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William Wordsworth

Page 44

by Hunter Davies


  Cintra, Convention of (1808), 196–7

  Clarkson, Catherine, 112

  Dorothy’s letters to, 153, 165, 167, 270, 271, 295

  Clarkson, Thomas, 112, 222, 235, 336

  Cocker, River, 5–6

  Cockermouth, 5–6

  birthplace, 5, 6, 7, 71, 347

  childhood in, 9–11, 14, 21

  grammar school, 10

  William revisits, 334

  Coleorton (Leics), 185–6, 292

  Coleridge, Berkeley, 107

  Coleridge, Derwent, 120, 202, 333

  and parents’ separation, 185, 187

  at school in Ambleside, 187, 206, 253

  at Allan Bank, 195

  Southey’s support of, 263

  Coleridge, Hartley, 88, 89, 117, 135, 202

  precocity, 154, 254, 263, 332–3

  and parents’ separation, 185, 187

  at school in Ambleside, 187, 206, 253

  at Allan Bank, 195, 200

  teaches Willy, 257

  Southey’s support of, 263

  on Dora’s devotion to William, 293

  death, 332, 333, 349

  on two-sided William, 343

  Coleridge, Henry Nelson, 310

  Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, 33, 34, 125, 133, 151, 192, 238, 243, 342

  and Pantisocracy, 78, 79, 80–82, 84, 261

  early life, 78–9

  meets

  Southey, 79, 80

  differences with him, 82, 84

  lectures, 82–3

  meets William, 83

  ends friendship with Southey, 84, 261

  marriage to Sara Fricker, 84

  begins correspondence with William, 85, 87–8

  first meeting with Dorothy and William, 88

  importance to William, 88, 91, 94, 122, 131–2, 208–9

  contacts with Southey as brother-in-law, 88

  increasing intimacy with Dorothy and William, 89–96, 110

  worship of William’s genius, 90, 91, 92, 106, 122, 128, 277

  character, 90–91, 92, 131, 208

  rejection of play, 92

  concentration on poetry, 93–4, 96

  drug-addiction, 93, 119, 159, 185, 199, 200, 201

  obtains annuity, 95–6, 185

  publication of Lyrical Ballads, 96, 101–2, 106–7

  in Germany, 96, 98–9, 100, 107

  Prelude addressed to, 101, 165, 340

  and ‘Idiot Boy’, 105

  tour of Lakes with William, 108, 111–12, 116

  rents Greta Hall, 117–18

  shared life with William and Dorothy, 118–22

  passion for Sarah Hutchinson, 119, 120, 149, 158, 187, 200, 302

  health problems, 119–20, 150, 154, 158

  fell-walking, 120

  collapse of marriage, 120–1

  journalism, 121–2

  renewed friendship with Southey, 122, 262

  helps William with new edition of Lyrical Ballads, 122, 123, 125–6, 127

  grouped with William and Southey as Lake Poets, 129, 189

  William’s light-hearted letter to, 135

  affection for Dorothy, 137

  and William’s marriage, 149–50

  strange dream, 149–50

  jealousy of William’s domestic happiness, 150, 166, 173, 182, 207

  godfather to John Wordsworth, 152

  methods of child care, 153–4

  Scottish tour with William and Dorothy, 154, 249

  depression and self-pity, 156, 158, 171, 199–201

  continues tour alone, 158–60

  tensions between William and, 159, 161

  portrait painted by Hazlitt, 163

  leaves Lakes for Malta, 165

  lack of news from, 166, 167, 171, 184

  uncertainty over future plans, 167, 171, 173

  on death of William’s brother John 170

  usually addressed by surname, 180

  in Malta, 184

  return to England, 184–5

  Poor health and changed looks, 185, 207

  separation from wife, 185, 186, 187

  winter or Beaumont estate, 185–6

  move to Allan Bank, 186–8, 192, 195, 198, 204

  illness in London, 187, 198

  produces Friend magazine, 195–6, 199

  on William’s Cintra pamphlet, 196

  causes unhappy atmosphere, 199–200

  given home by Montagu, 201, 205

  gift from De Quincey, 202

  grievances and slanders against William, 205–7

  so-called reconciliation, 207, 209

  contrasted with William, 207–9

  and deaths of Wordsworth children, 211, 212

  disappointed in Excursion, 240

  affectionate letters to wife, 249

  castigation of her, 264–5

  and Keats’s skit on ‘Peter Bell’, 275

  his part in changing public attitude to William, 277

  Hazlitt’s praise of, 278

  tour of Belgium and Rhineland with William, 287, 293, 304

  on Sarah Hutchinson, 302

  death, 304

  Coleridge, Sara (wife) (formerly Fricker), 81, 82, 83, 88, 96, 152, 195, 202, 262, 266

  marriage, 84

  at Nether Stowey, 88, 89

  Coleridge’s neglect of, 89, 92, 98, 119, 121

  at Greta Hall, 117, 120

  Dorothy’s antipathy to, 120, 150, 154, 200, 265

  collapse of marriage, 121–2

  separation, 185, 186, 187

  at Allan Bank, 195, 198, 200

  and Coleridge’s grievance against William, 206

  Coleridge’s castigation of, 264–5

  blossoming after separation, 265

  Coleridge, Sara (daughter), 120, 153, 195, 198, 202, 265, 331, 336

  and parents’ separation, 185

  at Allan Bank, 200

  Southey’s support of, 263

  marriage to cousin Henry, 310

  on Miss Fenwick, 316–17

  Colthouse, Ann Tyson’s house in, 21, 24

  Como, Lake, 138

  Cookson, Ann—see Wordsworth, Ann

  Cookson, Christopher—see Crackenthorpe, Christopher

  Cookson, Dorothy (grandmother), 9, 12, 13–14, 17, 26, 70

  Cookson, Mary (cousin), 66

  Cookson, William (grandfather), 9, 12, 13–14, 26

  Cookson, Rev. William (uncle), 9, 31, 32, 68, 180

  help and advice to William, 28–9, 40

  disappointed in William, 39, 40, 66, 75

  marriage, 40

  gives Dorothy a home, 40, 66, 70, 75

  reaction to news of Annette, 63

  as Dean of Windsor, 66, 179

  changed attitude to William, 179

  Cooper, Thomas, 324

  Cottle, Joseph, 86, 87, 91, 108

  arranges lectures by Coleridge and Southey, 82–3

  publishes Lyrical Ballads, 96, 101–2, 107

  ceases publishing, 102, 122, 298

  Courier, 196, 198

  Cowper, William, 33

  Crackenthorpe family, 9

  Crackenthorpe (formerly Cookson), Christopher (uncle), 9, 13

  dislike of William, 13, 23, 26, 28

  as guardian, 22, 25, 39, 62–3, 68, 70

  death, 145

  Crackenthorpe, Mrs Christopher (aunt), Dorothy’s letter to, 70–71

  Crackenthorpe, William (cousin), 235

  Critical Review, attack on Poems in Two Volumes, 190, 191

  Crosthwaite Church, Southey’s grave at, 349

  Crump, Mr (Liverpool attorney), builder of Allan Bank, 172, 194

  Cumberland Pacquet, 22

  Curse of Kehama, The (Southey), 262, 267

  Curwen family, 37, 38, 307

  Dalton, John, 11

  Danton, George Jacques, 54

  Darlington, Beth, 249

  Davy, Sir Humphry, 92, 173, 264, 306

  sees new Lyrical Ballads through press, 123, 133

  visits Lakes,
167

  Dawson, Mary, 248

  De Quincey, Margaret, 224, 349

  De Quincey, Thomas, 210, 336

  impressed by Dorothy, 137, 303

  fan letter to William after reading Lyrical Ballads, 201–2

  introduction and aid to Coleridge, 202

  momentous meeting with William, 202–3

  takes over Dove Cottage, 203

  on William’s attitude to women, 203–4

  devotion to Wordsworth children, 203, 204–5, 211, 223

  his comparison of William and Coleridge, 208

  ill-feeling between Wordsworths and, 223–4

  break in friendship, 224–6

  liaison and marriage, 224

  renewed friendship with William, 226, 236

  edits Westmorland Gazette, 236–7

  on William’s ‘animal passions’, 250

  description of Southey, 265

  on William’s achievement of fame, 279

  on Dorothy’s strong emotions, 303

  on Mary’s kindness, 335

  ‘Dejection: an Ode’ (Coleridge), 149

  Derwent, River, 5, 6

  Derwentwater, in, 117

  Devonshire, fifth Duke of, 197

  Devonshire, Georgiana, Duchess of, 127

  Dixon, James, 325, 326

  Don Juan (Byron), 267

  Dove Cottage (Grasmere), 321, 348

  first seen by William, 108

  move to, 112–13

  life at, 113–22, 128, 135

  garden hut, 114, 174

  neighbours, 115

  visitors, 116–20, 135, 145, 149, 150, 163–4, 167, 202–3, 208

  William and Mary’s return to, with Dorothy, after marriage, 146, 148, 150

  domestic routine, 150–1

  overcrowding, 166, 167, 177

  move from, 186, 192

  taken over by De Quincey, 203, 204, 223, 226, 237

  Duddon valley, 166, 278, 299, 328

  Dumfries, 156

  Durham, University of, honorary degree for William, 312, 316

  ‘Eagle, The’ (Tennyson), 327

  Earl of Abergavenny (ship), 41

  John Wordsworth as captain of, 116, 168–9

  sinking of, 169, 170

  Easedale, 114, 306, 336

  Eclectic Review, 240, 274, 276

  Edinburgh, 160, 289

  Edinburgh Review, 232, 243, 262, 276

  ignores Lyrical Ballads, 125, 128

  originates ‘Lake Poets’ term, 129

  attack on Poems in Two Volumes, 190–1

  attack on Excursion, 239, 241, 242

  on White Doe of Rylstone, 240

  on Ecclesiastical Sonnets, 279

  Edridge, Henry, his portrait of William, 179

  Ennerdale, 108

  ‘Eroica’ Symphony (Beethoven), 164

  Esthwaite Water, 19, 20, 35

  Evans, Mary, 78, 82

  Examiner, 275

  Hazlitt’s review of Excursion in, 239

  Fenwick, Isabella, 334, 335

  joins Wordsworth circle, 315–17

  defends Quillinan, 316, 330

  her notes on William’s memories of background to poems, 317, 341

  and birthday festivities, 321

  Fisher, Molly, 115, 135, 151

  Flagellant, 79

  Fleming, Lady Diana, 214–15

  Fleming, Lady Diana the younger, 214, 215, 294–5

  Fletcher, Miss (Rydal neighbour), 323, 328

  Fox, Charles James, 141

  William’s obsequious letter to, 127

  William’s meeting with, 178

  Fox, Mrs Charles James, 178

  France: 1790 trip to, 40, 42, 45–8

  1791–2 stay in, 51–5, 100, 111

  possible trip in 1793, 67, 69

  1802 visit, 139–42

  1820 visit, 272, 285–6

  French Revolution, 43, 45, 48, 50, 52–5, 79, 140–1, 164, 173–4, 229–30, 232, 287

  Fricker, Edith—see Southey, Edith

  Fricker, Eliza, 264

  Fricker, Martha, 264

  Fricker, Sara—see Coleridge, Sara

  Friend, The, Coleridge’s weekly paper, 195, 199–200, 201, 206

  ‘Frost at Midnight’ (Coleridge), 93

  George III, 66

  Germany, 1798–9 trip to, 96, 98–101, 107, no, 159

  Gillbanks, Rev. Joseph, 10, 11

  Gillman, Dr James, 287, 304

  Gilpin, William, 37, 98, 112

  Gladstone, William Ewart, 322, 327

  Glasgow, 156

  Godwin, Mary Wollstonecraft, 74

  Godwin, William, 92, 103, 179

  influence on William, 74

  Goslar, 99–101

  Grantham, ‘abandoned women’ in, 29

  Grasmere, 41, 70, 114, 151

  move to Dove Cottage in, 108, 110, 112, –13

  local life, 115, 215

  changes in, 172, 194

  plans to leave, 172, 177

  move to new house (Allan Bank) in, 186, 192, 194–5

  move to Parsonage, 209–10, 349

  deaths of Catherine and Thomas at, 210–12

  final move from, 212, 214, 215

  Wordsworth Museum, 290, 348

  Coleridge and Wordsworth graves at, 333. See also Allan Bank

  Dove Cottage

  Grasmere Lake, 114, 182, 203

  Grattan, Thomas, on William’s ‘unrefined’ appearance, 287

  Gray, Thomas, 32, 33, 38, 47

  Great Malvern, 337

  Green family, appeal for, 197–8

  Green, Sally, 197, 210

  Greta Hall (Keswick), 349

  Coleridge at, 117, 120, 122, 148, 149, 150, 161, 167–8, 200

  Southey at, 122, 161, 167–8, 261, 263–6, 310–12, 315

  Hazlitt hidden at, 163

  Gretna Green, 156

  Guide to the Lake District (Gilpin), 98, 112

  Halifax: Dorothy’s childhood in, 14, 23, 24

  her secret meeting with William in, 68, 69–70

  Hamburg, 99, 159

  Hampton Court, 286

  Hanway, Joseph, 36

  Harper, G. M., 55

  Hatfield, John, 155–6, 172

  Hawkshead, 16–17, 111

  Tyson house and shop in, 16, 17, 21, 35, 348

  schooldays in, 17–21, 22, 23–4, 26, 27, 30, 230

  grammar school, 18—19, 29, 252, 348

  summer vacations in, 35–8, 43

  social life, 36–8

  Haydon, Benjamin, 220

  close friendship with William, 221, 327–8

  paintings of William, 327

  suicide, 328

  Hazlitt, William, 91, 97, 125, 280

  first impression of William, 92, 105–6

  on Lyrical Ballads 106

  enchanted by Dorothy, 137

  at Dove Cottage after Keswick escapade, 163–4

  condemns Excursion, 239

  admits William’s genius, 277–8

  his ‘candle’ story about William, 281–2

  Helvellyn, 108, 114, 118, 167, 327

  Hogg, James, William’s poem written on death of, 304–5, 314

  Holland, Elizabeth Vassall Fox, Lady, 178

  back-handed compliment to William, 195

  donation to Green appeal, 197

  Hood, Edwin Paxton, 325

  ‘Hope, Hon. Augustus’ (John Hatfield), 155–6

  Howley, William, Archbishop of Canterbury, 327

  Hunt, Leigh, 220

  on William’s poetic genius, 277

  Hutchinson family, 143–4

  Hutchinson, George, 144, 168

  Hutchinson, Henry, 144

  Hutchinson, Joanna, 120, 144, 154, 295

  Hutchinson, John, 144, 181

  Hutchinson, Margaret, 101, 144

  Hutchinson, Mary—see Wordsworth, Mary

  Hutchinson, Sarah, 117, 118, 132, 141, 144, 146, 185, 215, 220, 221, 241, 242

  Coleridge’s passion for, 119, 120, 149, 158,
185, 186, 187, 200

  devotion to William, 149, 186

  at Dove Cottage, 150, 151, 154, 166, 173, 195

  possibility of marriage to John Wordsworth, 170, 302

  helps Coleridge on his magazine, 186, 187, 196, 199

  at Allan Bank, 196

  leaves Allan Bank, 199

  and Catherine’s death, 210–11

  in Scotland and Wales, 246

  on William’s spoiling of Willy, 257

  as universal aunt to Wordsworths and Southeys, 264, 265, 295, 302

  on ‘tourist attraction’ of William, 280

  death, 302, 303

  grave, 333

  Hutchinson, Tom, 144, 199, 210, 211

  godfather to Tom Wordsworth, 181

  In Memorium (Tennyson), 342

  Industrial Revolution, 230

  Ireland, 1829 visit to, 288–9

  Isola (Italian teacher), 38

  Italy, 1837 trip to, 307, 320, 328

  James (family servant), 12, 17

  Jeffrey, Francis (later Lord), 125

  attack on 1807 Poems, 190

  review of Excursion (‘This will never do’), 239, 241, 242

  claim to be admirer of William, 279

  Jerdan, William, 285

  Joan of Arc (Southey), 80, 83, 87, 102, 262

  Johnson, Joseph, 61, 65

  Johnson, Samuel, 121

  Jones, John Paul, 11

  Jones, Robert, 69, 286

  accompanies William on first trip to France, 46–7, 51, 159, 285

  in North Wales with William, 49

  Journal of a Few Months Residence in Portugal and Glimpses of the South of Spain (Dora Wordsworth), 331

  Keats, John, 262, 327, 335

  first meeting with William, 220, 221

  disappointed in him, 221, 222, 288

  parodies ‘Peter Bell’, 274, 275

  considers William a genius, 277

  death, 325

  Keble, John, 291

  Keepsake, 281

  Kendal, 185

  1818 election, 234–6

  Kendal Chronicle, 230, 234, 275

  Kendal and Windermere railway, projected, 322–3, 329

  Keswick, 70, 114, 128, 152, 266, 268, 349

  William’s nursing of R, Calvert at, 72–4

  Southey’s grave, 349. See also Greta Hall

  Kingston, Mr (Comptroller of Stamps), 220, 221

  Kirkby Lonsdale, 219

  ‘Kubla Khan’ (Coleridge), 93

  Lamb, Charles, 82, 89, 117, 179, 262, 296

  ridicules William’s shoes, 91

  on Lyrical Ballads, 124–5, 132

  possible author of teasing paragraph on William’s wedding. 149

  clears up doubts over John Wordsworth’s death, 170

  on ‘sad Josephs’, 198

  and Coleridge’s grievance against William, 206, 207

  tipsy teasing of William, 221

  on Excursion, 240

  death, 304

  Landor, Walter Savage, 80

  Lausanne, 286

  Lay of the Last Minstrel (Scott), 160, 161, 178, 180, 191

  Lectures on the English Poets (Hazlitt), 277–8

  Legouis, Emile, 55, 271, 342

 

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