508_
Zoili of Albemarle Street, the, vi.
Zoili of Albemarle Street, the, vi.
Byron
80, 81; on _Marino
Faliero_, iv. 329; _City of the Plague_, iv. 339; _Noctes Ambrosianae_,
iv. 570; on _Heaven and Earth_, v. 280, 282; on _Don Juan_, _vi. 213_
Wilson, Sir Robert Thomas, "Southwark's Knight," _vii. 67_
Wilson, W. , _A Missionary Voyage to the South Pacific Ocean, etc. _, _v.
605_
Winckelmann, _Storia delle Arti, etc. _, ii. _396, 431, 432_, 490, 509,
511, 512, 518
_Windsor Poetics. Lines composed on the Occasion of His Royal Highness
the Prince Regent being seen standing between the coffins of Henry
VIII. and Charles I. in the Royal Vault at Windsor_, vii. 35
Wingfield, Hon. John, _i. 96_; ii. 81, 82, 94
Winsor, Justin, _History of America_, _iv. 198_
Wirt, William, _Life of Patrick Henry_, _v. 560_
Wolcot, Dr. John (Peter Pindar), i. 294, _304, 390, 395, 412_; iv. 158;
_Instructions to a Laureat_, _iv. 519_; _Ode to a Margate Hoy_, _vii.
5_
_Wolcot_ v. _Walker_, v. 204
Wolf of the Capitol, Rome, ii. 396
Wolf, F. , _Primavera y Flor de Romances_, _iv. 529_
Wolfe, General James, vi. 12
Wolfe, Rev. C. , _vi. 165_
Wolmar, Madame, ii. 305
Wolseley, Lord, _Decline and Fall of Napoleon_, _v. 551_
_Woman's Hair, A_, i. 233; _iii. 12_
Wood, J. T. , _Modern Discoveries on the Site of Ancient Ephesus_, _ii.
441_
Wood, the pedestrian, _i. 322_
Woodhouselee, Alexander Fraser Tytler, Lord, _Essay on Petrarch_, _ii.
351_
Woodward, Dr. John, _Fossils of England_, _v. 632_
Worcester, battle of, _ii. 395_
Wordsworth, Miss Dorothy, _i. 422_; _iv. 585_
Wordsworth, John, captain of _The Earl of Abergavenny_, _vi. 91_
Wordsworth, William, _i. 305, 318, 331_; ii. 311; iii. 149; vi. 39, 80,
_587_; _vii. 70_ Byron's review of his _Poems_, _i. 234_; _Lyrical
Ballads_, i. 315, 316; _iv. 269_; Distributor of Stamps for the County
of Westmorland, _i. 321_; iv. 582; vi. 5; "Yet let them not to vulgar
Wordsworth stoop," etc. , i. 368; "Let simple Wordsworth chime his
childish verse," i. 369; "write but like Wordsworth--live beside a
lake," i. 422; on Bland Burges, _i. 437_; _Concerning the Relations of
Great Britain, Spain, and Portugal_, ii. 87; "l'acent Wordsworthien,"
_ii. 115_; iv. 6; as preached by Shelley, _ii. 219_; _Emperors and
Kings, etc. _, _ii. 227_; "Not in the Lucid Intervals of Life," _ii.
258_; _Tintern Abbey_, _ii. 261, 272_; _v. 613_; _Intimations of
Immortality_, _ii. 271, 352_; _Excursion_, _ii. 272, 281_; _v. 94,
613_; vi. 4, 176; _On the Extinction of the Venetian Republic_, _ii.
336_; _In the Pass of Killycranky_, _ii. 337_; _Near the Lake of
Thrasymene_, _ii. 377, 378_; _Descriptive Sketches_, _ii. 385_; "How
clear, how keen, how marvellously bright! " iii. xx; Coleridge's _Lines
to a Gentleman_, _iii. 336_; his quarrel with Byron, iii. 533; iv.
479; _Song at the Feast of Brougham Castle_, _iv. 16, 27_; _Ruth_, iv.
24; _Works_, _iv. 25, 27, 33, 220_; _A Poet's Epitaph_, _iv. 26_;
Byron an admirer of, _iv. 47_; "Wordsworth and Co. ," _iv. 182_;
depreciates Voltaire, _iv. 184_; _Resolution and Independence_
(originally _The Leech-gatherer_), iv. _267_, 582 _Two Addresses to
the Freeholders of Westmorland_, _iv. 341_; _Peter Bell_, _iv. 341_;
vi. 177; vii. 63, 64; Hazlitt on, _iv. 518_; referred to in _The
Blues_, iv. 585; _Sonnet to a Painter_, _v. 251_; "crazed beyond all
hope," vi. 74; "unexcised, unhired," vi. 175; _Benjamin the Waggoner_,
vi. 177; "poet Wordy," vi. 214; _Supplement to the Preface_ (_Poems_),
_ibid. _; compared with Jacob Benmen, _vi. 268_; _Thanksgiving Ode_,
vi. 332; "has supporters two or three," vi. 445; Mackintosh, _vii.
32_; _The White Doe of Rylstone; or, The Fate of the Nortons, a Poem_,
vii. 45; "the great metaquizzical poet," _vii. 72, 73_
_World, The_, _i. 358_; _vi. 525_
Wormeley, Katharine Prescott, translation of _Prince de Ligne's
Memoirs_, _vi. 415_
Wraxall, Sir N. W. , _Historical Memoirs_, _vi. 478_; _Posthumous
Memoirs_, _vii. 29, 30_
Wren, C. , i. 438
Wright, John, _ii. 217_; iii. 75, 443; _iv. 63_
Wright, Walter Rodwell, _Horae Ionicae_, i. 366; ii. x, _104_, 202
Wright, Professor, _Kufic Tombstones in the British Museum_, _iii. 120_
_Written after swimming from Sestos to Abydos_, iii. 13; _vi. 112_
Wul-wulleh, death-song of Turkish women, iii. 205
Wyatt, Sir Thomas, iv. 239
Wycherley, _i. 322_
Wylde, G. , _i. 45_
Wynn, _iv. 520_
Wynne, iv. 476
X
Xantippe, _iv. 253_
Xeres, v. 565
Xerxes, ii. 166; iv. 259; vi. 46, 169
Y
Yakintu, king of Arvad, v. 4
Yanina, Janina, or Joannina, lake of, ii. 179, 189
Yarmouth, Maria Fagniani, Lady, _i. 501_
Yarmouth, Lord, "Red Herrings," _i. 493, 497, 501_; vii. 22
Yearsley, Ann, _i. 329_
Yesoukoi, Lieutenant-Colonel, vi. 354
Yonge, C. D. , translation of Athenaeus' _Deipno. _, _v. 11_
York, Duchess of, _iii. 45_
York, Duke of, _i. 3, 391_; _ii. 169_; _iii. 45_; _iv. 587_; _vi. 67,
451, 507_
Young, Edward, _Revenge_, i. 26, _409_; _iii. 158, 200_; _Night
Thoughts_, ii. 95, _161_; _iii. 129, 262_; _vi. 186, 450_;
_Resignation_, _vi. 450_; _Love of fame, the Universal Passion_, _vi.
461_
Young, Rosalind A. , _The Mutiny, etc. _, _v. 622_
_Young Lochinvar_, _ii. 70_
Z
Zama, battle of, _ii. 459_
Zanetti, ii. 472
Zanga, a character in Young's _Revenge_, i. 26, _409_
Zappi, Giovanni Battista, _iv. 271_
Zara, siege of, iv. 331, 332
Zaragoza, Augustina, maid of, ii. 58, 91
Zarina, Queen, character in _Sardanapalus_, v. 12
Zarotti, _iv. 287_
_Zechariah_, _v. 286_
Zegri, the, a Moorish tribe, v. 558
Zela, battle of, _ii. 398_
Zeller, Dr. E. , _Socrates and the Socratic Schools_, _ii. 103_
_Zend-Avesta_, _iii. 110_; _iv. 112_
Zendrini, A. , _Elogio di Jacopo Morelli_, _iv. 457_
Zeno, Carlo, ii. 477, 497
Zeus Olympius, Temple of, ii. 167
Ziani, Doge Sebastian, ii. 473
Zibeon, Esau's wife, _v. 285_
Zimri, king of Israel, _v. 107_
Zitza, convent and village of, ii. 129, 174, 180; _iii. 7_
? i? ka, John of Trocnow, v. 549
Zoffani, _iv.
508_
Zoili of Albemarle Street, the, vi. xix, _467_
Zonaras, _Annales_, ii. 202
Zonta of Twenty, the, _iv. 385, 441_
Zoritch, or Zovitch, Catherine II. 's favourite, _vi. 388_
Zoroaster, the creed of, vi. 491
Zosimado, ii. 197
Zosimus, _Historiae_, ii. 172
Zoubof, Plato, Catherine II. 's favourite, _vi. 388_
Zrini, Hungarian commander, iii. 442
Zsigetvar, siege of, iii. 442
Zuccari, _ii. 437_
Zuccato, Bartolommeo, _iv. 332_
Zuleika, Persian name of Potiphar's wife, _iii. 187_; vi. 254
INDEX TO FIRST LINES.
(The first line is given of every _Poem_, and of each _Canto_ of the
longer Poems: that of the _Plays_ is omitted. )
A noble Lady of the Italian shore (_Poems 1816-1823_), iv. 547
A Spirit passed before me: I beheld (_Hebrew Melodies_), iii. 406
A Year ago you swore, fond she! (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc. _), vii. 41
Absent or present, still to thee (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 50
Adieu, adieu! my native shore (_Childe Harold_, Canto I. ), ii. 26
Adieu, thou Hill! where early joy (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 237
Adieu, ye joys of La Valette (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 24
AEgle, beauty and poet, has two little crimes (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc. _),
vii. 76
Ah! gentle, fleeting, wav'ring sprite (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 20
Ah, heedless girl! why thus disclose (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 244
Ah! Love was never yet without (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 62
Ah! --What should follow slips from my reflection (_Don Juan_, Canto
XV. ), vi. 544
And dost thou ask the reason of my sadness? (_Jeux of Esprit, etc. _),
vii. 41
And thou art dead, as young and fair (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. _32_, 41
And thou wert sad--yet I was not with thee (_Poems of July-September,
1816_), iv. 63
And "thy true faith can alter never" (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 65
And wilt thou weep when I am low? (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 266
Anne's Eye is liken'd to the Sun (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 244
As by the fix'd decrees of Heaven (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 231
As o'er the cold sepulchral stone (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 4
As the Liberty lads o'er the sea (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc. _), vii. 42
Away, away, ye notes of Woe! (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. _32_, 35
Away, away,--your flattering arts (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 15
Away with your fictions of flimsy romance (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 82
Away, ye gay landscapes, ye gardens of rose (_Hours of Idleness_), i.
171
Behold the blessings of a lucky lot! (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc. _), vii. 75
Belshazzar! from the banquet turn (_Poems 1814-1816_), iii. 421
Beneath Blessington's eyes (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc. _), vii. 82
Beside the confines of the AEgean main (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 18
Bob Southey! You're a poet--Poet-Laureate (_Don Juan_, Dedication), vi.
3
Born in a garret, in the kitchen bred (_Poems of the Separation_), iii.
540
Breeze of the night in gentler sighs (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 262
Bright be the place of thy soul! (_Poems 1814-1816_), iii. 426
But once I dared to lift my eyes (_Poems 1816-1823_), iv. 564
By the rivers of Babylon we sat down and wept (_Hebrew Melodies_), iii.
402
Candour compels me, Becher! to commend (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 114
Chill and mirk is the nightly blast (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 7
Come, blue-eyed Maid of Heaven! --but Thou alas! (_Childe Harold_, Canto
II. ), ii. 99
Could I remount the river of my years (_Poems of July-September, 1816_),
iv. 51
Could Love for ever (_Poems 1816-1823_), iv. 549
Cruel Cerinthus! does the fell disease (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 74
Dear are the days of youth! (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 177
Dear Becher, you tell me to mix with mankind (_Hours of Idleness_), i.
112
Dear Doctor, I have read your play (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc. _), vii. 47
Dear Long, in this sequester'd scene (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 184
Dear Murray,--You ask for a "_Volume of Nonsense_" (_Jeux d'Esprit,
etc. _), vii. 70
Dear object of defeated care! (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 19
Dear simple girl, those flattering arts (_Hours of Idlaiess_), i. 15
Do you know Dr. Nott? (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc. _), vii. 78
Dorset! whose early steps with mine have stray'd (_Hours of Idleness_),
i. 194
Doubtless, sweet girl! the hissing lead (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 70
Eliza! What fools are the Mussulman sect! (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 47
Equal to Jove that youth must be (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 72
Ere the daughter of Brunswick is cold in her grave (_Poems 1816-1823_),
iv. 555
Eternal Spirit of the chainless Mind (_Sonnet on Chillon_), iv. 7
Fame, Wisdom, Love, and Power were mine (_Hebrew Melodies_), iii. 394
Famed for the contemptuous breach of sacred ties (_Jeux d'Esprit,
etc. _), vii. 35
Famed for their civil and domestic quarrels (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc. _),
vii. 36
Fare thee Well! and if for ever (_Poems of the Separation_), _ii. 274_;
iii. 499, 537
Farewell! if ever fondest prayer (_Poems 1814-1816_), iii. 409
Farewell to the Land, where the gloom of my Glory (_Poems 1814-1816_),
iii. 427
Father of Light, great God of Heaven (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 224
Few years have pass'd since thou and I (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 271
Fill the goblet again! for I never before (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 283
For Orford and for Waldegrave (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc. _), vii. 76
Friend of my youth! when young we rov'd (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 200
From out the mass of never-dying ill (_Prophecy of Dante_, Canto III. ),
iv. 261
From the last hill that looks on thy once holy dome (_Hebrew Melodies_),
iii. 401
From this emblem what variance your motto evinces! (_Jeux d'Esprit,
etc. _), vii. 36
God maddens him whom 't is his will to lose (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc. _),
vii. 45
Good plays are scarce (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc. _), vii. 12
Great Jove! to whose Almighty Throne (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 14
Harriet, to see such Circumspection (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 263
He, unto whom thou art so partial (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc. _), vii. 74
He who, sublime, in epic numbers roll'd (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 73
Here once engaged the stranger's view (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 259
Here's a happy New Year! but with reason (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc. _), _ii.
322_; vii. 64
High in the midst, surrounded by his peers (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 28
Hills of Annesley, Bleak and Barren (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 210
His father's sense, his mother's grace (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc. _), vii. 54
How came you in Hob's pound to cool? (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc. _), vii. 66
How pleasant were the songs of Toobonai! (_Island_, Canto II. ), v. 598
How sweetly shines, through azure skies (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 131
Hush'd are the winds, and still the evening gloom (_Hours of Idleness_),
i. 5
Huzza! Hodgson, we are going (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc. _), vii. 4
I cannot talk of Love to thee (_Poems 1814-1816_), iii. 411
I enter thy garden of roses (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 22
I had a dream, which was not all a dream (_Poems of July-September,
1816_), iv. 42
I heard thy fate without a tear (_Poems 1814-1816_), iii. 425
I now mean to be serious;--it is time (_Don Juan_, Canto XIII. ), vi. 481
I read the "Christabel" (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc. _), vii. 45
I saw thee weep--the big bright tear (_Hebrew Melodies_), iii. 390
I speak not, I trace not, I breathe not thy name (_Poems 1814-1816_),
iii. 319, 413
I stood beside the grave of him who blazed (_Poems of July-September,
1816_), iv. 45
I stood in Venice on the "Bridge of Sighs" (_Childe Harold_, Canto IV. ),
ii. 327
I want a hero: an uncommon want (_Don Juan_, Canto I. ), vi. 11
I watched thee when the foe was at our side (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc. _),
vii. 84
I wish to tune my quivering lyre (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 147
I would I were a careless child (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 205
I would to Heaven that I were so much clay (_Fragment on back of MS. of
Don Juan_, Canto I. ), vi. 2
If Fate should seal my Death to-morrow (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 247
If for silver, or for gold (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc. _), vii. 62
If from great Nature's or our own abyss (_Don Juan_, Canto XIV. ), vi.
516
If, in the month of dark December (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 13
If sometimes in the haunts of men (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 46
If that high world, which lies beyond (_Hebrew Melodies_), iii. 383
Ill-fated heart! and can it be (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 48
In Coron's bay floats many a galley light (_Corsair_, Canto II. ), iii.
249
In digging up your bones, Tom Paine (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc.
Faliero_, iv. 329; _City of the Plague_, iv. 339; _Noctes Ambrosianae_,
iv. 570; on _Heaven and Earth_, v. 280, 282; on _Don Juan_, _vi. 213_
Wilson, Sir Robert Thomas, "Southwark's Knight," _vii. 67_
Wilson, W. , _A Missionary Voyage to the South Pacific Ocean, etc. _, _v.
605_
Winckelmann, _Storia delle Arti, etc. _, ii. _396, 431, 432_, 490, 509,
511, 512, 518
_Windsor Poetics. Lines composed on the Occasion of His Royal Highness
the Prince Regent being seen standing between the coffins of Henry
VIII. and Charles I. in the Royal Vault at Windsor_, vii. 35
Wingfield, Hon. John, _i. 96_; ii. 81, 82, 94
Winsor, Justin, _History of America_, _iv. 198_
Wirt, William, _Life of Patrick Henry_, _v. 560_
Wolcot, Dr. John (Peter Pindar), i. 294, _304, 390, 395, 412_; iv. 158;
_Instructions to a Laureat_, _iv. 519_; _Ode to a Margate Hoy_, _vii.
5_
_Wolcot_ v. _Walker_, v. 204
Wolf of the Capitol, Rome, ii. 396
Wolf, F. , _Primavera y Flor de Romances_, _iv. 529_
Wolfe, General James, vi. 12
Wolfe, Rev. C. , _vi. 165_
Wolmar, Madame, ii. 305
Wolseley, Lord, _Decline and Fall of Napoleon_, _v. 551_
_Woman's Hair, A_, i. 233; _iii. 12_
Wood, J. T. , _Modern Discoveries on the Site of Ancient Ephesus_, _ii.
441_
Wood, the pedestrian, _i. 322_
Woodhouselee, Alexander Fraser Tytler, Lord, _Essay on Petrarch_, _ii.
351_
Woodward, Dr. John, _Fossils of England_, _v. 632_
Worcester, battle of, _ii. 395_
Wordsworth, Miss Dorothy, _i. 422_; _iv. 585_
Wordsworth, John, captain of _The Earl of Abergavenny_, _vi. 91_
Wordsworth, William, _i. 305, 318, 331_; ii. 311; iii. 149; vi. 39, 80,
_587_; _vii. 70_ Byron's review of his _Poems_, _i. 234_; _Lyrical
Ballads_, i. 315, 316; _iv. 269_; Distributor of Stamps for the County
of Westmorland, _i. 321_; iv. 582; vi. 5; "Yet let them not to vulgar
Wordsworth stoop," etc. , i. 368; "Let simple Wordsworth chime his
childish verse," i. 369; "write but like Wordsworth--live beside a
lake," i. 422; on Bland Burges, _i. 437_; _Concerning the Relations of
Great Britain, Spain, and Portugal_, ii. 87; "l'acent Wordsworthien,"
_ii. 115_; iv. 6; as preached by Shelley, _ii. 219_; _Emperors and
Kings, etc. _, _ii. 227_; "Not in the Lucid Intervals of Life," _ii.
258_; _Tintern Abbey_, _ii. 261, 272_; _v. 613_; _Intimations of
Immortality_, _ii. 271, 352_; _Excursion_, _ii. 272, 281_; _v. 94,
613_; vi. 4, 176; _On the Extinction of the Venetian Republic_, _ii.
336_; _In the Pass of Killycranky_, _ii. 337_; _Near the Lake of
Thrasymene_, _ii. 377, 378_; _Descriptive Sketches_, _ii. 385_; "How
clear, how keen, how marvellously bright! " iii. xx; Coleridge's _Lines
to a Gentleman_, _iii. 336_; his quarrel with Byron, iii. 533; iv.
479; _Song at the Feast of Brougham Castle_, _iv. 16, 27_; _Ruth_, iv.
24; _Works_, _iv. 25, 27, 33, 220_; _A Poet's Epitaph_, _iv. 26_;
Byron an admirer of, _iv. 47_; "Wordsworth and Co. ," _iv. 182_;
depreciates Voltaire, _iv. 184_; _Resolution and Independence_
(originally _The Leech-gatherer_), iv. _267_, 582 _Two Addresses to
the Freeholders of Westmorland_, _iv. 341_; _Peter Bell_, _iv. 341_;
vi. 177; vii. 63, 64; Hazlitt on, _iv. 518_; referred to in _The
Blues_, iv. 585; _Sonnet to a Painter_, _v. 251_; "crazed beyond all
hope," vi. 74; "unexcised, unhired," vi. 175; _Benjamin the Waggoner_,
vi. 177; "poet Wordy," vi. 214; _Supplement to the Preface_ (_Poems_),
_ibid. _; compared with Jacob Benmen, _vi. 268_; _Thanksgiving Ode_,
vi. 332; "has supporters two or three," vi. 445; Mackintosh, _vii.
32_; _The White Doe of Rylstone; or, The Fate of the Nortons, a Poem_,
vii. 45; "the great metaquizzical poet," _vii. 72, 73_
_World, The_, _i. 358_; _vi. 525_
Wormeley, Katharine Prescott, translation of _Prince de Ligne's
Memoirs_, _vi. 415_
Wraxall, Sir N. W. , _Historical Memoirs_, _vi. 478_; _Posthumous
Memoirs_, _vii. 29, 30_
Wren, C. , i. 438
Wright, John, _ii. 217_; iii. 75, 443; _iv. 63_
Wright, Walter Rodwell, _Horae Ionicae_, i. 366; ii. x, _104_, 202
Wright, Professor, _Kufic Tombstones in the British Museum_, _iii. 120_
_Written after swimming from Sestos to Abydos_, iii. 13; _vi. 112_
Wul-wulleh, death-song of Turkish women, iii. 205
Wyatt, Sir Thomas, iv. 239
Wycherley, _i. 322_
Wylde, G. , _i. 45_
Wynn, _iv. 520_
Wynne, iv. 476
X
Xantippe, _iv. 253_
Xeres, v. 565
Xerxes, ii. 166; iv. 259; vi. 46, 169
Y
Yakintu, king of Arvad, v. 4
Yanina, Janina, or Joannina, lake of, ii. 179, 189
Yarmouth, Maria Fagniani, Lady, _i. 501_
Yarmouth, Lord, "Red Herrings," _i. 493, 497, 501_; vii. 22
Yearsley, Ann, _i. 329_
Yesoukoi, Lieutenant-Colonel, vi. 354
Yonge, C. D. , translation of Athenaeus' _Deipno. _, _v. 11_
York, Duchess of, _iii. 45_
York, Duke of, _i. 3, 391_; _ii. 169_; _iii. 45_; _iv. 587_; _vi. 67,
451, 507_
Young, Edward, _Revenge_, i. 26, _409_; _iii. 158, 200_; _Night
Thoughts_, ii. 95, _161_; _iii. 129, 262_; _vi. 186, 450_;
_Resignation_, _vi. 450_; _Love of fame, the Universal Passion_, _vi.
461_
Young, Rosalind A. , _The Mutiny, etc. _, _v. 622_
_Young Lochinvar_, _ii. 70_
Z
Zama, battle of, _ii. 459_
Zanetti, ii. 472
Zanga, a character in Young's _Revenge_, i. 26, _409_
Zappi, Giovanni Battista, _iv. 271_
Zara, siege of, iv. 331, 332
Zaragoza, Augustina, maid of, ii. 58, 91
Zarina, Queen, character in _Sardanapalus_, v. 12
Zarotti, _iv. 287_
_Zechariah_, _v. 286_
Zegri, the, a Moorish tribe, v. 558
Zela, battle of, _ii. 398_
Zeller, Dr. E. , _Socrates and the Socratic Schools_, _ii. 103_
_Zend-Avesta_, _iii. 110_; _iv. 112_
Zendrini, A. , _Elogio di Jacopo Morelli_, _iv. 457_
Zeno, Carlo, ii. 477, 497
Zeus Olympius, Temple of, ii. 167
Ziani, Doge Sebastian, ii. 473
Zibeon, Esau's wife, _v. 285_
Zimri, king of Israel, _v. 107_
Zitza, convent and village of, ii. 129, 174, 180; _iii. 7_
? i? ka, John of Trocnow, v. 549
Zoffani, _iv.
508_
Zoili of Albemarle Street, the, vi. xix, _467_
Zonaras, _Annales_, ii. 202
Zonta of Twenty, the, _iv. 385, 441_
Zoritch, or Zovitch, Catherine II. 's favourite, _vi. 388_
Zoroaster, the creed of, vi. 491
Zosimado, ii. 197
Zosimus, _Historiae_, ii. 172
Zoubof, Plato, Catherine II. 's favourite, _vi. 388_
Zrini, Hungarian commander, iii. 442
Zsigetvar, siege of, iii. 442
Zuccari, _ii. 437_
Zuccato, Bartolommeo, _iv. 332_
Zuleika, Persian name of Potiphar's wife, _iii. 187_; vi. 254
INDEX TO FIRST LINES.
(The first line is given of every _Poem_, and of each _Canto_ of the
longer Poems: that of the _Plays_ is omitted. )
A noble Lady of the Italian shore (_Poems 1816-1823_), iv. 547
A Spirit passed before me: I beheld (_Hebrew Melodies_), iii. 406
A Year ago you swore, fond she! (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc. _), vii. 41
Absent or present, still to thee (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 50
Adieu, adieu! my native shore (_Childe Harold_, Canto I. ), ii. 26
Adieu, thou Hill! where early joy (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 237
Adieu, ye joys of La Valette (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 24
AEgle, beauty and poet, has two little crimes (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc. _),
vii. 76
Ah! gentle, fleeting, wav'ring sprite (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 20
Ah, heedless girl! why thus disclose (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 244
Ah! Love was never yet without (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 62
Ah! --What should follow slips from my reflection (_Don Juan_, Canto
XV. ), vi. 544
And dost thou ask the reason of my sadness? (_Jeux of Esprit, etc. _),
vii. 41
And thou art dead, as young and fair (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. _32_, 41
And thou wert sad--yet I was not with thee (_Poems of July-September,
1816_), iv. 63
And "thy true faith can alter never" (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 65
And wilt thou weep when I am low? (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 266
Anne's Eye is liken'd to the Sun (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 244
As by the fix'd decrees of Heaven (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 231
As o'er the cold sepulchral stone (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 4
As the Liberty lads o'er the sea (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc. _), vii. 42
Away, away, ye notes of Woe! (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. _32_, 35
Away, away,--your flattering arts (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 15
Away with your fictions of flimsy romance (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 82
Away, ye gay landscapes, ye gardens of rose (_Hours of Idleness_), i.
171
Behold the blessings of a lucky lot! (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc. _), vii. 75
Belshazzar! from the banquet turn (_Poems 1814-1816_), iii. 421
Beneath Blessington's eyes (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc. _), vii. 82
Beside the confines of the AEgean main (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 18
Bob Southey! You're a poet--Poet-Laureate (_Don Juan_, Dedication), vi.
3
Born in a garret, in the kitchen bred (_Poems of the Separation_), iii.
540
Breeze of the night in gentler sighs (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 262
Bright be the place of thy soul! (_Poems 1814-1816_), iii. 426
But once I dared to lift my eyes (_Poems 1816-1823_), iv. 564
By the rivers of Babylon we sat down and wept (_Hebrew Melodies_), iii.
402
Candour compels me, Becher! to commend (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 114
Chill and mirk is the nightly blast (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 7
Come, blue-eyed Maid of Heaven! --but Thou alas! (_Childe Harold_, Canto
II. ), ii. 99
Could I remount the river of my years (_Poems of July-September, 1816_),
iv. 51
Could Love for ever (_Poems 1816-1823_), iv. 549
Cruel Cerinthus! does the fell disease (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 74
Dear are the days of youth! (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 177
Dear Becher, you tell me to mix with mankind (_Hours of Idleness_), i.
112
Dear Doctor, I have read your play (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc. _), vii. 47
Dear Long, in this sequester'd scene (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 184
Dear Murray,--You ask for a "_Volume of Nonsense_" (_Jeux d'Esprit,
etc. _), vii. 70
Dear object of defeated care! (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 19
Dear simple girl, those flattering arts (_Hours of Idlaiess_), i. 15
Do you know Dr. Nott? (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc. _), vii. 78
Dorset! whose early steps with mine have stray'd (_Hours of Idleness_),
i. 194
Doubtless, sweet girl! the hissing lead (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 70
Eliza! What fools are the Mussulman sect! (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 47
Equal to Jove that youth must be (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 72
Ere the daughter of Brunswick is cold in her grave (_Poems 1816-1823_),
iv. 555
Eternal Spirit of the chainless Mind (_Sonnet on Chillon_), iv. 7
Fame, Wisdom, Love, and Power were mine (_Hebrew Melodies_), iii. 394
Famed for the contemptuous breach of sacred ties (_Jeux d'Esprit,
etc. _), vii. 35
Famed for their civil and domestic quarrels (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc. _),
vii. 36
Fare thee Well! and if for ever (_Poems of the Separation_), _ii. 274_;
iii. 499, 537
Farewell! if ever fondest prayer (_Poems 1814-1816_), iii. 409
Farewell to the Land, where the gloom of my Glory (_Poems 1814-1816_),
iii. 427
Father of Light, great God of Heaven (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 224
Few years have pass'd since thou and I (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 271
Fill the goblet again! for I never before (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 283
For Orford and for Waldegrave (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc. _), vii. 76
Friend of my youth! when young we rov'd (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 200
From out the mass of never-dying ill (_Prophecy of Dante_, Canto III. ),
iv. 261
From the last hill that looks on thy once holy dome (_Hebrew Melodies_),
iii. 401
From this emblem what variance your motto evinces! (_Jeux d'Esprit,
etc. _), vii. 36
God maddens him whom 't is his will to lose (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc. _),
vii. 45
Good plays are scarce (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc. _), vii. 12
Great Jove! to whose Almighty Throne (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 14
Harriet, to see such Circumspection (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 263
He, unto whom thou art so partial (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc. _), vii. 74
He who, sublime, in epic numbers roll'd (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 73
Here once engaged the stranger's view (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 259
Here's a happy New Year! but with reason (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc. _), _ii.
322_; vii. 64
High in the midst, surrounded by his peers (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 28
Hills of Annesley, Bleak and Barren (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 210
His father's sense, his mother's grace (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc. _), vii. 54
How came you in Hob's pound to cool? (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc. _), vii. 66
How pleasant were the songs of Toobonai! (_Island_, Canto II. ), v. 598
How sweetly shines, through azure skies (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 131
Hush'd are the winds, and still the evening gloom (_Hours of Idleness_),
i. 5
Huzza! Hodgson, we are going (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc. _), vii. 4
I cannot talk of Love to thee (_Poems 1814-1816_), iii. 411
I enter thy garden of roses (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 22
I had a dream, which was not all a dream (_Poems of July-September,
1816_), iv. 42
I heard thy fate without a tear (_Poems 1814-1816_), iii. 425
I now mean to be serious;--it is time (_Don Juan_, Canto XIII. ), vi. 481
I read the "Christabel" (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc. _), vii. 45
I saw thee weep--the big bright tear (_Hebrew Melodies_), iii. 390
I speak not, I trace not, I breathe not thy name (_Poems 1814-1816_),
iii. 319, 413
I stood beside the grave of him who blazed (_Poems of July-September,
1816_), iv. 45
I stood in Venice on the "Bridge of Sighs" (_Childe Harold_, Canto IV. ),
ii. 327
I want a hero: an uncommon want (_Don Juan_, Canto I. ), vi. 11
I watched thee when the foe was at our side (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc. _),
vii. 84
I wish to tune my quivering lyre (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 147
I would I were a careless child (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 205
I would to Heaven that I were so much clay (_Fragment on back of MS. of
Don Juan_, Canto I. ), vi. 2
If Fate should seal my Death to-morrow (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 247
If for silver, or for gold (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc. _), vii. 62
If from great Nature's or our own abyss (_Don Juan_, Canto XIV. ), vi.
516
If, in the month of dark December (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 13
If sometimes in the haunts of men (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 46
If that high world, which lies beyond (_Hebrew Melodies_), iii. 383
Ill-fated heart! and can it be (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 48
In Coron's bay floats many a galley light (_Corsair_, Canto II. ), iii.
249
In digging up your bones, Tom Paine (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc.