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Aurora Borealis, a new, 124. A versified Aurora Bore-
alis, 551.

Authors: fellows in foolscap uniforms,' 477.
Autumn in England, and its pleasures, 598.
Autumn's bleak beginning, 530.

'Beauty blighted in an hour,' 189.
Beauty's heavenly ray,' 198, 652.

Becher (Rev. J. T.): Answer to a complaint of his, 24.
Response to advice given by him, 30.
'Becket's bloody stone,' 579.

Beckford, William, author of Vathek,' Cintra, retreat of,
142. Great merits of his Vathek, 651. Idea borrow-
ed therefrom by Byron, 656.

Bed of Ware, 543.

Beecher. See Becher.

Beef and Battles, 508. English Bee', 622.
Beggar's Opera. See Gay.

Behmen, Jacob, and his reveries, 542.

Belisarius, hero, conqueror, and cuckold,' 511.

Belshazzar! from the Banquet turn, 62. Vision of, 66.
'Belshazzar in his Hall,' 517.

Bender, like Swedish Charles at,' 564.
Beneath Blessington's eyes, 89.

Benzon, Vittor, and his mother the celebrated beauty,'
663.

BEPPO, a Venetian Story, 472. Specimen of the model,

479.

Berkeley, Bishop, and his no matter' theory,' 580.
Bernis, Abbé, alleged consequence of a Royal verse upon,

306.

Betty, Master, the young Roscius,' 96.
Bigamy, that false crime,' 564.

Bigotry: Who doom to hell, themselves are on the way,'

274.

Bile, energetic, 'nought 's more sublime than,' 539.
Birds inhabited by the souls of the dead: instances of
such a belief, 653.

Biren and Biron, the graceless name of Biron,' 577.
Fortunes of the race in Russia, 668, 669.
'Bismillah!' 190; its meaning, 650.

Black Edward's helm,' 579.

Black Friar, Legend of the, 618.

Blackbourne, Archbishop, an alleged buccancer, €35.
Blackett, Joseph, the Poetic Cobbier; Epitaph upon him,
49. Notice of, 98, 109. His patron, 634.
Blake, the fashionable tonsor, 107, 633.

Bland, Rev. R., and his associate Bard,' 99, 631.
Blank verse allied to Tragedy, 103; preferred by 'prose
poets,' 495.

Avarice, a good old gentlemanly vice,' 496. Byron's Blasphemy and blasphemers, 542. Fielding's Mrs. Adanis

panegyric on, 586, 587.

Ave Maria! blessed be the hour,' 520.

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on this topic, 600.

Blessington, To the Countess of, 89.

Bligh, Captain: Awake, bold Bligh!' 263. Object of
his expedition, 657.

'Blood serves to wash Ambition's hands,' 571.
Bloomfield, Nathaniel, 98, 631, 634.

Bloomfield, Robert, his patrons, and his fate, 98, 631, 634.
Blue, intensity of, and instrument for measuring same,

529.

'Blue devils for his morning mirrors,' 608.

Blues, our, contrasted with the Turkish ladies, 653.
BLUES, THE, a Literary Eclogue, 117.
Boatswain,' Byron's dog, inscriptions on the monument
of, 43.

Bob Southey! You're a poet-Poet Laureate, 479.
Boccaccio, the Bard of Prose,' 173. Treatment of his
ashes, 174. Boccaccio's lore,' 521. His aversion to the
marriage of literary men, 658.

Boeotia and Baotian Shades, 146, 637. Dull Bœotis,'

112.

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Bowles, Rev. W. Lisle, song written to 'shock' him,
81. Why, how now, Billy Bowles, 87. Maudlin
prince of mournful sonneteers,' 94. Byron's ludicrous
interpretation of one of his episodes, 94, 95, 629, His
Edition of Pope stigmatised, 95. Byron's confession
relative thereto, 629. Sonneteering Bowles,' 99. Don't
begin like Bowles,' 104. Rev. Rowley Powley,' 584.
'Brandy for heroes,' 263. Heaven's brandy,' 580. See
O Cogniac."

Brass. Sce Corinthian Brass.

Brazier's Company, On the intended address of the, 87.
Bread fruit, 261, 657.

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111.

Bullfight, description of a, 146. Inveterate rage for the
amusement in Spain, and its results, 147.
Buonaparte, Jacopo, work written by, 280.
Buonaparte, Napoleon. See Napoleon.
Burgage tenures and tithes, discord's torches,' 620.
Burgess, Sir Jas. Bland, fate of an Epic poem of, 634.
Burgoyne, General, 481.

Burke, Edmund, and his lament for chivalry, 139. Say-
ing attributed to him, 263.

Burns, Robert, 98. Whom Dr Currie well describes,'

520.

Busby, Thomas, Mus. Doct. (Dr. Plagiary '), 114. Oh
for the flow of Busby,' 115. Parody on a monologue by
him, 55.

Butler, Dr., head master at Harrow (Pomposus):
satiric allusions to, 8, 27.

Byron, Augusta (the poet's sister). See Leigh.
Byron, Augusta Ada (the poet's daughter): paternal
apostrophes to, 157, 167.

Byron, John, Commodore, afterwards Admiral (grand-
father of the poet), incident of the destruction of
his dog, 501. Further references to my grand-dad's '
narrative, 506.

Byron, Lady (the poet's widow, née Milbank): Lines on
hearing that she was ill, 76. Lines on her patronage of
a charity ball, 87.

Byron, Lord: His ancestry, their exploits, &c., 3, 4, 23,
25. [See Biren]. His daughter Allegra, 37. His fond-
ness for the sea, 114. His poetic eulogium on Jeffrey,
574. Autobiographic notes by him, 625, 657. His ani-
mosity against Jeffrey, 630.

Byron, Mrs. (the poet's mother): 'Childe Harold had a
mother,' 140.

Byron Oak, The, 40

"By the rivers of Babylon,' 67.

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Calmar and Orla,' 31. Source of the story, 627.
'Calpe's adverse height,' 100. 'Calpe's rock,' 187.

Calpe's straits, 150.

Calvin saw Servetus blaze,' 105.

'Calypso's Isles,' 151. Geographic note thereon, 639.
Endeared by days gone by,' 47.

Cambridge University: Granta's sluggish shade,' 20.
'Hoary Granta,' 99. Dark asylum of a Vandal race,'
100, 632.

Camilla, simile drawn from the swiftness of, 603.

Camoëns, Stanzas to a lady with the poems of,' 7. Sa-
tirical allusions to his translator, 629, 631.
Campbell, Thomas: Lines entitled Bowles and Camp-
bell, 87. Come forth, oh Campbell,' 98, 631. His 'Hip-

pocrene, 495. Some of his slips of the pen, 667. Iis
triumphant defence of l'ope,' '667.

'Can Grande,' humorous rendering of the name, 134.
Candia, 170.

Candour compels me, Becher, to commend, 21.
Cannæ s carnage,' 163.

Canning, Rt. Hon. George: His colleagues hate him
for his wit,' 100. Poetic tribute to his genius, 135,

136.

Canova, 173. Lines on his bust of Ilelen, 8

Cant, the 'crying sin' of the time, 542.
Cantemir, Demetrius, the Ottoman historian, 540, 544.
Canterbury Cathedral and its relics, 579.

Capo di Bove, stern round tower of other days,' 177,

649.

Caracalla, act of Alexander the Great imitated by,
652, 653.

Caravaggio's gloomier stain,' 598.
Carbonaro cooks,' 135.

Care brings every week his bills in,' 576.
Carlisle, Frederick Howard, fifth Earl of: Dedication of
Hours of Idleness to him, 2. His paralytic puling,'
97. Lord, rhymester, petit-maltre, and pamphleteer,'
98. His champion, Mr. Jerningham, and his threat,
101. His eighteen-penny pamphlet,' and its object,
631. The poet's justification of his satirical allusions to
the Earl, 631.

Carnage is God's daughter,' 558. Origin of the phrase,
668. Satiric comment thereon, 668.
Carnival, origin of the, 472.

Caroline, verses to, 6, 7.

Caroline, Queca, On the Braziers' proposed address to,
87. That injured queen,' 534. The unhappy queen,'

585.

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Cassandra's fate,' 100.

Castalian tea, 529.

Castalie, the dews of, 637.

Castelnau's Histoire de la Nouvelle Russie, Byron's ob-
ligations to, 541.

'Castle Spectre,' Monk Lewis's characteristic reason for
introducing negroes into the, 633.

Castlereagh, Viscount (Robert Stewart, Marquess of
Londonderry), 130. 'Ne'er (enough) lamented,' 135.
Epigrams and epitaph upon him, 87. A wretch
never named but with curses and jeers,' 89. The n-
tellectual eunuch,' 480. A tinkering slave maker,'
450. Ireland's Londonderry's Marquis,' 571. Carotid-
artery-cutting,' 577. Little Castlereagh,' 585. His
suicide, and the inquest on his body, 641.

Catalani, Madame, and her first appearance in panta-
Castri, site of the village of, 637. Its Castalian springs, 641.
loons, 97, 630.

Cathay. See Ceylon.

Catherine of Russia, 135. Instance of her dexterity, 135.
Whom glory still adores,' 549. The Christian Em-
press,' 555. Her boudoir at threescore,' 562. Her
occasional liking for juveniles, 570. Her touch of
sentiment,' 570, 571. Her bearing and personal as-
pect, 571, 572, 573.

Catiline chased by all

the demons, 550.

Cato, to die like, 110. Who lent his lady to his friend,'
542, 667.

Cattle breeding, ancient promoter of, 508.

Catullus, translations from, 4, 5. Imitation from, 5.
Whose old laurels yield to new,' 134. Scarcely has a
decent poem,' 484. Scholar of love, 511.
Caucasus, Mount, Kaff clad in rocks,' 100.
'Cavalier,' a, 562.

Cavalier servente,' 473, 476. A supernumerary slave,'
475. The strange thing some women set a value on,'

571.

Cecilia Metella, tomb of, 649.

Ceres, Venus's coadjutor, 509, 622. She fell with Buona-
parte,' 569.

Cervantes and his too true tale,' 593.

Ceylon, Ind, or far Cathay.' 587.

'Change grows too changeable,' 586.
Charity a saving virtue, 529.

Charity Ball, The, 87.

Charles the First, fate of a tragedy named after, 633.
Charles the royal wittol' of Spain, 144.

Charles V. the Spaniard,' 60.

Charles XII. of Sweden, his obstinacy at Bender, 564.
Charlotte, Princess of Wales, death of: Lines to her
(To a lady weeping), 54. Hark from the abyss,' 183.
The daughter whom the Isles loved well,' 583.

Chase, the English, 598.

Chateaubriand forms new Books of Martyrs,' 137. Equi-
vocal compliment paid to him, 637.

Chatham, William Pitt, first Earl of, 592.
Chaucer and old Ben,' 106.

Chaworth, Mary Anne (afterwards Mrs. Musters):
Fragment, written shortly after the marriage of, 9.
Stanzas to her: viz. To a Lady, 31. Well! thou art
happy,' 43. To a Lady,' 43. On leaving England,' 45.
Cheops, Old Egypt's king.' 496.

Cherries, by who transplanted into Europe, C70.
Chesterfield, Earl of, and his struggle for dramatic free-
dom, 105, 633. His witty query relative to tox-hunt-
ing, 603.

CHILDE HAROLD'S PILGRIMAGE, 138.

CHILDISH RECOLLECTIONS, 26.

Children, the lisp of,' 499. Running restive,' 516.
Like cherubs round an altar-piece,' 516.

Chill and mirk is the nightly blast, 47.

Chillon, Sonnet on, 250. See Prisoner of Chillon.'
Chimari's thunder-hills of fear,' 175.

China's vasty wall,' 143. Its crockery ware metro-
polis,' 580.

Chinese nymph of tears,' 525.

Chivalry and the good old times,' 139.
conqueror's chain, 148.

'Hugg'd &

Christabel of Coleridge, lines from, 70, 656.
Christianity quoted to sauction negro slavery, 670.
Church. See Mother Church.

CHURCHILL'S GRAVE, a fact literally rendered,' 78.
Cicero, Marcus Tullius,Romie's least mortal mind,'
172, 178. His habit of punuing, 632. Illustrative quota-
tions from his life, 649, 649.

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Civilisation: Civilised civilisation's son,' 267. The in-
convenience of, 561. Its great joys,' 562.

Clare, John Fitzgibbon, Earl of: Stanzas to him, 36, 37.
Clarence in his malmsey butt,' 492.

'Clarens, sweet Clarens,' 166, 647.

Clarke, Dr. Edward Daniel, on an incident connected
with the destruction of the Parthenon, 639.
Clarke, Hewson, still striving piteously,' 99. His despi-
cable avocation, 99, 632. Poor Hewson,' 100, 632. His
'quarrel with a bear, 101.

Classics, the drill'd dull lesson,' 175. Consequences of

a too early study thereof, 648.

Claudian's good old man,' 134.

Cleonice and Pausanias, story of, 659.

her eyes, 542. Iler melted pearls,' 613.

Cleopatra on her galley's deck,' 115.

Clitumius, river, 174.

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Actium lost for

Cobbett, William: Epigram on his digging up Tom
Paine's bones, 86. Derisive epithet bestowed by him
on hoarse Fitzgerald,' 628.

Coblentz and the simple pyramid' there. 162.

Cogniac, sweet Naïad of the Phlegethontic rill,' 525. See
Brandy.

Cohen, F. See Palgrave, Sir Francis.

Colbleen, mountain of, 627.

Coleridge, Samuel Taylor: to turgid ode and tumid
stanza dear,' 94, 629. Lines from his Christabel,' 70,
656. Further satirical allusions to him, 479, 487, 495, 520.
Coliseum, present state and former glories of the, 179,
180, 181, 303, 649.

College education recommended, 484. Thoughts sug-
gested by a College Examination,' 20.

Collier's curse, 105, 633.

Collini's love inspiring song,' 97.

Colman, George, 96.

Cologne and its eleven thousand virgins, 578, 669.

Colonna's Cliff,' 156. Its historical and artistic asso-
ciations, 645.

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Cortejo,' 474, 491, 665.

Cottle, Amos and Joseph, 95. The pair of epics,' 629.
Could I remount the river of my years, 79.
Could Love for ever, $5.

Coumourgi, he whose closing scene,' 237. Points in
which he resembled Caligula, 6. 6.
Country and Town, 622.

Coxe, Archdeacon, reviver of Marlborough's fame, 520.
Crabbe, Rev. George, nature's sternest painter, yet the
best,' 99.

'Craning,' in fox-hunting, 603, 669.

Crashaw, Richard, the poet. 518.

Cribb, the pugilist. query of, on the Elgin marbles, 112.
Crime not the child of solitude,' 561.

Critics all are ready made,' 92. Side of literature be-
held by them, 574.

Cromwell, Oliver: The fierce usurper,' 25.

'Sagest of

usurpers,' 176. His pranks,' 520. Polemical con-e-
quence of the tempest which followed his death, €26,
His fortunate day,' 649.

Cruel Cerinthus ! does the fell disease, 4.
Cruscan Quire,' The, 172.

Cumberland, Richard, dramatist and essayist, 96. His
poetic protégé, 632.

Cumberland, William, Duke of, the butcher,' 481.
'Cupid's cup intoxicates apace,' 572.

Curil, Edmund, 95, 629.

Curran, Right Hon. John Philpot, 585. Longbow from
Ireland, 599.

Curric, Dr., biographer of Burns, 520

CORSE OF MINERVA, 111.

Curtis, Sir William, in a kilt,' 137. Harsh lines on him,

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Dandies. See Dandy.

Dandolo, Henry: blind old Dandolo,' 170.

Dandy, a broken, 475. The dynasty of dandies,' 476.
Danes and their drinking,' 669.

Dante Alighieri, 172, 173. Sheltered at Verona, 134
Dante sleeps afar, 173. His love for Florence, and
treatment by its citizens, 278, 279. His carly and last-
ting love for Beatrice, 279. His wife, that fatal she,'
279. Translation of his Francesca da Rimini,' 291.
Hapless in his nuptials,' 513. Where Dante's bones
are laid,' 529. Grim Dante,' 575. The second sen
tence against him, 658. Michael Angelo's esteera
for him, 659. Quotations from his Purgatory, 665
See Francesca of Rimini.''Prophecy of Dante.'
Danton, 481.

DARKNESS, 72.

Darwin's pompous chime,' 99. Neglect of his poems a
proof of returning taste, 631.

Dates, I like to be particular in,' 488.
David, King, danced before the Ark, fd5.
arch minstrel,' 115. His medicine,' 493.
Davies, Scrope Berdmore, Dedication to, 245,

'The mon

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Dear object of defeated care, 49.

Dear, simple girl, those flattering arts, 4.
Death; his unequal hand,' 4. A victory, 79.

A quiet

of the heart,' 79. Stern Death,' 157. The spectre,'
165. The sable smoke,' 179. What is death,' 401.
Shuns the wretch,' 495. All tragedies are finished
by,' 513. Death and the lady,' 513. Deaths escaped
by those who die young, 522. Can this be death?'
532. Death laughs, 568. The sovereign's sovereign,'
575. A thing which makes men weep,' 601. Thou,
dunnest of all duns,' 609. Gaunt gourmand,' 699.
DEATH OF CALMAR AND ORLA, 31. Source of the story,

627.

Deep in my soul that tender secret dwells, 211.
'Dee's rushing tide,' 35, 574, 627.

De Foix, Gaston, 529.

DEFORMED TRANSFORMED, THE; a drama, 456.
Deformity an incentive to ambition, 460,

Delawarr, Geo. John, fifth Earl of ( Euryalus '), 28, 29.
Stanzas to him, 36.

'Delphi's long deserted shrine,' 140. Present occupation
of its site, 637.

Demetrius Poliorcetes; 'was he e'er human only?'

459.

Denman, Thomas, Lord (late Lord Chief Justice), merit
of a translation by, 646.

Dennis, John, the critic, 95, 629. His hatred of operas,
105.

De Pauw, blunders of, relative to English horses and
Spartan men,' 643.

Dervish Tahiri, Byron's faithful Arnaout guide, 639. His
energetic resentment of an insult, 639. His prophecy
of peril, 651. Last tidings heard of him, 656.
Desaix, Napoleon's General, 481.

Despair a smilingness assume,' 158.

will, 196. Spoils longevity,' 501.

De Staël. See Staël.

De Tott, 544.

Stronger than my

DEVIL'S DRIVE, The, an unfinished rhapsody, 58.

Devotion, Byron's notion of, 521.

'Dian's wave-reflected sphere,' 150.

'Difficile est proprie communia dicere,' discussion on

the proper rendering of the passage, 632.

Dinner, dependence of man's happiness on, 600.
Dinner-bell, the tocsin of the soul,' 533.
Dinner's knell, 600.

Diogenes, 135, 161, 551, 582, 613. His trampling on

Plato's pride,' 619, 670.

Dionysius the Younger, Corinth's pedagogue,' 60.
Dirce, the fountain of, and its present use, 641.

Disdar, anecdote of a, 639. Status of a 'Disdar Aga,'

641.

Dives, To; a Fragment,' 50.

Dodona's aged grove,' 153.
DOMESTIC PIECES, 70.

Don, Brig of, 574, 668.

DON JUAN, 479. Ironical Dedication, 479.

Don Quixote,' 'that too true tale,' 573, 608.

Dorotheus of Mitylene, merit of the writings of, 643.

Dorset, Geo. Jno. Fredk., fourth Duke of, Lines to, 8, 9.
Dorset! whose early steps with mine have stray'd, 8.
Dover, satiric anathema on, 578.

Doubtless, sweet girl! the hissing lead, 21.

Drachenfels, 'The Castled Crag of, 162. Its position on
the Rhine, 578, 646.

Drama, the, and modern dramatists, satirical allusion to,
96, 97, 105, 633.

Dramatic unities, Byron's adherence to the, 307, 340,
Drapery Misses,' 583. Elucidation of the phrase,

669.

'Drawcansir,' 103.

DREAM, THE, 74.

Dream of Haidée, 523.

Dream of Sardanapalus, 359.

Drummond, Sir William, characteristic quotation from,

649.

Drury, Rev. Dr. Joseph: Byron's affectionate remem-
brances of him, 27, 626, 648. His anticipations of By-
ron's oratorical powers, 29.

Drury Lane Theatre, Address spoken at the opening of,
54. Parody on Dr. Busby's monologue on the same
occasion, 55.

Dryden, John: careless Dryden,' 92. Great Dryden
poured the tide of song,' 92. Origin of his Satires, 103,
632. Him who drew Achitophel,' 520. Wordsworth's
dictum regarding his verses, 665.

Dubost's pictorial libel on Thomas Hope, and its de-
served fate, 101.

Duff, Mary, my sweet Mary,' 35.

Dying Gladiator, The, 180.

air,' 526. See Gladiators.

E-, Lines to, 3.

E

The ever-dying gladiator's

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On Virgil and Tibullus (translated), 4.

On John Adams, a drunken carrier, 41.

On a Newfoundland Dog, 43.

'My Epitaph,' 48.

For Joseph Blackett,' 49.

For William Pitt, 86.

On Lord Castlereagh, 187.

Equal to Jore that youth must be, 4.

Ere the daughter of Brunswick is cold in her grave, 83.
Eros and Anteros, story of the raising of, 297, 659.

Erse language, classic origin of the, 559.
Erskine, Lord: Strongbow from the Tweed,' 599.
Eternal spirit of the chainless mind! 250.
Etiquette, 'nothing in the world like,' 537.
Etna, 132. Restless Titan,' 557.

Euripides, Translations from the Medea of, 19, 43.
Euthanasia, 52.

Eutropius, eunuch and minister of Arcadius, 480. His
character, 664.

Eve's fig leaf, 127. Eve's slip and Adam's fall,' 568.
Made up millinery,' 606.

Evil and good, the two principles,' 405.

Experience, the usual price of, 494. The chief philoso-
pher,' 609

Eyes, the, 485, 497.

F

Faintness, last mortal birth of Pain,' 84.

Fair Albion, smiling, sees her son depart, 48.

Falconer, the poet, actual spot of the shipwreck of, 645.
Falkland, Lucius Cary, Lord: godlike Falkland,* 25, 626.
Falkland, Charles John, 8th Viscount, 97. His death in
a duel, 631.

Fame, wisdom, love, and power were mine, 65.
Fame, 89, 158, 160, 496, 528, 529, 569, 592, 619.

Famed for contemptuous breach of sacred ties, 59.
Fan, on finding a, 40.

Fancy falls into the yellow leaf,' 521.

'Fans turn into falchions in fair hands,' 482.
Fare thee well! and if for ever, 70.
Farewell! if ever fondest prayer, 41.
Farewell to Malta,' 49.

Farewell to the land where the gloom of my glory, 70.
Farewell to the Muse,' 40.

Farmers and 'gentlemen farmers,' 569.
Fashion, the great world,' 583, 602.

Fate will leave the loftiest star,' 169. Futility of oppo-
sition to, 531. Fate is a good excuse,' 594.
Father of Light! great God of Heaven! 23.

Fauvel, M., depreciatory opinion of the Greeks expressed
by, 641.

'Faux pas,' in England, 605.

Fazzioli, the Venetian, 497. Explanation thereof, 665.
Features, 536. Lord Castlereagh's misuse of the word,

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First love, it stands alone,' 490. Nature's oracle,' 510.
Fitzgerald, Lord Edward, Sonnet on the Repeal of the
Forfeiture of, 85.

Fitzgerald, William Thomas, and his creaking cou-
plets,' 92. Derisive epithet bestowed on him by Cob-
bet, 628.

Fitzscribble's lungs,' 110, 635.

Five per cents., the, those martyred saints,' 585.
Fletcher, William, Byron's faithful valet, my staunch
yeoman,' 141.

Florence:

rence,' 173.

Etrurian Athens,' 173. Ungrateful Flo-

Florence.' See Smith, Mrs. Spencer.
For Orford and for Waldegrave, 83.

Forsyth, Joseph, the Italian tourist: his remarks on the
Coliseum, 649.

Fortune, 133, 160, 176, 476. Fortune a female, 334, 531.
Forty-parson power,' 576, 668.

Fox, Right Hon. Charles James, lines on the death of,
occasioned by an 'illiberal impromptu,' 22.
Fox-hunting to a foreigner, 603. Lord Chesterfield's
humorous query on the sport, 603.

'France got drunk with blood to vomit crime,' 177. 'Re-
taken by a single march,' 133.

FRANCESCA OF RIMINI, 291.

Francis, Sir Philip, 128.

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Genevra, Sonnets to, 58.

"Gentlemen farmers,"-a race worn out quite,' 569.
George the Third, of kings the best,' 115. Burlesque
Apotheosis of-(The Vision of Judgment,') 123–131.
Where is his will?' 585.

George, Prince Regent, afterwards George the Fourth,
115. Between the coffins of Henry VIII. and Charles
I.,' 59. Sonnet to him on the repeal of Lord Edward
Fitzgerald's forfeiture, 85. The despised,' 88. Fourth
of the fools and oppressors call'd "George," 88. Sati-
rical allusions to him, 570, 585. A finished gentleman
from top to toe,' 592.

Georgian beauties, 545, 668.

Germany, how much to thee we owe!' 115. Items of the
debt, 115.

Gesner's Death of Abel,' 392.

Ghosts, 615, 670.

Giaffar, Pacha of Argyro Castro, fate of, 653.
Giant's Grave,' The, 530, 666.

GIAOUR, THE, a fragment of a Turkish Tale, 185.
Source of the story, 195.

Gibbon, Edward, the lord of irony,' 166.
Gibraltar, Calpe's rock,' 183.

Gifford, William, 92. His heavy hand,' 98. Why
slumbers Gifford ?' 98. Arouse thee, Gifford!' 98.
His Baviad and Mæviad, 631.

Giorgione and his portrait of his son and wife and self,'

473.

Gladiator. See Dying Gladiator.
'Glory's stainless victories,' 163.

Its gewgaws,' 178.

What is it?' 557. A great thing,' 558.

'God save the King!' 123, 475, 518, 560.

Godoy, Don Manuel, Prince of Peace, notice of, 637.
Goethe: Dedication of Sardanapalus' to him, 339. His
Mephistopheles, 593.

Gold, Apostrophe to, 586, 587.
Golden Age. See Age of Gold.
Golden Fleece, the, 516.

Gondola, description of a, 473, 662.

Gondoliers, 169. Adria's Gondolier,' 409. See Gondola,

'Good Night,' Lord Maxwell's, 138. Childe Harold's

last good night,' 140.

Good plays are scarce, 50.
Goose, Royal Game of, 590.

Gordons, the, Byron's ancestors, 626.
Goza, Calypso's Island, 639.

Gracchus, Tiberius, and the agrarian law, 668.
Graham's narrative of the kidnapped Vocalists, 666.

Franklin, Benjamin, 133. Stoic Franklin's energetic Grahame, James: 'sepulchral Grahame,' 94. His poeti-
shade,' 134.

Fraser, Mrs. 50.

Frederick the Second, the Great: Fredericks but in
name and falsehood,' 132. Result of a verse of his, 306.
His flight from Molwitz, 558. Romantic incident in
the army of, 658.

"Free to confess "-whence comes this phrase,' 621.
Freedom, apostrophe to, 177.

'Freedom's best and bravest friend,' 519.
'Freedom's chosen station,' 580.

Frere, Rt. Hon. John Hookham: Pronouncing on the
nouns and particles,' 82.

Friend of my youth ! when young tre roved, 26.
Friend, what were humanity without a,' 604.

the task to shield an absent friend,' €23.

Friends: one 's quite enough,' 604.

endship between the two sexes, 607.

'Sweet

[blocks in formation]

Gray, Thomas, line pilfered from Dante by, €65.
Great Britain's coast, 497.

'Great Jove, to whose almighty throne,' 5.

Greece, past and present condition of, 145, 150, 155, 156.
No lightsome land of social mirth,' 107, 111, 153, 157,
186, 239, 269. See Greeks.

Greek sailors and their guitars, 650.

Greek War Song, translation of a, 48. Carcer of its
author, 627.

Greeks only should free Greece,' 123.

Greeks, the modern, and their literature, 641, 642. See
Romaic.

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