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Andalusia, province of, 75, 79.
Andalusian nobleman, adventures of

a young, 597 n.
Andernach, 118 n.

Anderson, his 'British Poets,' 9 n.
Andrews, Bishop, a punster, 173 n.
Andrews, Miles Peter, his prologues,
60. Some account of, 60 n.
Andromache, 574.
'Anent,' 730.

Ardennes, forest of, 114.
Arethusa, fountain of, 807.
Aretino, Pietro, 160, 336 n.
Argentière, Mount, 119 n.
Argos, 99, 260 n.
Argus, Ulysses' dog, 638.
Argyle Institution, 59.
Argyro-Castro, 96, 218.
Ariosto, his portrait by Titian,
308 n. His bust, 131, 155. Con-
Angelo, St. Castle of, 143, 501. trasted with Tasso, 339. His
Angelo, Michael, his tomb in the
person respected by the public
church of Santa Croce, 133. His robber, 801.
Statue of Moses, his Last Judg-Aristænetus, 101.
ment, his copy of Dante, treat-Aristides, 804.
ment of, by Julius II., and neg-Aristippus, 635.

lect of, by Leo X., 340, 340 n. | Aristogeiton, 113 n. 570 n.

Anecdote of, 677.
Anger, 198, 231, 610.
Angiolini, Mlle., 59.

Angling, 'the cruelest and stupidest
of sports,' 751.
Anne, Lines to, 843.
Annesley, hill near, 9 n., 882. Heir-

ess of, 12 n. See Chaworth.
Annuitants, alleged longevity of,622.
Anonymous Remarks on 'Don Juan,'
787.

Anstey's 'Bath Guide,' 678, 773.
Anteros, 290.

Anthology, translations of, 63 n.
Anthony, St., his recipe for hot
blood, 600.

Antigonus, anecdote of, 677.
'Anti-Jacobin Review,' 397.
Antilochus, tomb of, 216 n. 656 n.
Antinous, the bust of, super-natural,
829 n.
His heroic death, 84 n.
'Antiquary,' 85.
Antoninus Pius, 166 n.
Autony, 88 n. 764. His person de-
scribed, 492. The slave of love,
635, 681.
Apelles, 339.

Apennines, the, xvii. xviii. 135.
Apicius, 402.
Apollo, 649.

Apollo Belvidere, 144.
Apostolo, St., church of, at Venice,
391.

Appearances, the joint on which
good society hinges,' 749.
Appetite, 667 n.

Appian, 164 n.

Applause, popular, 643.
Aquatacchio, 166.
Aqueducts, 827.

Aquileja, patriarch of, 150.
Aquinas, Thomas, 153 n.
Arabia, deserts of, xxix.
Arabs, life of the, 219 n.
Ararat, Mount, 416.
Arcadia, 99.

Archenholz, M., 392 n.
Archidamus, saying of, 583 n.
Archilogus, 154.
Archimedes, 758.
Archipelago, 119 n. 825.

Aristophanes, 632 n.
Aristotle, 605, 762.
Arithmetic, poets of, 777.

| Armada, the Spanish, 146.
'Armageddon,' Townshend's, 175 n.
Armenian Language, 819n. 'Trans-
lation of two Epistles from,' 819.
Grammar of, 407 n.
Armstrong, Johnny, 116 n.
Army, 698.

Army tailor, 715.

Arnaouts, or Albanese. Their re-
semblance to the Highlanders of
Scotland, 97.

Arnaud, 161.

Arno, the river 132, 719.
Arpenaz, fall of, 135 n.
Arquà described, 129, 133, 154.
Art, not inferior to nature, for poeti-

cal purposes, 827.
'Art of Happiness,' Horace's, 745.
Arthur, King, his Christmas at
Carlisle, 306 n.
Arthur's Seat, 56.
Ascension, festival of, how cele-
brated in Greece, 807.
Asdrubal, 579 n.

A spirit pass'd before me,' 259.
'As o'er the cold sepulchral stone,'

852.

Askalon's Towers, 3.
Asphaltes, the lake of, 115.
Assyria, 146.
Asturias, the, 75 n.
'Atalantis,' account of Mrs. Man-
ley's, 734.
Athanasian creed, 682.
Athanasius Parios, 105.
'Atheista Fulminato,' the old reli-
gious play of, 592 n. 594 n.
The origin of 'Don Juan,' 613 n.
Its extensive popularity, analysis
of, and scene from, ib.
Athenæus, 632 n.

Athenians, character of the, 99.

|

Athos, Mount, 86. Project for hew-
ing it into a statue of Alexander,
742.

Atlas, 135.

'Attic Bee,' 772.
Atticus, 186 n.

Attila, his harangue to his army
previous to the battle of Chalons,
868 n.

Attributed poems disowned, 793,

794.
Augury, 650.

'Augusta, Stanzas to,' 878, 879.
'Epistle to,' 879.

Augustin, St., his 'Confessions,'
598, 769.

Augustus Cæsar, 167. His cha-
racter, 870 n.

'Auld lang syne,' 720.
Aulus Cæcina, 119 n.
Aurelius, his column, 139 n.
Aurora Borealis, 400. Description
of, 400 n. 'Don Juan' a ver-
sified, 690.

Austerlitz, battle of, 193.
Authors, 49, 314, 667.
Autocrat, an, 713.
Autumn, an English, described, 749.
Avalanches, 135 n.
Avarice, a good old gentlemanly

vice,' 614. Panegyric on, 734.
'Ave Maria!' 646.
Avenches, formerly Aventicum, the
Roman capital of Helvetia, 119.
Aventine Mount, Rome, 139.
Avignon, 153, 389.

'Away, away, ye notes of woe,'
859.

Away ye gay landscapes, ye gar-
dens of roses!' 26.
'A year ago you swore,' etc., 878.

B.

Babel, tower of, 667, 668.
| Babylon, ruins of, 668.
Bacchus, 632,776. Temple of, 167.
Back-woodsmen, Kentuckian, 703.
Bacon, Friar, his brazen head, 615.
The discoverer of gunpowder, 701.
Bacon, Lord, 645,761. His Essay
on Empire,' 675 n. Inaccuracies
in his Apophthegms,' 677, 678.
Saying of, 752.
Badajos, 77 n.

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Baillie, Joanna, 351. Her 'Family
Legend,' 351 n.

Baillie, Dr. Matthew, xii. consulted
on Lord Byron's supposed insani-
ty, 596 n. His visit to Lord By-
ron, ib. Remarkable for plainness
of speech, 722.

Athens, apostrophe to, 83. Re-Bailly, mayor of Paris, 385 m.
flections on the past and present | Balgounie, brig of, 720.
condition of, 83 n., 98. Its si-Baltic, the, 190.
tuation and climate, 98. On the
plunder of the works of art at,
85, 96, 188. The Maid of, 855.

Bandusian Fountain, 169.

Bankes, W., esq., xx. 316 n. 636 #.
Banks, Sir Joseph, 68, 907.

Bansbie, superstition of the, 772 n. | Beckford, William, esq., his resi-
Barbarossa, Frederic, his submis-

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Barrow, John, esq., his 'Peter the

Great,' 324 n. His Eventful
History of the Mutiny of the
Bounty,' 575 n. His testimony
to the accuracy of Lord Byron's
description of a shipwreck, 621 n.
His account of the cyanometer
and marine barometer, 660 n.
Barrey, Lodowick, 193.
Barthelemi, M. 102.
Bartley, George, the comedian, 348n.
Basilius, Lord Byron's Athenian ser-
vant, 97.
Bashfulness, 213.
Bastie, M. de la, 153.
Bastille, the, 395 n.
Bath de, Lord, xiii.

'Bath Guide,' Anstey's, 678, 773.
Bathurst, Earl, his speech on the
treatment of Napoleon at St. He-
lena, 568 n.

dence at Cintra described, 73, n.
Character of his 'Vathek,' ib.
Some account of, ib.
'Bed of Ware,' 681.

Bedford, Duke of, Regent of France,
52.

Bedford, Duke of, Lord Lieutenant
of Ireland, 814.
Bedlam, 729.

'Beggar's Opera,' Gay's, 882 n. Its
evil tendency denied, 178 n.
Behmen, Jacob, his reveries, 680.
Some account of, 680 n.
Belgrade, 347.
Belisarius, 167. 'A hero, conqueror,
and cuckold,' 635.
'Belshazzar, Vision of,' 257, 642.
Belshazzar, Lines to,' 872.
Bembo, Bernardo, 158.
Bembo, Cardinal, his correspond-

ence with Lucretia Borgia, xxiii.
Benbow, William, 505 n.

Black Friar, of Newstead Abbey,
771, 772.

Blackburn, Archbishop, account of,
241.

Blackett, Joseph, the poetical cob-
bler, 61, 62n. His posthumous
writings, 185. Some account of,
61 n. His 'Epitaph,' 857.
Blackmore, Sir Richard, 52 n.
Blackstone, Judge, composed his
'Commentaries' with a bottle of
port before him, 824.
Blackwood's Magazine,' 505 n., its
Remarks on 'Don Juan,' 782,
783. Some Observations upon
its Remarks on Don Juan,' 794.
Critical notes from, passim.
Blaquiere, Mr. xxix.
Blair, Dr., his Sermons, 505 n. 631.
Blake, the fashionable tonsor, 180.
Bland, Rev. Robert, 803. His
'Collections from the Greek An-
thology,' 63n. Some account of, ib.

over, in English poetry, 173, 802.
Blasphemy, and blasphemers, 680,

Bender, obstinacy of Charles XII. Blank-verse, excellence of rhyme
of Sweden at, 707.
Ben-e-vis and Ben-e-bourd, 43 n.
Benjamin, Professor, 102.
Bentham, Jeremy, xxix. 680 n.
Bentley, 22.

Benzoni, Countess, xxv. xxvi. her
conversazioni, 316 n. The he-
roine of La Biondina in Gondo-
letta,' 386 n.

Benzoni, Vittor, 386 n.
Beppo; a Venetian Story, 305.
Beranger, 711 n.
Berat, 96, 207.

Bathurst, Captain, 853 n.
Battle, 114, 232, 267, 268, 698, Beresford, Mr., 57 n.

699.
'Baviad and Mæviad,' 62 n.; extin-
guishment of the Della Cruscans
by the, 61.
Baxter, Richard, his 'Shove,' etc.
178. Some account of, 178 n.
Bay of Biscay, 72.

Bayard, the Chevalier, 36 n., 500.
Bayes, Mr., his expedient, 180.
Bayle, 815.

Beatrice of Dante, 334, 637.
Beattie, Dr., his reflections on
dreams, 651 n.
Beauharnais, Eugene, his testimony
to the correctness of Lord Byron's
delineation of Napoleon Bona-
parte, 593 n.

Beaumont and Fletcher, 111 n.
Beaumont, Sir George, 346, 800.
Beauty, 78, 200, 201, 212, 600,
627, 642, 743, 764.
Becher, Rev. John, 27 n. 28 n.
'Answer to his complaint that one
of Lord Byron's descriptions was
rather too warmly drawn,' 27.
'Lines addressed to, on his ad-
vising Lord Byron to mix more
with society,' 36.
Becket, Thomas à, his tomb in Can-
terbury Cathedral, 725.

Bergami, the Princess of Wales's
courier and chamberlain, 668 n.
Bergamo, 470.
Berkeley, Bishop of Cloyne, his
scepticism concerning the exist-
ence of matter, 726.
Berlin, 569, 724.

Bernard, St., Monks of, 123 n.
Bernese Alps, xxiii. 119. n.
Berni, the father of the Beppo style
of writing, 305 n. 324.
Bernis, Abbé de, Frederick the
cond's verse on, 350.
'Bertram,' Mathurin's tragedy of,
351 n.

Bettinelli, 159.

750.

'Blatant Beast,' 74 n.
Blessington, Earl of, 897 n.
Blessington, Countess of, xxix. 'Im-
promptu on her taking a villa
called 'Il Paradiso,' 897. 'Lines
written at the request of,' 903.
Her Ladyship's Answer, 904 n.
Bligh, Captain, his 'Narrative of
the Mutiny of the Bounty,' 575.
Blood, only serves to wash Ambi-
tion's hands,' 716.
Bloomfield, Nathaniel, 61 n. 185 ».
Blount, Martha, Pope's attachment
to, 823, 833.
Blucher, Marshal, 702.
Blue, instrument for measuring the
intensity of, 660.

Blue Devils, 760.
'Blue-Stocking,' 311 n. 342 n.
'Blue-Stocking Club,' origin of, 342.
Blues, the; 'a Literary Eclogue,'
342.

Se-Blues,' 216 n. 613, 660, 731.
Boabdil, 599.

Betty, William Henry West, (the
young Roscius,) 58, 862.
Bevius, canon of Padua, 161.
Bianchi, the 158.
Bible, the, 508 n.
Bigamy, 707.
Bigotry, 73, 588.

Bile, energetic, described, 674.
Birch, Alderman, 183 n.
Birds, belief that the souls of the

dead inhabit the forms of, 222.
Biron, John Ernest, Duke of Cour-
land, 723 n.

Black, Dr., his Life of Tasso, 149 n.

646.

'Boatswain,' Lord Byron's favour-
ite dog, 848 n. 'Inscription on
his monument,' 848.
Boccaccio, 130 n., 336 n.,
Treatment of his ashes, 133. De-
fence of, 160.
Bodoni, 150.
Boehm, Mrs., 312.
Boeotia, 80, 99, 189.
Bohemia, 542, 548.
Bohours, M., 155.
Boiardo, 114 n., 324.

Boileau, his depreciation of Tasso,
131, 154.
Bolero, 755.

Boleyn, Anne, her remark on the
scaffold, 233 n.

Bolingbroke, Lord, hires Mallet to Bread-fruit, 577.

traduce Pope, 55.

Bolivar, Simon, 569.

Bologna, xxvi. 170, 308 n.

Bolsena, lake of, 163.

Brennus, 387.

Brenta, the river, xxiv. 129.
Brentford, 79.

Brescia, 470.

Bonaparte, Lucien, his 'Charle- Brewster, Sir David, his Natural

magne,' 64 n.

Bonaparte, Napoleon, xxx. 567,

568, 712, 759, 868 n., 869 n.,
874. The Triptolemus of the Bri-
tish farmer,' 573. His exclama-
tion on the loss of his old guard,
724. His character, 115, 116 n.
592, 593n. 'Ode to,' 868. 'Lines
on his escape from Elba,' 873.
Boniface VIII., 158.

Bonn, 724.

'Bonne fortune,' 757.

Magic,' 491 n., 748 n. His 'Life
of Newton,' 690 n., 718 n. His
description of Bishop Berkeley's
theory, 724.
Briareus, 683.

Burgage tenures and tithes, 'dis-

cord's torches,' 774.

Burgess, Sir James Bland. His
'Richard the First' sold to line
trunks, 184 n., 800 n.
Burgoyne, General, 592.
Burgundy, Duke of, 118.
Burke, Edmund, 68, 415, 576.
Burlesque, 648.

Burney, Dr., his character of Jewish
music, 254.

Bride of Abydos; a Turkish Tale, Burns, Robert, 62.
210, 660 n.

Bridge of Sighs, 127, 147.
'Brig of Balgounie,' 720 n.
'Bright be the place of thy soul !'846.
Brighton, Pavilion at, 758.
Brissot de Warville, 592, 593 n.

Bonnivard, François de, account of, Bristol, 55.

278.

Bons-mots, 751.

Booby, Lady, €74.

Boon, Daniel, the Kentuckian back-
woodsman, 703.

'Bores,' 750.

Borghese, villa, 167.

Borghetto, 162, 163.

Borgia, Lucretia, xxiii.

Bristol, Earl of, 190 n.
'British Critic,' 781.
'British Review,' 'The Old Girl's

What would
he have been, if a patrician?'
61n. His youthful pranks, 645.
His rank among poets, 830. ‘Often
coarse, but never vulgar,' 841.
His Elegy on Maillie, 848 n.
Burun, Ralph de, xi. n. 3 n.
Busby, Thomas, Mus. Doct., 192.
His monologue on the opening of
Drury Lane Theatre, 863 m. 'Pa-
rody on his monologue,' 863.

904.

Review,' 344. 'My Grandmo-But once I dared to lift my eyes,'
ther's Review,' 511 n., 614. Its
abuse of 'Don Juan,' 782. Lord
Byron's 'Letter to the Editor of,'
792.

Brocken, superstition of the, 490.

'Born in a garret, in a kitchen bred,' Bronze wolf of Rome described, 145,

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'Bosworth Field,' Lord Byron's pro-Browne, Sir Thomas, his 'Religio
jected epic entitled, xv. n.

Botany Bay, 645.

Medici' quoted, 212 n. His en-
comium on sleep, 651 n.

Bourbon, Duke of, Constable of Bruce, Abyssinian, his description

France, 337, 497, 500.

Bouts-rimés, 773.
Boveret, 123 n., 280 n.
Bowles, Rev. William Lisle, 'the
maudlin prince of mournful son-
neteers,' 54, 55. His 'Spirit of
Discovery,' 54, 822. Lines on
his edition of Pope,' 55, 55 n. 822.
Lord Byron's 'Letter on his Stric-
tures on the Life and Writings
of Pope,' 821. His 'invariable
principles of poetry,' 822-829.
His controversy concerning Pope,
822-824, 832-841. Lord By-
ron's 'Observations upon Obser-
vations; a Second Letter,' etc.,
832. His hypochondriacism, 836.|
His 'Missionary,' 839, 892.
Boxing, 183 n., 625, 837.
Braemar, Castle of, 26 n.
Braham, John, the singer, 254.
Brandenburg, 542.
'Brandy for heroes!' 576.

Brasidas, 84 n., 128 n.

Brass, Corinthian, 685.

Brave, picture of the truly, 707.
Brazils, prince of the, 711.

of a simoom, 199 n.
Brummell, William, esq., 312 n.,

733.

Brunck, Mr. 22, 193.
Bruno, Dr. xxx.

Bute, Lord, 404.

Butler, Dr. (head master at Har-

row), 10 n., 64 n. Reconciliation
between Lord Byron and, 10 я.
'Lines on his being appointed
head master at Harrow,' 10.
Portrait of, 31 n.

By the rivers of Babylon,' 259.
Byng, Admiral, his court martial,

74n.

Byron, Sir John, the Little, with

the great beard, 3 n. 28 n.
Byron, two of the family of, at the
siege of Calais, and the battle of
Cressy, xi. n. 3 n.
Byron, Sir John, created (1643)
Baron Byron of Rochdale; some
account of, 3, 4 n.
Byron, Sir Nicholas, his character

by Lord Clarendon, 3 *.
Byron, Sir Richard, tribute to his
valour and fidelity, 4 n.

Brunswick, Duke of, his death at Byron, Admiral John (the grand-

Quatre Bras, 114.
Brussels, 113.
Brutus, 133, 764.

Bryant, Jacob, on the existence of

Troy, 65 n., 656, 805 n.
Brydges, Sir Egerton, his 'Letters

on the Character and Poetical
Genius of Byron,' 530 n., 788.
Critical notes by, passim.

Bucentaur, 128.
Buda, 263.
Budgell, Eustace, his 'leap into the
Thames,' 186.

Buffon, 907.

father of the poet), 32 m. His
shipwreck and sufferings, 622.
'My grand-dad's Narrative,' 629.
Extract from, 629 n. His pro-
verbial ill-luck at sea, 879.
Byron, William, fifth Lord (grand-
uncle of the Poet), xii. 29, 33.
His trial for killing Mr.Chaworth
in a duel, xiv. His solitary and
eccentric habits, ib.
Byron, Captain, John (father of the
poet). His marriage with Miss
Gordon, xi. His spendthrift
habits, ib. His character, 32,33

Bull-fight, description of a, 80, 81, Byron, Mrs. (mother of the poet,

168.

Bulow, Marshal, 702.

Buonaparte, Jacopo, his 'Sacco di

Roma,' 337 n., 501 n.
Burdett, Sir Francis. His style of

eloquence, 572 n.

xi. xvi. 13 n. Descended from
the Gordons of Gight, xi. Vebe
mence of her feelings, xii. xiv.
xv. 489 n. 845 n. Her capri-
cious excesses of fondness and of
anger, 489 n. Her death, xvii.

Byron, Honourable Augusta (sister
of the poet), 33 n. See Leigh,
Honourable Augusta.
Byron (George - Gordon - Byron),
sixth Lord:-

1788. Born, Jan. 22, in Holles
Street, London, xi.-According
to Mr. Dallas, at Dover, xxx.
His early prospects, xi. His
pedigree, xi n.

1792-1795. Sent to a day-school,

and afterwards to the Grammar-

School, at Aberdeen,.xi.
1796-1797. Removed into the
Highlands, xii. His early love
of mountain scenery, xii. 2, 27,
842. His attachment for Mary
Duff, xii. 43 n. 842.

1798. His succession to the title,
and removal to Newstead, xii.
Placed under the care of a Not-
tingham quack for the cure of his
lameness, ib.

1799. Removed to the school of

Dr. Glennie, at Dulwich, and put
under the care of Dr. Baillie, ib.
His fondness for reading history,
poetry, and the sacred writ-
ings, ib.

1800-1804. His removal to Har-

row, xiii. Notices of his school
life, xii. xiii. 10 n. 11 n. 30-36.
Instances of his quickness and
energy, xiii.

60 n. 70 n. Passes his time be-
tween the dissipations of London
and Cambridge, 15 n.
1809-1810. Forms a design of
visiting Persia, xvi. Takes his
seat in the House of Lords, xvi.
60. English Bards and Scotch
Reviewers' published, xvii. 48.
His subsequent regret, 66 n.
Sets out on his travels, xvii.
His character about this time, ib.
Introduction to Ali Pacha, xviii.
91 n. Begins 'Childe Harold' at
Ioannina, in Albania, 67 n.
Concludes second canto at Smyr-
na, 67 n. The Maid of Athens,
855 n. Writes Hints from Ho-
race,' 171 n. and Curse of Mi-
nerva,' 187 n. Swims from Ses-
tos to Abydos, 853 n.
1811. Returns to England, after vi-
siting Portugal, Spain, Sardinia,
Sicily, Malta, Greece, Constanti-
nople, etc. xviii. Effect of travel
on his mind, and state of his affairs
at this period, ib. Death of his
mother, and of his college friends,
Wingfield and Mathews, xviii.
83. And of Thyrza,' 859 n.
Reviews Gell's Geography of
Ithaca,' 805.

Feb. 29.

811.
His first Harrow
verses, xiii. 6 n. Heads a 're-
belling' at Harrow, 31 n. 32 n.
His respect for Dr. Drury, 35 n.
His school friendships, xiii. 2, 4.
His boyish love for his cousin,
Margaret Parker, xiii. 2. His
first dash into poetry, xiii. 2 n.
His practice of dating his poems,
2 n. His early attachment to
Miss Chaworth, xiv. 9 n.
1805-1806. His life and pursuits

at college, xiv. 15n. Passes the
vacation at Southwell, xiv. Visit
to Harrowgate, 24 n. His skill
in swimming, xiv. Private thea-
tricals at Southwell, xv. 24 n.
His first appearance as a poet,
xv. 3 n. Prints a volume of his
poems, but, at the suggestion of
Mr. Becher, commits the edition
to the flames, 28 n.
1807. Publishes 'Hours of Idle-
ness,' xv. 45 n. His aristocra-
tical notions, xv. xxxiii. Reviews
Wordsworth's Poems, 805. Be-
gins a poem entitled "Bosworth
Field,' xv. n.
1808. Effect produced on his mind

by the critique on 'Hours of
Idleness' in the Edinburgh Re-
view,' xv. 45 . His early scep-
ticism, 39, 40. His love of so-
litude, 86 n. His disappointment
and loneliness at this period, xvi.

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1812. Feb. 27. Makes his first
speech in the House of Lords,
Publishes the
first and second cantos of 'Childe
Harold,' xix. 67 n. Presents the
copyright of them to Mr. Dallas,
51 n. Success of 'Childe Ha-
rold,' xix. Although far advan-
ced in an edition of English
Bards,' determines to commit it
to the flames, 822 n.
His po-
pularity and gallantries at this
period, xix. xx. Presented to the
Prince Regent, 868 n. Writes
the 'Address for the opening of
Drury Lane Theatre,' 862 n.
1813. Becomes a dandy, or man
of fashion, xx. 312 n. April,
brings out anonymously the
'Waltz,' 191 n. May, publishes
the 'Giaour, 195 n. Dec., pub-
lishes the Bride of Abydos,'

210 n.

1814. His unsettled state of mind
about this time, xx: 210 n. Jan.,
publishes the 'Corsair,' 223 n.
April, writes 'Ode to Napoleon
Bonaparte,' 868 n. Comes to
the resolution, not only of writ-
ing no more, but of suppressing
all he had ever written, 242 n.
May, writes 'Lara;' 242 n.
Makes a second proposal for the
hand of Miss Milbanke, and is
accepted, xx. xxi. Dec., writes

'Hebrew Melodies,' 254 n.
1815. Jan. 2, marries Miss Mil-

banke, xxi. April, becomes
personally acquainted with Sir
Walter Scott, xxii. His respect
for Sir Walter Scott, 131 n.
Pressure of pecuniary embar-
rassments, xxii. xxiii. July,
writes the Siege of Corinth,'
260 n. Sept., writes 'Parisina,'
271 n.

1816. Jan., Lady Byron adopts the
resolution of separating from him,
xxii. Remarks thereon, xxii.
596 n. 877 n. March, writes
'Fare thee well,' and 'A Sketch,'
877 n. April, leaves England,
xxiii. 111 n. His route-Brus-
sels, Waterloo, etc., xxiii. 114n.
Takes up his abode at the Cam-
pagne Diodati, xxiii. 121 n. Fi-
nishes, June 27, the third canto
of Childe Harold,' xxiii. 67 n.
Writes, June 28, The Prisoner
of Chillon,' xxiii. 278 n. Writes,
in July, Monody on the Death
of Sheridan,' the Dream,'Dark-
ness,' Epistle to Augusta,'
'Churchill's Grave,' 'Prome-
theus,' 'Could I remount,' 'Son-
net to Lake Leman,' 879-888,
and part of Manfred,' xxiii. 283n.
August, an unsuccessful negoti-
ation for a domestic reconciliation,
877 n. Sept., makes a tour of
the Bernese Alps, xxiii. Oct.,
proceeds to Italy, staying a short
time at Milan and Verona, ib.
Nov., takes up his residence at
Venice, ib. Marianna Segati, ib.
1817. Feb., finishes Manfred,'
283 n. March, translates, from
the Armenian, a correspondence
between St. Paul and the Corin-
thians, 819 n. April, visits Fer-
rara, 130 n. and writes 'Lament
of Tasso,' 301. Makes a short
visit to Rome, xxiv. and writes
there a new third act to 'Man-
fred,' 294 n. July, writes, at
Venice, the fourth canto of
'Childe Harold,' xxiv. 67n. Oct.,
writes Beppo,' 305.
1818. The Fornarina, Margarita
Cogni, xxiv-xxvi. July, writes
'Ode on Venice,' 894 n. Nov.,
finishes Mazeppa,' 316. And
first canto of Don Juan,' xxvi.

589 n.

1819. Jan., finishes second canto
of Don Juan,' 615 n. April,
his acquaintance with Countess
Guiccioli, xxvi. 333 n. June,
writes 'Stanzas to the Po,' 895 n.
August, writes 'Letter to the
Editor of my Grandmother's Re-
view,' 792 n. Dec., completes
the third and fourth cantos of
'Don Juan,' 636 n. Removes to
Ravenna, xxvi.

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1820. Subsequent connection with
Countess Guiccioli, and her se-
paration from her husband,
xxvii. xxxi. Feb., translates first
canto of the 'Morgante Maggiore,'
xxvii. 324. March, finishes Pro-
phecy of Dante,' xxvii. 333 n.
Translates 'Francesca of Rimini,'
899 n. And writes Observations
upon an Article in Blackwood's
Magazine,' 794. April-July,
writes Marino Faliero,' xxvii.
347. Oct.-Nov., writes fifth
canto of 'Don Juan,' 661 n.
1821. Feb., writes Letter on the
Rev. W. L. Bowles's Strictures
on the Life of Pope,' 821.
March, 'Second Letter,' etc. 832.
May, finishes 'Sardanapalus,'
xxvii. 429 n. July, The Two
Foscari,' xxvii. 463 n. Sept.,
'Cain,' xxvii. 504 n. Oct., writes
'Heaven and Earth, a Mystery,'
416 n.; and Vision of Judg-
ment,' 394 n. His Address to
the Neapolitan government, xxvii.
Regret of the poor at his depar-
ture from Ravenna, xxviii. Re-
moves to Pisa, ib.
1822. Jan., finishes Werner,'
532 n. July, writes sixth, se-
venth, and eighth cantos of 'Don
Juan,' 679 n. Finishes the 'De-
formed Transformed,' 488 n.
Death of his natural daughter,
Allegra, xxviii. His project of
visiting South America, ib. His
coalition with Hunt in the 'Libe-
ral,' xxviii. xxxiii. 409 n.
1823. Jan., writes ‘Age of Bronze,'
567 n. Feb., writes the Island,'
575 n.
March, commences an
epic entitled the 'Conquest,' 904.
April, turns his views towards
Greece, xxviii. Receives a com-
munication from the London
committee, xxix. July 14, sails for
Greece, ib. Waits, at Cephalonia,
the arrival of the Greek fleet, ib.
His conversations on religion
with Dr. Kennedy, ib. His noble
conduct in Greece, ib. Testi-
monies to the benevolence and
soundness of his views, xxvii.
xxix. xxxii.

1824, Jan. 5, arrives at Misso-
longhi, xxix. Writes Lines on
completing my thirty-sixth year,'
904 n. Intended attack upon
Lepanto, xxx. Rupture with the
Suliotes and the expedition sus-
pended, ib. His last illness, ib.
His death, ib. Sensation pro-
duced by it in Greece and Eng-
land, xxxi. His funeral, ib. In-
scription on his monument, ib.

His person, 112 n. His sensi-

tiveness on the subject of his

lameness, xi. xii. xiv. 184 n.
488 n. 489 n. 493 n. His ten-
dency to make the worst of his
own obliquities, 70 n. 87 n.
His generosity and kind-hearted-
ness, xxvii. xxxii. 795. His po-
litics, 797. His religious opi-
nions, xxxii. 39, 40, 84, 137,
296 n. 646. His tendency to
superstition, xii. 267 n. 768.
His fondness for curious arms,
xvii. 13 n. Summary of his cha-
racter and writings, xxxii.
Byron, Lady, xx-xxii. 61 n. 312 n.
454 n. 594n. 596 n. 637 n. 796,
875, 877 n. Extract from her
Remarks on Mr. Moore's Life of
Lord Byron,' 596 n. 'Lines on
hearing that she was ill,' 886.
'Lines on reading in the news-
papers that she had been pa-
troness of a charity ball,' 903.
Byron, Honourable Augusta Ada,
111, 125, 876.
Byzantium, 128, 852.

C.

Cabot, Sebastian, 338 n.
Cade, Jack, 646.
Cadiz, xviii. xix. 79, 594, 616.
Cadiz, The Girl of,' 82 n.
Cæsar, Augustus, his character,
870 n.

Cæsar, Julius, xxix. 137, 166,
491, 700. His laurel wreath,
142, 496. The suitor of love,'
580, 635.

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the Poets,' 678. Critical notes
by, passim.

'Can Grande,' 571.
Candia, 128, 626.
Cannæ, battle of, 118.
Canning, Right Hon. George, 62#.
65. His opinion of the Bride of
Abydos,' 220 n. His Inscription
for Mrs. Brownrigg, the 'Prenti-
cide,' 397 n. His oratory, 572я.
His defence of public schools and
universities, 599 n. His charac-
ter, 572, 680 n.
Canongate, the, 76 n.
Canova, 311, 386. His early love,
43n. His Venus, 132 n. 308 m.
'Lines on his bust of Helen,'
891.

Cant, the grand primum mobile of

England,' 824. The crying sin
of the times,' 680.
Cantemir, Demetrius, his 'History
of the Ottoman Empire,' 675,
683.

Canterbury cathedral, 725.
Capena, Porta, 166, 167.
Capitoline Hill, the, 131 n.
Capitol, the, 164, 165.

Capo di Ferro, Cardinal, 163.
Capo d'Istria, 347.
Capo d'Istrias, Connt, 574.
Capo di Bove, 138 n.
Capperonnier, M., 153 .
Caracalla, 168. Circus of, 167.
Caractacus, 100, 747.
Caravaggio, 748.
Carbonari, 572.
Care, 722.

Cain; a Mystery, 504. Wander- Carlisle (Frederick Howard), fift

ings of,' 529.

Siege of, xi n.

Cairn Gorme, 715.
Calais, 311.
Calderon, 594.

Caledonian Meeting, Address in-
tended to be recited at,' 871.
Calenture, 476 n. Described, 773.
Calenus, A., 168 n.
Caligula, 262 n. His wish, 683.
Calm at sea, 633.

Calma aud Orla, Death of,' 37.
Calpe, 86.
Calvin, 178.

Calypso, her island, 87, 87 n.
Cambridge University, 22, 64 n.,
842.
Cambyses, 568.
Camden, Lord, 814.
Cameron, Evan and Donald, 114.
Camilla, 755.
Camillus, 167 n.
Camoens, 52.

Stanzas to a lady,
with the poems of,' 8.
Campan, Madame, 287 n.
Campbel!, Thomas, esq. 62, 94 n.,
613, 590, 731, 800, 824. His
'Pleasures of Hope,' 62 n. His
'Gertrude of Wyoming,' 182 n.
Inadvertencies in his 'Lives of

Earl of, Lord Byron's guardias,
xiii. 60, 61 n. 64. Dedication
of Hours of Idleness' to, 1.
Character of his poems, 2 n. Lord
Byron's Lines upon, 60. His al-
leged neglect of his ward, 60 m.
Proposed reconciliation between
Lord Byron and, ib. His advice
to Lady Holland, 905.
Carlisle (Isabella Byron), Countess
of, 1 n.

Carlisle (Henry) Fourth Earl of, 1 =.
Carlo Dolce, 428, 748.
Carlowitz, plain of, 262.
Carnage, 699. 705.
Carnival, xxv. 305--307.
'Caroline, Lines to,' 7, 8.
Caroline, Queen of England, 668,
682 n., 733. 'Lines on,' 901.
'Epigram on Address to be pre-
sented by the Brasiers' company,'
902.

Carr, Sir John, 65, 82 n.
Carrara, Francesca da, 151, 153.
Carrer, the improvisatore, 386 m.
Carthage, 146, 703.
Cartwright, Major, 817.
Cary, Rev. Henry Francis, his trans-
lation of Dante,' 335, 336, 901.

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