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D'Arblay, Madame (Miss Burney), | D'Herbelot, ix. 177.

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97.
Darnley, death of, a fine subject for a
drama, iii. 59.

'DARKNESS,' iii. 287.; x. 283. 283 n.
Daru, M., his picture of Venetian
society and manners, xii. 225.
Darwin, Erasmus, his ' pompous
chime,' vii. 276. His Botanic
Garden,' 277 n. Put down by a
poem in the Anti-Jacobin, xv. 80.
Dates, a sort of post-house, where
the Fates change horses,' xv. 153.
David, King, xv. 176. His harp, x.
76. His hymns characterised, X.
77.

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Dekker, Thomas, his Wonder of a
Kingdom,' quoted, vii. 217 n.
Delaval, Sir Francis Blake, v. 97.
Delawarr (George-John West), fiftl.
Earl, i. 69. 121. ; ii. 101. ; vii. 142 n.,
143 n.

'VERSES to,' 11.

'LINES on,' 179.

Delia, poetical epistle from, to Lord
Byron, iii. 217 n.

Dalladecima, Count, vi. 111. His
opinion of Lord Byron's conduct in
Greece, 111 n.

Delphi, fountain of, i. 304. 317.;
viii. 11.

Deluge, xiii. 22. 44.

Davies, Scrope, esq. i. 186. ; ii. 39, 40. Demetrius, ii. 183.
51. 63, 63 n.; iii. 20. 235.

Davy, Sir Humphry, iv. 303. 309.;
xii. 40. His safety lamp, xv. 163.
Dawkins, Mr., v. 331.

Dead, features of the, ix. 151. Belief
that the souls of, inhabit the forms
of birds, ix. 254.

DEAR DOCTOR, I have read your
play,' iv. 54.

'DEAR OBJECT of defeated care,' ix. 3.
Death, iv. 52. 197.; v. 86. 90.; viii.

109. 173. 243. ; ix. 188.; x. 291.; xi.
182.; xiv. 58.; xv. 333.; xvi. 10.
33. 48. 73, 74. 83. 273. 311. Shuns
the wretched, xv. 188. Advantages
of an early, xvi. 10. 305. 'The
sovereign's sovereign,' 311. A
reformer,' 312. 'Dunnest of all
duns,' xvii. 157. 'A gaunt gour-
mand,' 158.

'Death and the Lady,' xv. 292.
Death, in the Apocalypse, iii. 263.
'Death of Calmar and Orla,' vii. 155.
De Bath, Lord, i. 65.
Dee, the, vii. 176.

De Foix, Gaston, his tomb at Ra-
venna, xvi. 48. Account of, 48 n.
'Deformed Transformed; a Drama,'
xiii. 301.

Deformity, an incentive to distinc-

tion, iii. 241.; xiii. 321 n.
D'Egville, John, the ballet-master,
i. 213.

Demetrius Poliorcetes described, xiii.
318.

Demosthenes, viii. 173.

Denham, his " Cowper's Hill,' ii.
193.; xv. 332.

Denman, Sir Thomas (Lord Chief
Justice), his translation of the
Greek song on Harmodius and
Aristogeiton, viii. 141 n.

Dennis, John, the critic, ix. 69. His
tract against operas, 69 n.

Dent de Jument, iii. 258.
De Pauw, his writings characterised,
viii. 123.

De Quincey, Mr., his Confessions of
an Opium Eater,' xvi. 12.
De Retz, Cardinal, his account of a
shipwreck in the Gulf of Lyons,
xv. 221.

Dervish Tahiri, Lord Byron's faithful
Arnaout guide, iii. 194 n.; viii.
114.; ix. 190.; x. 107.
Desaix, General, xv. 113.
Despair, viii. 139.; ix. 196. 198. 318.
xv. 229.; xvi. 231.
Despotism, xvi. 101.
Destiny, viii. 229.

De Tott, Baron, his History of the
Turks,' xvi. 144.

'DEVIL'S DRIVE; an unfinished Rhap
sody,' x. 257.

'Devil's Walk,' Porson's, ii. 304.
Devonshire, Duchess of (Lady Eli-

zabeth Foster), her character of the
Roman government, v. 206 n.
Devotion, xiv. 18.; xv. 331. ; xvi.
144.

'Diary of an Invalid,' Matthews's, its

merit, iv. 342.

Dibdin, Thomas, play-wright, v. 190.
Success of his Mother Goose,'
vii. 260.

Dick, Mr., i. 182.

'Dictionnaire de Trévoux,' its defini-
tion of an epic, xv. 189.

Diderot, his definition of sensibility,
iii. 128.

'Difficile est propriè,' &c. of Horace,
disputes on the meaning of, ix.

61.

Digestion, iii. 5.

Dinner, a man's happiness dependent

on, xvii. 110.

Dinner-bell, the tocsin of the soul,'
xvi. 77.

Dioclesian, iii. 22.
Diodati, iii. 246.

Diogenes, xvii. 180. 209.

Dionysius at Corinth, iii. 22.; x. 11.
Dirce, fountain of, viii. 118.
Discontents, progress of popular, xvi.
231.

'Disdar Aga,' viii. 118.
D'Israeli, J. esq. his Essay on the Li-
terary Character,' i. 63.; ii. 7 n.;
iii. 134. His Quarrels of Authors,'
iii. 15.; ix. 56 n.; xv. 56. His re-
mark on the effect of medicine upon
the mind and spirits; v. 264 n.
Dedication of Observations upon
an Article in Blackwood's Maga-
zine' to, xv. 56.

'Distrest Mother,' excellence of the

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'DON JUAN,' xv. 1.
Preface, 3.

Testimonies of authors, 5.

Letter to the Editor of My Grand.
mother's Review,' 41.
'Observations upon an Article in
Blackwood's Magazine,' 55.
Dedication of Observations' to
J. D'Israeli, esq. 56.

Fragment on the back of the MS.
of Canto I., 100.

Dedication of Don Juan' to Ro-
bert Southey, esq. 101.

Preface to Cantos VI., VII., VIII.,
127.

Origin of the character, xv. 109.
When first introduced upon the
stage, 109.
Sketch of his supposed
character by Mr. Coleridge, 114.
Partiality of the Germans for, v.
336. Goethe's character of, xv. 37.
See also, i. 34. 49.; iv. 121. 134.
138. 141. 151. 171. 177. 179-182.
186. 196. 238, 239. 249. 253. 260.
304. 351. 354.; v. 34. 118. 126. 201.
220. 226. 231. 238. 348. 351. 354. 371.;
vi. 22. 169.

'Donna Bianca,' v. 31.

6

Don Quixote, a too true tale,' xvii.
77. Delight of reading, in the ori-
ginal, 150.

Doomsday.book, xvi. 315.
Dorotheus of Mitylene, viii. 124.
D'Orsay, Count, vi. 13. His Jour.
nal,' 18. 22. Lord Byron's letter to,
24.

Dorset (Thomas Sackville), Earl of,
'called the drama forth,' vii. 41 n.
(Charles Sackville), Earl of,

his character, vii. 41.

(George-John Frederick),
fourth Duke of, i. 69. 151.; iii. 151.
153.; vii. 39. 43.

'LINES Occasioned by the death of,'
iii. 151.

Dorville, Mr., iv. 171.

Dover dear,' xvi. 328.

Drachenfels, viii. 156. ; xvi. 325.

Dramatists, old English, full of gross

faults,' v. 115. Not good as mo-
dels,' 145

'Drapery Misses,' xvii. 21.
Drawcansir, ix. 60.

'DREAM,' The, iii. 287.; x. 243.

-, Account of a remarkable

one, xvi. 17.

Duppa, Richard, esq., his 'Life of
Michael Angelo,' xi. 296-298.
Dwarfs, xvi. 91.

Dwyer, Mr., i. 318.

Dyer's Grongar Hill,' vi. 365.

Drcams, ii. 270.; xiii. 150.; xvi. 16. Dying Gladiator,' viii. 249, 250.

160. Reflections on, xvi. 17.
Drummond, Sir William, ii. 95.; xii.
60.; xiv. 4. His Edipus Judaï-
cus,' ii. 97. His Academical
Questions' quoted, viii. 244 n.
Drury, Rev. Henry, Lord Byron's
letters to, i. 200. 270. 315. 325. 358.
iii. 122.

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Dubois, Edward, esq., vii. 283 n. His
satire, entitled My Pocket Book,'
vii. 283 n.

Dubost, M., painter, his Beauty and
the Beast,' ix. 49.
Duelling, xvi. 21.

'Duenna,' Lord Byron's partiality for

the songs in, i. 101.

'DUET between Campbell and Bowles,'
xvii. 244.

Duff, Colonel (Lord Byron's godfa.
ther), i. 20.

Miss Mary (afterwards Mrs.
Robert Cockburn), Lord Byron's
boyish attachment for, i. 26.; ii.
261.; vii. 176, 176 n.
Dumont, M., iv. 202.

E.

E-, Lines to, vii. 11.
Early death, xvi. 10. 305.
hours, xvii. 114.

rising, xv. 259, 259 n
Eating, xvi. 71.

Eblis, Oriental Prince of Darkness,
ix. 178.

Eboli, Princess of, epigram on her
losing an eye, vi. 390.
Eclectic,' xv. 312.
Eclectic Review, its strictures
'Hours of Idleness,' i. 192.; ix. 89.
Its character of Don Juan,' xv. 12.
Economy, xvi. 314.

on

Eddleston (Cambridge chorister), i. 99.
160-162. 164 n.; ii. 76.; vii. 99,
100 n. His death.

'LINES on a cornelian given to Lord
Byron by,' vii. 99.
Edgecombe, Mr., iv. 155. 173.
Edgworth, Richard Lovell, esq.,
sketch of, v. 78.

Maria, v. 78, 79. 80.; xv.

119.
Edinburgh Annual Register, ii. 78.
Edinburgh Review, i. 204, 205. 209.
266.; ii. 234. 266. 281.; iii. 96. 209.
266.; v. 144. 146. vii. 223.
Its Critique on
ness,' vii. 188. 223.

Hours of Idle-

Strictures on its remarks on the
literature of modern Greece, viii.
123.

Education, English system of, i. 65.
199.

Edward the Black Prince, his tomb,
xvi. 229.

Egeria, viii. 240. 318.

" Fountain of, viii. 241.
Grotto of, viii. 241. 318.
Egripo (the Negropont), ix. 222

Ehrenbreitstein, viii. 158.
Eighers, the, iii. 253.

Ekenhead, Mr., v. 129.; xv. 246.
Elba, Isle of, iii. 65.; xiv. 274.
Eldon, Earl of, i. 236, 237.; ii. 129.
Anecdote of, ii. 149. His judgment
in the case of Cain,' xiv. 6. 37.

His impartiality, xvii. 187.
'ELEGY on Newstead Abbey,' vii. 118.
Eloquence, state of, in England, ii.
209.

Elgin, Lord, ii. 29.; vii. 234.; viii. 72.

111.; ix. 108. 112. 117.

Elgin marbles, viii. 111. ; i. 108. 113.
117.

ELIZA, Lines to,' vii. 110.

Elizabeth, Queen, her avarice, xvi.
297.

'ELLEN, Lines to,' imitated from Ca-
tullus, vii. 23.

Ellice, Edward, esq. v. 342,
Ellis, George, esq., ii. 259.
Elliston, Robert William, comedian,
ii. 162. 166.

Eloisa and Abelard,' Pope's, xv. 88.
Eloquence, power of, xvii. 159.
EMMA, Lines to,' vii. 28.

Endor, witch of, x. 87.; xi. 37.
Endurance, of more worth than ta-
lent, iii. 296.

EPIGRAM on Moore's Operatic Farce,
or Farcical Opera, ii. 65.

from the French of Rulhières, xi.
316.

on my Wedding Day, xi. 316.
on Cobbett's digging up Tom
Paine's Bones, xi. 316.

The world is a bundle of hay,' xi.
317.

on my Wedding, xii. 321.
on the Braziers' Company having
resolved to present an Address to
Queen Caroline, xii. 322.

on Lord Castlereagh, xvii. 245.
Epistle, a female, described, xvii. 112.
to a Friend, in answer to
some Lines exhorting the author
to banish care,' ix. 11.
'EPISTLE to Augusta,' x. 201.
EPITAPH on a Friend, vii. 13.
on Virgil and Tibullus, by Deme-
trius Marsus, translated, vii. 21.
on John Adams, of Southwell, a
carrier, who died of drunkenness,
vii. 209.

Substitute for an, ix. 4.

for Joseph Blackett, late poet and
shoemaker, ix. 10.

for William Pitt, xi. 314.

for Lord Castlereagh, xvii. 246.

'ENGLISH BARDS AND SCOTCH REVIEW- Erasmus, his Naufragium,' xv. p. v

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'Faux pas,' in England, xvii. 137.
Fawcett, John, comedian, v. 112.

Evening described, viii. 205.; x. 159.;
xv. 330.

Evil, xiv. 76, 76 n. 78. Origin of, xiv. | Fazio,' Milman's tragedy of, iv. 92.

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Experience, xi. 116. 182.; xvii. 57. Felicaja, his 'O Italia, Italia,' trans-

'The chief philosopher,' 160.
Eyes, xv. 138.; xvi. 294. xvii. 181.

F.

Faber, Rev. George, ii. 232 n.
Fainting, sensation of, iii. 254.
Faintness,

the last mortal birth of

pain,' xi. 182.
Fairy, xi. 30.

Falconer, his Shipwreck,' vi. 357.
365.

Falkland (Lucius Cary), Viscount, i.
233.; vii. 122, 122 n. 264 n.
Falkner, Mr., i. 128.

Fall of Terni, iv. 31.
Falmouth, i. 272.

Fame, ii. 288. 301.; iv. 160.; v. 55. 76.
199.; viii. 105. 137. 146. 162. 183.;
xii. 19.; x. 138.; xv. 95. 198.;
xvi. 46, 47. 50. 183. 190. 218. 220.
281.; xvii. 67. 110. 151.

Fancy, xvi. 6.

'FARE THEE WELL, and if for ever,'
iii. 229.; x. 185.

'Farewell to the Muse,' vii. 204.
Farewell! if ever fondest prayer,'
vii. 211.

'Farewell to Malta,' xvii. 239.
Farmers, xvi. 280.

Farrell, D. esq., i. 182. 185.
Fashionable world, xvii. 19. 122, 123.
Fatalism, ii. 272.

Fate, viii. 149.; xvi. 65.; xvii. 79.
"Father of Light! great God of Hea-
ven,' vii. 164.

"Faust,' Goethe's, iii. 375.; iv. 67.
'Faustus,' Marlow's, iv. 67.
Fauvel, M. (French consulat Athens),
viii. 119.

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Fielding, the prose Homer of hu

man nature,' v. 55.

'Fill the goblet again,' vii. 300.
'First Kiss of Love,' vii. 36.
First love, xv. 161. 277.

Finlay, Kirkman, esq. vi. 89.
Fitzgerald, Lord Edward, iii. 11. "Son-
net on the repeal of his forfeiture,
xi. 315.

William Thomas, esq.,
poetaster, iii. 29. 50.; vii. 225. ix.
103.
Flemish school of painting, iii. 300.
Fletcher, William (Lord Byron's
valet), i. 268. 296. 300. 314. 329. 331.
338. 350. 357.; iii. 10.; vi. 216,
217.; viii. 18, 18 n.

Flood, Right Hon. Henry, ii. 211.
'Florence' (Mrs. Spencer Smith), i.
286.; viii. 78, 79. Stanzas to, vii.
308. Account of, 308 n.; viii.

79 n.
Florence, iv. 12.; v. 279.; viii. 212.
216, 217.; xi. 274.

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