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Nature, vi. 362, 363. ; viii. 71. 81. 152.; Nottingham frame-breaking bill, ii.
xvi. 104.; xvii. 157. 173..

'PRAYER of,' i. 154

Naufragia,' Clarke's, ii. 214.

'NAY, SMILE not at my sullen brow,'
viii. 54.

'Needy knife grinder,' viii. 60.
Nabuchadonoser, xvi. 81.

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"" the consul, xiv. 318.
Nessus, robe of, xvii. 26. 197.
Nerni, iii. 283.

Neupperg, Count, x. 11.; xiv. 296.
Newfoundland dog, INSCRIPTION on
the monument of a,' vii. 292.
Newstead, i. 3. 32. 234. 247.; ii. 173,
173 n. 233. 260.; iii. 112.; xvii.
94.

'LINES written on leaving,' vii. 15.
'ELEGY on,' vii. 119.
Newton, Sir Isaac, xvi. 178.

Memor-

able sentiment of, 179. Anecdote of
the falling apple, 303.
Ney, Marshal, xvi. 269.
Nicopolis, ruins of, i. 295.
Night, vi. 259.

Nightingale, its attachment to the
rose, ix. 148. 219. Its love of soli-
tude, xvi. 15.

'Nil admirari,' happiness of the, xvi.
97.; xvii. 87.
Nimrod, xvi. 81.

'NISUS AND EURYALI'S,' a paraphrase
from the Æneid, vii. 78.

121.

Novelties, please less than they im-

press,' " xvii. 64.

Novels, ii. 295.; xvi. 12.

Numa Pompilius, xv 128.

0.

Oak, the Byron, i. 148.; vii. 206 n.
'LINES to an, at Newstead,' vii.

206.

Oaths, British, xvii. 19.

Continental, xvii. 19.

'OBSERVATIONS upon an Article in
Blackwood's Magazine,' xv. 55.
Obstinacy, xvii. 147.

Ocean, viii. 267, 267 n.
'Ocean Stream,' xvi 60

ODE TO NAPOLEON BUGNAPARTE,'
x. 1.

'ODE ON VENICE,' iv. 125.; xi. 179.
Odessa, xvi. 127.

O'Donnovan, P. M., his 'Sir Proteus,'
iii. 91.

Offspring, care of, xvi. 109.
OH! banish care,' ii. 73.

'OH! had my fate been joined with
thine!' vii. 171.

'OH LADY! when I left the shore,' vii.
308.

OH! my lonely, lonely, lonely, pil-
low,' xiv. 357.

'On! never talk to me again,' viii. 56.
'Он! snatch'd away in beauty's
bloom,' x. 82.

'On! talk not to me of a name great
in story' xii. 19.

'On! weep for those,' x. 79.

O'Higgins, Mr., his Irish tragedy, iii.

185.

Old age, xv. 310.
Olympus, iii. 196.

O'Meara, Barry, xiv. 268. Causes of

his dismissal from the navy, 268 n.
Omens, xvi. 14.

'ON Jordan's banks,' x. 80.

'ONE struggle more, and I am free,'
ix. 17.

O'Neil, Miss, actress, iii. 77.
Orators, only two thorough ones, in
all antiquity, ii. 210. 'Things of
ages,' 210.

Orchomenus, i. 309.

'LINES written in the traveller's
book at,' ix. 8.

O'Reilly, General Count, xv. 169.
Origin of Love,' Lines on being asked

what was the, ix. 37.

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most superficial and unnatural,' iv.
9. 12.

Palafox, General, his heroic conduct
at Saragossa, viii. 58.
'Palamon and Arcite,' xv. 88.

Palatine, mount, viii. 237.
Palavicini, Marquis, vi. 11.
Palgrave, Sir Francis, xii. 217.
Palmerston, Viscount, vii. 45.
Pantheon at Rome, viii. 252, 253,
253 n.

'Pantisocracy,' xv. 74, 75. 327.
Paper, xv. 325.

Paper-money, xvii. 41.

'Paradise Lost, xv. 91.

of Fools,' ii. 111 n.

Orrery, Earl of, his Life of Swift Parcæ, xvi. 61.

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Oxenstiern, Chancellor, his remark to Parry, Captain, vi. 139. 175 n. 187.

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Passions, xvi. 23. 50. Effect of violent
and conflicting, 28.

Past, the best prophet of the future,"
v. 89.

Paswan Oglou, ix. 236.

Paternoster-row, the bazaar of book-
sellers,' xii. 24.

Paterson, Mr. (Lord Byron's tutor at
Aberdeen), i. 18.
Patience, xi. 27.
Patrons, i. 340.

Patroclus, tomb of, xvi. 27.

Paul, St., translation from the Arme-
nian, of correspondence between
the Corinthians and, vi. 271.

In his youth a coxcomb, 233 n. His
portrait in the Manfrini palace, iv.
8. Lord Byron's agreement in cha-
racter with, vi. 232. His laureat
crown, viii. 217. 302. On the con-
spiracy of Marino Faliero, xii
223. Crowned in the Capitol, xv.
84.The Platonic pimp of all pos-
terity,' xvi. 59.

See also, ii. 116 n.; viii. 70 n. 205.
217. 288.; xi. 288.

Petticoat, garment of a mystical
sublimity,' xvii. 125.

government, xvii. 213.
influence, xvii. 125.

Pausanias, his Achaics' quoted, vi. Petty, Lord Henry (now Marquis of

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Peacock, the royal bird, whose tail 's
a diadem,' xvi. 205.

Peel, Right Hon. Sir Robert, i. 61 n.
Lord Byron's form-fellow at Har-
row, 62.; ii. 209.; iii. 233.; iv.
346.

Pelagius, viii. 32.

Lansdowne), vii. 97, 97 n. 257.
Phædra and Hippolitus, xvi. 108.
Philanthropy, viii. 95.

Phillips, Ambrose, his pastorals, vi
371.; ix. 76.

xv. 44.

S. M., esq., ii. 283.

, Thomas, esq., R. A., iii. 97,98.
Charles, esq. (the barrister),

Philo-progenitiveness,' xvii. 48.
Philosophers, celibacy of eminent, iii.
134.

Penelope, baths of, Lord Byron's Philosophy, xv. 284.

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Phoenix, Sheridan's story of the, ii.

163.

Phyle, Fort, viii. 100. 118.
Physicians, xvi, 317.
Pibroch,' vii. 67, 67 n.

Pickersgill, Joshua, his • Three
Bro-thers' the foundation of The
Deformed Transformed, ' xiii.
S03.

Picture, a, is the past,' xvii. 199.
Pictures, iv. 9.

Pierce Plowman, i. 148.

Pigot, Miss, i. 97. 111. 269.; v. 256,
257 n. Account of her first acquain-
with Lord Byron, i. 98.
'LINES to,' vii. 110.

Lord Byron's letters to, i. 100. 105.
108, 109. 113. 159, 160. 162. 165. 168.
171. 173.

Pigot, Dr., i. 112. His account of
Lord Byron's visit to Harrowgate,

His

113.

'REPLY to some Verses of, on the
cruelty of his mistress,' vii. 107.
Lord Byron's letters to, i. 104. 107.
123. 158.; ii. 31.

Pigot, Mrs., Lord Byron's letter to, i.
164.

Pillans, James (Professor of Hu-
manity at Edinburgh), vii. 255,
255 n.
Pindemonte, Ippolito, Lord Byron's
portrait of, iv. 32. Mr. Rose's
character of, xiv. 282.
Pindus, Mount, viii. 83.
Pistol, xvi. 21.

Pitt, Right Hon. William, his addi
tions to our parliamentary tongue,
ix. 53. His grave next that of Fox,
xiv. 265. His disinterestedness,
xvi. 272.

EPITAPH for, xi. 314.

Plagiarism, ii. 314.; iii. 177.; iv.
236.; v. 225, 225 n.; x. 165.; xiii.
251.; xv. 211, 212.

Plato, his lines on the tomb of The-

mistocles, ix. 147. His system of
love, xv. 157. His Dialogues, xvii.
185. His reply to Diogenes, xvii.
209.

Platonic love, xv. 144. 157, 158.; xvi.
295.

63.99. 297. 'The feeling of a for-
mer world and future,' v. 89. De-
scriptive, vi. 367. Ethical, the
highest of all,' vi. 369. Present
state of English, xv. 79. Nothing
in, so difficult as a beginning, xvi.
5. Is a passion,' 50.

See also iv. 105, 306.; v. 89. 285.
Poets, self-educated ones, i. 145. Un-
fitted for the calm affections and
comforts of domestic life, iii. 125.
Querulous and monotonous lives
of, ii. 277. Female, 278. Amatory,
xvi. 59. Duties of, xvi. 245. The
greatest living,' xvii. 23.

See also, v. 95.; vi. 368. 376.; XL.
293.; xvi. 46.

Poggio, his exclamation on looking
down on Rome, viii. 212.
Poland, xiv. 272.
Polenta, Guido da, xii. 4.

"" Francesca da, xii. 5.
Polidori, Dr., iii. 247, 248. 275, 276.
285. 301. 306. 342.; iv. 5. 7. 38, 39.
72. 147. 150. 152.; xi. 308.; xv. 73.
Some account of, iii. 275. Anec.
dotes of, iii. 278. 301. 306. His
'Vampire,' iii. 282 n.; iv. 147. His
tragedy, iv. 54. EPISTLE from Mr.
Murray to,' xi. 308.

Political consistency, vi. 237.
Politics, ii. 311.

Players, an impracticable people, iii.
185.
Playhouse bill, origin of, ix. 72. Pro- Polycrates, xv. 323.

priety of repealing it, 73.

Polygamy, xvi. 251.

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Pleasure, xv. 159. 164. 198. A stern Pompey, a hero, conqueror, and
moralist,' 312.

'Pleasures of Hope,' ii. 98. 240.
'Pleasures of Memory,' ii. 240.

'LINES written on a blank leaf of,'
ix. 28.

Plimley, Peter (Rev. Sidney Smith),
his Letters,' xvii. 223.
Plethora, abstinence the sole remedy
for, iii. 337.

Plutarch's Lives,' xi. 37. ; xvi. 223.
Mitford's abuse of, xvii. 47.
Poetry, distasteful to Byron when a
boy, ii. 7 n. When to be employed
as the interpreter of feeling, iii.
231. Addiction to, whence result-
ing; iii. 241.
New school of, iv.
VOL. XVII.

X

cuckold,' xv. 283. His statue, viii,
230. 311.

Pomponius Atticus, ii. 266.

Pope, a self-educated poet, i. 145. An
example of filial tenderness, ii. 33 n.
His Prologue to Cato, ii. 165. The
parent of real English poetry,' iv.
143. His imagery, v. 139. His
Essay upon Phillips's Pastorals a
model of irony, vi. 371. The prin-
cipal inventor of modern garden-
ing, vi. 408. His Homer,' vi. 373.
376. 413. His Pastorals, ix. 76. His

Rape of the Lock,' xv. 88. Har.
mony of his versification, xv. 89.
His imagination, xv. 89. His cha

racter of Sporus, xv. 89. List of
his disciples, xv. 95. Systematic
depreciation of, xv. 79.
'LETTER ON BOWLES'S STRICTURES
ON THE LIFE AND WRITINGS of,' vi.
346. SECOND LETTER, vi. 382.
See also, i. 223.; iii. 219.; iv. 64.
139. 297.; v. 25. 33. 138. 140. 150.;
vi. 351.; vii. 229. 231.; ix. 70.
Popular applause, xv. 319.
Popular discontents, progress of, xvi.
231.

Popularity, xvi. 51.
Porphyry, viii. 59.

Porson, Professor, his' Devil's Walk,'
ii. 40. 304. Anecdotes of, iv. 84.;
vii. 96.

Portland (William Henry Cavendish),

third Duke of, vii. 283.

Portrait painter, agonies of a, vi.
363.

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Portuguese, the, characterised, viii. Pulci, his 'Morgante Maggiore,'

31, 31 n.

Possession, xvi. 11.

Posterity, xv. 104.; xvii. 46.

Potemkin, Prince, xvi. 191. His cha-
racter, xvi. 191. His instructions
to Suwarrow before the siege of
Ismail, xvi. 193.

Potiphar's wife, xvi. 108.
Pouqueville, M. de, iv. 322.; viii. 85.
121, 122.; xvi. 68. Character of his
writings, viii. 122.

Pratt, Samuel Jackson, i. 209. 243. ; ii.
54. His Sympathy,' vii. 244.

Prayer, xiv. 18, 19.

'PRAYER OF NATURE,' vii. 164.
Pride, xvi. 5.; xvii. 81.

Priestley, Dr., his Christian mate.
rialism, vi. 259.
Prince Regent, iii. 41. ; iv. 185. Lord
Byron's introduction to, ii. 155. A
finished gentleman from top to toe,'
xvii. 70.

'SONNET to, on the repeal of Lord
Edward Fitzgerald's forfeiture,' iv.
155.; xi. 315.

Principles, the two, xiv. 76.
Prior's Paulo Purgante, iv. 183.
PRISONER OF CHILLON,' iii. 285.; iv.
27.; x. 221.

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