brainbridge, Mrs (London landlady), 119

  Brent family, 289, 341, 343

  Brent, Charlotte: STC’s attachment and flirtations with, 111–12, 120–1, 135, 220, 221, 244, 259–60, 262–3, 289, 294, 314, 346–7, 360, 363, 501; resemblance to Asra, 312, 392; STC seeks sympathy from, 314; and John Morgan’s illness, 341; and John Morgan’s financial difficulties, 342; family silverware business transferred to, 343; and STC’s fund-raising in Bristol, 345–8; travels with STC to West Country, 348–51; and STC’s illness and treatment in Bristol, 354; and STC’s opium addiction, 356–7; quarrels with STC, 365; in smallpox scare, 381; organizes STC’s study room, 387; copies “Christabel”, 414; and STC’s unruly behaviour, 416–17; attracts admirers, 418; and STC’s letter from Byron, 422; and John Morgan’s final illness and death, 502; STC gives financial help to, 502

  Brice (of Aisholt), 103

  Bridgwater, Somerset, 99, 102

  Bristol: STC and Hartley in, 94; Sara returns to, 99; Sara leaves, 109; STC stays with Morgans in, 111–12; STC visits and lectures in to help Morgans, 343–9; STC recovers in (1813–14), 354–5, 358–60, 365, 371; celebrates Napoleon’s downfall, 360, 362; in STC’s Biographia Literaria, 379

  Bristol Gazette, 344, 349

  British Association for the Advancement of Science: Cambridge meeting (1833), 559

  British Critic, 454, 547

  Broadhead, John, 145

  Brown, John (Penrith printer), 158–9, 176, 179, 290–1

  Browne, Sir Thomas, 3, 33

  Brun, Fredericka, 173, 252

  Bruno, Giordano, 7, 362, 400

  Burdett, Sir Francis, 213, 238, 307–9

  Burke, Edmund, 471n, 481

  Burnett, George, 230–1, 236, 239

  Burnett, Martha (née Fricker), 94

  Burton, Robert, 511

  Bury St Edmunds, 72, 94, 122, 142, 145

  Byerly, Katherine, 128

  Byron, George Gordon, 6th Baron: sales of poetry, 209; attends STC’s Shakespeare lectures, 267, 274, 277; STC drafts letter to, 275, 277; accused of plagiarizing STC, 280n; absent from STC’s Willis’s Rooms lectures, 310; Wordsworth meets, 311; on Drury Lane Committee, 338, 414; admires Goethe’s Faust, 366; STC writes to for help, 376–8, 414–15; cited in Biographia Literaria, 396; STC promises new play for Drury Lane, 413–14, 417, 421; debts and personal problems, 414; imitates STC, 414; requests Moore to praise STC, 415; sends money to STC, 421–2; leaves England permanently, 425; STC confesses opium addiction to, 425; STC meets, 425–6; STC recites “Kubla Khan” to, 425–6, 457; STC sends Zapolya to, 425; discusses STC, 432; admires “Christabel”, 434, 437–8, 457; encourages STC, 440; reads Biographia Literaria, 456–7; Hazlitt on, 468, 471n; caricatured in Peacock’s Nightmare Abbey, 485; funeral, 542; Schlegel disparages, 553; Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage, 310; The Corsair, 377; Don Juan, 457; English Bards and Scotch Reviewers, 377; Hebrew Melodies, 377; “The Maid of Corinth”, 414; Manfred, 323n; Sardanapalus, 323n; The Siege of Corinth, 434

  Calderon de la Barca, Pedro, 269

  Calne, Wiltshire: STC lives in with Morgans, 373–5, 381; Hartley visits, 385–7; and STC’s unruly behaviour, 416–17

  Cambridge: STC revisits, 74, 559

  Campbell, John, 136

  Canning, George, 161, 430

  Carlisle, (Sir) Anthony, 211, 214–16, 222, 477

  Carlyle, Thomas, 251, 281n, 367n, 450, 487n, 488, 543–4; Life of Sterling, 550n

  Caroline, Princess Regent, 311

  Carroll, Lewis (Charles Lutwidge Dodgson), 525 & n

  Cary, Henry Francis, 458, 468, 473, 488, 544

  Cary, Henry (H.F. Cary’s son), 458, 468

  Castle, Michael, 344, 347–8, 364

  Catalana, Angelica, 236

  Catholic Emancipation, 244

  Cayley, Sir George, 161

  Cervantes Saavedra, Miguel de, 354, 465

  Champion (newspaper), 465–6

  chance: STC on, 17

  Chapman (Public Secretary, Malta), 33, 42, 46, 49

  Chasles, Philarete, 487n

  Chatterton, Thomas, 280, 468

  Chaucer, Geoffrey, 467

  Chiabrera, Gabriello: Epitafi, 175, 184, 252

  Chichester, HMS, 121

  children: labour and exploitation of, 474–7, 481

  Chisholm, Miss (of Highgate), 511

  Chisholm, Mrs (of Highgate), 542

  “Christabel”: writing, 3, 94, 198, 440; Scott imitates, 94, 208–10, 277; STC rewrites, 113; Crabb Robinson reads, 258; Shelley admires, 293; STC sends copy to Byron, 414; Byron admires, 425, 467; Murray publishes, 426, 429, 431, 434, 437, 439; reviewed, 434, 436–8; Wordsworth’s silence on, 458; Hazlitt on, 470; Peacock admires, 485; Lockhart praises, 508; influences Lewis Carroll, 525n; unfinished state, 538, 546

  Christchurch Bay, Hampshire, 443–4

  Christian Monitor (newspaper), 335

  Christianity: STC’s views on, 71–3, 216–18, 225–6, 359, 371, 442, 538–9; in Biographia Literaria, 398–9; see also religion

  Christ’s Hospital, London (school), 11, 36, 132, 235, 519

  Chubb, Thomas, 100–1

  Cimarosa, Domenico, 491

  Cintra, Convention of (1808), 155, 157–8, 171

  Clairmont, Claire, 425

  Clarke, Charles Cowden, 487n

  Clarkson, Catherine: friendship and correspondence with Dorothy Wordsworth, 73, 75, 89, 91, 94, 142–3, 193–4, 197, 200, 212, 233, 335, 339, 342; Wordsworth visits, 122; Crabb Robinson reports STC’s lecture on education to, 132; friendship with STC, 142–3; on Asra’s departure from Allan Bank, 193; criticizes STC’s patriotic journalism, 240; Crabb Robinson and, 258, 286; and STC-Wordsworth quarrel, 296, 300–1; concern over STC’s inaction after Remorse success, 339; on STC’s caring for Morgan, 3
41–2

  Clarkson, Thomas: campaigns against slave trade, 72, 477; STC renews friendship with, 72; Asra visits, 94; STC requests to intercede for Henry Hutchinson, 121; Wordsworth visits, 122; STC reviews history of slave trade, 141–3; STC visits, 141–3; advises STC on launching of The Friend, 144; and STC’s opium cure, 144, 145; sends turkey to Charles Lamb, 152; subscribes to The Friend, 161; Portraiture of Quakerism, 73

  classicism: STC lectures on, 320

  Claude Lorraine, 54

  Cobbett, William: produces Weekly Political Register, 152, 165; STC despises, 226; attacks STC, 228; imprisoned, 238; STC refers to in Courier article, 239, 257; political radicalism, 442; STC criticizes in second Lay Sermon, 448

  Coburn, Kathleen, 137n

  Coleorton, Leicestershire, 47, 68, 74, 76–7, 79–87, 200, 501

  Coleridge, Ann (née Bowdon; STC’s mother): STC declines to visit when dying, 179

  Coleridge, Berkeley (STC’s son): death, 41, 333

  Coleridge, Derwent (STC’s son; ‘Stumpy Canary’): welcomes STC on return from abroad, 77; stays with mother at Greta Hall, 79; education, 90, 147, 210, 294, 317; liking for De Quincey, 110; visits to Allan Bank, 184; STC’s relations with, 199, 203; and father’s 1812 visit to Lakes, 290–1, 296; STC sends school books to, 298; visits STC at Gillmans’, 320, 510; Dorothy Wordsworth favours, 341; STC pays for clothes, 452; at Cambridge, 453, 465, 507, 510, 523; STC’s concern for welfare and upbringing, 495–6; and Hartley’s rift with STC, 512; and Hartley’s dismissal from Oriel, 513, 515; qualities, 516; and STC’s interest in Hartley’s Prometheus project, 519; relations with Hartley, 520; typhus, 526–7; and Hartley in Ambleside, 532; preserves Green’s essay on STC, 555n; marriage and career, 557

  Coleridge, Edward (STC’s brother), 90, 518

  Coleridge, Edward (STC’s nephew), 551

  Coleridge, Ernest Hartley (STC’s grandson), 266n, 557

  Coleridge, Frances (née Taylor; James’s wife), 98

  Coleridge, George (STC’s brother): teaches Adye, 8; invites STC to help teach at Ottery, 90–1; and STC’s marriage failure, 90–1, 98–9; STC leaves letter unopened, 95, 98; cancels invitation to STC, 98–9; censoriousness, 112; STC writes to reproach, 137; and launching of The Friend, 151; subscribes to The Friend, 161; disapproves of STC, 244; STC self dramatizes to, 259; on reports of STC’s 1818 lectures, 467; and STC’s flight from Cambridge, 515; avoids STC on visit to London, 520–1; death, 521

  Coleridge, Hartley (David Hartley; STC’s son): and STC’s return from abroad, 69–70, 77; education, 70, 79, 90, 147, 199, 210, 294, 317, 359; accompanies STC to Coleorton, 79–81; character and behaviour, 80–1, 92, 156–7, 199, 206, 293, 317, 341, 451, 511, 516, 526, 532; fantasy world (‘Ejuxria’), 80; unease with Asra, 80, 93, 148; and move to uncle George’s at Ottery, 91–2; in London with STC, 93; and parents’ quarrels, 95; small stature, 101, 520; returns to Keswick, 109; liking for De Quincey, 110; STC cites in lecture, 129; visits Lloyds with STC, 156–7; and STC’s infatuation with Asra, 178; visits to Allan Bank, 184; STC’s relations with, 199, 203, 315–16, 444, 495, 525–6; and STC’s 1812 visit to Lakes, 290–1, 296; STC sends school books to, 298; resemblance to STC, 317; and Wordsworths, 335; Dorothy Wordsworth’s view of, 341; affected by STC’s absence and suffering, 369; visits STC in Calne, 385–7, 391; interest in theatricals, 386; and writing of Biographia Literaria, 386; named after philosopher, 403; STC dictates to, 406; returns to Oxford from Calne, 413; relations with cousins Henry and John, 451–2; spends university vacations with STC in Highgate, 451, 463, 509–10; melancholy and isolation, 452; and Poole, 452; STC helps financially, 452; university degree, 490; Fellowship at Oriel College, Oxford, 496, 510; and STC’s financial difficulties, 507; plans Prometheus project, 509, 513, 519, 523; dismissal from Oriel Fellowship, 511–18, 531; rift with STC, 511–12; death, 512; in London after dismissal from Oriel, 518–19; drinking, 519–20, 525–6, 532; moves in with Gillmans, 520; relations with Derwent, 520; writings, 520, 523, 532; helps nurse Derwent, 527; separates from STC finally, 527, 532, 558–9; teaching posts in Ambleside, 527, 532; STC’s separation poem to, 528–9; remains unmarried, 532; STC’s grief over, 532; dedicates published poems to STC, 558; misses sister Sara’s wedding, 558; trust set up under STC’s will, 559; “On the Poetical Use of Heathen Mythology”, 523; Poems, 558

  Coleridge, Henry Nelson (James’s son): records STC’s Table Talk, 245, 534, 559; friendship with cousin Hartley, 451; love and marriage with STC’s daughter Sara, 533, 535, 554, 557; reverence for STC, 533, 535; edits STC’s works, 536n, 555; in Highgate, 555

  Coleridge, Colonel James (STC’s brother), 161, 244–5, 359

  Coleridge, (Sir) John Taylor (James’s son), 245–6, 248–9, 368, 452, 467, 511–12, 518

  Coleridge, Samuel Taylor:

  HEALTH: opium addiction, 11–12 & n, 14–15, 19, 32, 35, 66, 74, 77, 82, 96, 98, 102–3, 110, 117–181, 120, 134, 137–8, 185, 189, 201, 211, 228, 236, 239, 254, 263, 314, 340, 349–50, 355–6 & n, 368, 416, 421, 423, 502, 521–2, 541–2; bowel problems, 12, 14, 110–11, 266–7; undergoes enemas, 61; legs and face swell, 74, 314; boils, 79; run-down, 95; collapses over Royal Institution lectures, 116–18, 135–7, 140–1; convalesces at Margate, 141; undergoes cures for addiction, 144, 145, 154–5, 177, 216, 228, 424–5, 428–32, 444–5; mumps, 160; illness on trip to Bath, 348–51; treatment and care in Bristol (1813–14), 354–60, 365, 371; erysipelas inflammation on legs, 365; heart disease, 424, 554; withdrawal symptoms, 430; premature ageing, 489–90, 502, 530; decline, 556; final illness and death, 559–60

  LITERARY ACTIVITIES: Malta writings destroyed, 34, 97; contracts with Longman for two-volume collection of poems, 94, 109, 198; writings in Nether Stowey, 104–6; plans The Friend, 138–9, 143–4; monsters in poetry, 140n; reviews in Edinburgh Review, 141–3; produces The Friend, 149, 151–6, 163–70, 176, 182–3, 191; works on Courier, 157, 227–8, 237–44, 246, 249, 256, 370; proposes establishing press in Grasmere, 158; copyrights transferred to Longman, 160–1, 241; accused of obscurity, 171–2, 272, 453; discontinues The Friend, 191–2; studies for St Theresa of Avila, 198, 205–7; proposes volume version of The Friend, 203, 208, 241; water-images, 206–7, 402, 403n, 404, 407, 435; adapts Jean-Paul Richter, 251–3; accused of plagiarism, 253–4, 275–80, 280n, 400–3, 406, 466; leaves Courier, 257; play produced (Remorse or Osorio), 321–7, 330–3, 335–8; translation of Goethe’s “Kennst du das Land”, 339–40, 413; proposes translation of Goethe’s Faust, 365–7; philosophical study and writing, 371–2, 379; proposed new play, 413–14, 417, 421; proposed novel on sex conflicts, 418; disparaged by Hazlitt, 432, 434, 438–40, 442, 446, 448–9, 453, 455, 469–70, 494, 533, 545–7; output and reputation, 432; unfavourably reviewed, 438–40; contracts with Fenner and Curtis, 445–6, 451–2, 465; Introduction to Encyclopaedia Metropolitana, 446, 451, 458, 461–3, 481; argues for social reform, 447–9; speculations on life forms, 478–80; issues revision of The Friend, 479–82; copyrights fall to Fenner’s creditors, 504; book on grammar and logic, 519, 523; compiles Archbishop Leighton selection, 524–5, 533, 538–9; elected Fellow of Royal Society of Literature, 541; late poetry, 552

  PRIVATE LIFE AND CAREER: visit to Mediterranean, 1–16, 31–2, 71; reading, 3–4; dreams, 5, 36–8, 43, 47, 121, 229–30, 289, 501–2; infatuation with Asra, 12n, 37, 41, 65, 72, 75–6, 79, 82–3, 85–9, 101, 105, 107, 114, 121, 135, 139, 146, 148–50, 176–8, 184–5, 196, 201, 207, 213, 216–19, 231, 249, 260, 306, 314–15, 433; stays and works for Ball in Malta, 16–20, 29, 32–5, 38–43, 45–8; visit to Sicily, 20–5; attracted to Anna-Cecilia Bertozzi, 22–7, 31, 35, 83, 150; intervenes in Syracuse naval dispute, 27–9; musings on sex, 35–6, 43; and death of John Wordsworth, 39–40, 60; defers return to England, 41; sees apparitions, 42–3, 129, 168; regrets love denied, 44; depressions and introspection, 47, 58–9, 61, 133–4, 137–8, 189, 193, 200–1, 215–19, 235–6, 315, 350–3, 417–18; leaves Malta, 49–50; in Italy on return to England, 50–61; finances, 51n, 57, 91, 93, 95, 99, 117, 228, 241, 3
28, 329, 337–8, 341, 375–6, 421, 504; Allston portraits of, 55–6, 363–4, 393; sails from Italy to England, 61–3; marriage difficulties, 65, 68–9, 72, 75–8, 90–1, 94–5, 100, 109–10, 120–1; understanding of personal struggles, 65–6; plans public lectures, 66, 70–1, 75, 79, 82, 90, 93, 107–9, 113, 115; religious beliefs and interests, 71–3, 204–7, 216–18, 225–6, 359, 371, 394, 406, 412, 441–2, 494; visit to Kendal, 74–5; returns to family at Greta Hall, 77; provides for Sara and children, 79; stays at Coleorton with Hartley, 79–81, 85–7; teaches Greek to Hartley, 79; disorganized behaviour, 81–2; drinking, 82, 83n, 237, 340, 416–17; confrontation with Asra over relations with Wordsworth, 83–4; invited by brother George to teach at Ottery, 90–1; attitude to son Hartley, 91–2; procrastination, 92, 98; quarrels with wife, 94–5; leaves letters unopened, 95, 98, 230–1; stays with Poole in Nether Stowey, 95–7, 103–6, 109; George cancels invitation, 98–9; conversation, 100, 223–5, 248, 426, 470–1, 497, 533, 536–7; anonymous loan from De Quincey, 102, 110; search for unifying power of Imagination, 108; convalesces with Morgan family, 110–11; attachment to Charlotte Brent and Mary Morgan, 111–12, 120–1, 135, 220–1, 244, 259–60, 262–3, 289, 294, 314, 346–7, 360, 363, 501; stays at Courier offices in London, 113, 118–19; delivers Royal Institution lectures, 115–20, 123–33, 135, 441; isolation and loneliness in London, 119, 134, 137, 255; postal flirtation with Morgan sisters, 120–1; Wordsworth visits in London, 122–3, 126; letter from Dorothy Wordsworth on “White Doe”, 126; appearance, 128, 146–7, 222, 274, 363–4, 487, 543, 549, 554; condemns school punishments, 131–2; reputation and notoriety, 132–3, 228, 336, 487; Matilda Betham attempts portrait, 133, 236; lecture notes stolen, 135–6; terminates Royal Institution lectures, 135–6; disagreements with Wordsworth, 137–41; paranoia, 138–9; returns to Wordsworths at Grasmere (1808), 144, 146–7; looks for redemption, 145–6; puts on weight, 146–7; life at Allan Bank, 147, 184–5; relations with daughter Sara, 147–8, 198, 293–4, 453, 486–7; walking tour with Wordsworth and Asra, 149; rebuffed by Asra, 150–1; visits Lloyds with Hartley, 156–7; caricatured, 175, 432, 449–50, 485; fantasy life, 178; and Asra’s leaving Allan Bank for Radnorshire, 191–4, 199, 202; Dorothy Wordsworth criticizes to Mrs Clarkson, 193–5; leaves Allan Bank, 197; visits Sara and children at Greta Hall (1810), 197–200, 202, 208; interest in and concern for sons, 199, 203, 496, 509–10, 525–7, 531; obsessive washing, 201–2; snuff-taking, 202; learning and knowledge, 203–4; invited to London by Montagu, 211–16; Wordsworth injures with advice to Montagu, 211–15, 228, 233–4; rescued and accommodated by Morgan, 220, 221–2, 229, 231, 244, 313; social-literary life in London, 222–7; in Crabb Robinson’s diaries, 223–6; attacked for political views, 227–8, 442; breach with Wordsworth, 234, 240–1, 260, 291–2, 295–6, 298–9, 305, 531; nostalgia for Lakes, 234–5; life assurance payments, 241, 480, 507; meets nephews, 245–9; table talk recorded by nephews, 245–8; rapport with children, 248; leaves Morgans, 256; returns to Morgans, 259–60, 262–4; excuses character to Morgans, 260, 262; Shakespeare/Milton lectures at Philosophical Institution, 264–74, 281–8; lecturing manner, 272–3, 345; life-mask, sketch and bust by Dawe, 274, 298; theory of organic form, 278–9; lectures at Willis’s Rooms (1812), 288, 295, 308, 310–11; travels to Lakes (1812), 289–92; easier relations with wife, 294–5; pride in and love for own children, 294, 315–16, 453; leaves Lakes for last time, 297; returns to London (1812), 297–8; confrontation and agreement with Wordsworth in London, 299–307; reaction to Perceval assassination, 308–10; political views, 309–10, 447–9; geometrical diagrams, 316–17; lecture series at Surrey Institution, 317–21, 328, 330, 333, 336; showmanship, 322; Josiah Wedgwood reduces annuity to, 328–30; and death of Wordsworth’s son Tom, 333–5; inaction after success of Remorse, 339–40; supposed suicide, 340; helps Morgan during convalescence and financial collapse, 341–8; lectures in Bristol (1813–14), 343–6, 349, 354; confesses opium addiction, 356–7; Vandycke portrait of, 364; retreats to Morgans at Ashley, 365, 367–73; moves to Calne, 373–5; on artists’ studios, 387; effect of Rest Fenner’s bankruptcy on, 405–7; Byron sends money to, 421–2; receives grant from Literary Fund, 421; leaves Calne for London, 422; 1816 return to London from Calne, 423; meets Byron, 425–6; retreats to Highgate under Gillman’s care, 428–33, 443, 452, 472, 500, 502; holidays with Gillmans, 443–4, 458, 505–6, 522; lectures on European Literature at Philosophical Society (1818), 465–8; Hazlitt’s panegyric to, 470–1; campaigns for Peel’s Bill against child labour, 475–7, 481; holiday with Green, 478; Lamb dedicates Collected Works to, 480; proposes posthumous continuation of work, 480; attracts visitors and disciples to Highgate, 487 & n, 488, 543–4; Leslie portrait of, 487–8; Phillips portrait of, 487; lectures at Crown and Anchor (1818–19), 489–94, 504; meeting with Keats in Highgate, 496–500; generosity to Mary Morgan and Charlotte Brent, 502; inner uncertainties and self-analysis, 502–3, 530–1; relations with Ann Gillman, 503, 505, 508, 513, 541, 544; rift with Hartley, 511–12; and Hartley’s dismissal from Oriel, 512–18, 531; concern for Hartley after dismissal, 519; sea-bathing, 522–3, 532; holds private classes in Lincoln’s Inn Fields, 524; nurses Derwent with typhus, 526–7; Hartley leaves forever, 527, 532; alienation from wife, 531; social life in Highgate, 533, 551; and daughter Sara’s love for cousin Henry, 535; daughter Sarah’s sympathetic understanding of, 536; on science and religion, 539, 548–9; Fellowship and annuity from Royal Society of Literature, 541; lecture on Prometheus Myth, 541; funeral eulogy of Byron, 542; deputizes for Gillman as physician, 543; reconciliation and Rhine tour with Wordsworth (1828), 553; playfulness, 554; plans own epitaph and tombstone, 556, 557n; will, 559

 

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