Reminiscences of Samuel Taylor Coleridge and Robert Southey | Page 4

Joseph Cottle
of his Poems
Mr. Coleridge and Mr. Southey each sells his 1st volume of Poems, for thirty guineas
Mr. Southey sells his Joan of Arc for fifty guineas
Mr. Coleridge begins his lectures in Bristol
Specimen of Mr. C.'s lecture
Liberty's letter to Famine
Mr. C.'s political lectures, &c.
Death of Robert Lovell
Mr. Southey's course of historical lectures
Mr. Coleridge disappoints his audience
Excursion to Tintern Abbey
Dissension between Mr. Coleridge and Mr. Southey
Incidents connected with Mr. Coleridge's volume of Poems
Mr. Coleridge married to Miss Sarah Fricker
Household articles required
Notices of Wm. Gilbert, Ann Yearsley, H. More, and Robert Hall
Mr. Coleridge removes, first to Bristol and then to Stowey
--- --------- again to Bristol
--- --------- woeful letter
Mr. Coleridge's Poems now published
--- --------- projects his "Watchman"
--- --------- seven letters, while on his journey to collect subscribers to the "Watchman"
--- --------- inaugural sermon at Bath
Mr. Lloyd domesticates with Mr. Coleridge
Mr. Coleridge's melancholy letter
Mr. Coleridge's views of Epic Poetry
Quarrel between Mr. Coleridge and Mr. Southey. Reconciled
Mr. Coleridge's letter to Miss Cruikshanks
--- -------- diagram of the second bottle
--- -------- Theological letter
Mr. Coleridge prepares for a second edition of his Poems
Mr. Coleridge's letter to George Catcott
--- -------- on hexameters, &c.
--- -------- Foster-mother's tale (extract)
--- -------- ludicrous interview with a country woman
--- -------- Poem relating to Burns
--- -------- character of Mr. Wordsworth
Herbert Croft and Chatterton (Note)
Coleridge's character of Thelwall
Letters from Charles Lamb
Mr. Coleridge's lines to Joseph Cottle
Sara's lines to the same
Three Sonnets, by Nehemiah Higginbotham
Coleridge, Lloyd, and Lamb, quarrel
Lamb's sarcastic Theses to Mr. Coleridge
Coleridge goes to Shrewsbury on probation
Mr. Coleridge receives an annuity of £150 from the Messrs. Thomas and Josiah Wedgewood
Letters from Mr. Wordsworth,--Lyrical Ballads
Mr. Wordsworth caballed against
Disasters attending a dinner with Mr. Wordsworth
Mr. Coleridge and Mr. Wordsworth depart for Germany
Mr. Coleridge's character of Mr. Southey
Mr. Southey marries Miss Edith Fricker
Three letters of Mr. Southey, from Falmouth and Portugal
Sundry letters from Mr. Southey to Joseph Cottle
George Dyer, and a ludicrous incident
Mr. Southey's rhyming letter from Lisbon
Mr. Churchey, and incidents concerning him
Mr. Southey in danger from an enraged author
Mr. Southey and Wat Tyler
Mr. Foster explains how Wat Tyler came to be published
J. Morgan's ruined circumstances. Mr. S.'s proposal for a subscription
List of Mr. Southey's contributions to the Quarterly
Discovery of first edition of Pilgrim's Progress
Mr. Coleridge's letter on travelling in Germany
Slow sale at first of Mr. Wordsworth's Lyrical Ballads
Mr. Humphrey Davy arrives in Bristol
Dr. Beddoe and the Pneumatic Institution
Mr. Davy's dangerous experiments with the gases
Mr. Coleridge's and Mr. Davy's anecdotes
Mr. Coleridge relates his military adventures
Mr. Coleridge's Epigrams from the German
Character of Coleridge, by Professor Wilson, Mr. Sergeant Talfourd, Dr. Dibdin, Mr. Justice Coleridge, Rev. Archdeacon Hare, Quarterly Review, Rev. C. V. Le Grice
Mr. Coleridge's letter to Mr. Cottle on his return from Malta, 1807
Rev. J. Foster's letter concerning Coleridge
Mr. Coleridge's singular escape from Italy
--- ----------- letter on the Trinity
--- ----------- views of Unitarianism
--- ----------- character of Sir H. Davy
Sir H. Davy's rebuke of an Infidel
Mr. Coleridge's character of Holcroft, the Atheist
Rev. J. Foster's letter respecting his Essay on Doddridge
Mr. Coleridge's letter to Mr. G. Fricker
Mr. De Quincey presents Mr. Coleridge with £300
Mr. Coleridge's letter on Narrative Poems
Reasons why Mr. Coleridge's opium habits should not be concealed
Mr. Coleridge ill in Bath
Mr. Coleridge engages to Lecture in Bristol, 1814. Disappoints his Audience, by an excursion into North Wales
Mr. Coleridge's lines for a transparency at the capture of Buonaparte
Mr. Coleridge's approval of Infant Schools
Mr. Cottle's letter of remonstrance respecting opium
Mr. Coleridge's distressing letters in reply
Mr. Coleridge wishes to be placed in an Asylum
Mr. Southey's letters respecting Mr. Coleridge
Mr. Coleridge's contrivance to cheat the doctor
Mr. Coleridge leaves Bristol for Calne
Letters of Mr. Southey respecting Mr. Coleridge
Letter of Mr. Coleridge from Calne
Mr. Coleridge's letter, requiring the truth to be told of his opium habits, after his death
Mr. Coleridge's letter to his god-son, Kinnaird
Letters from Mr. Southey concerning Mr. Allsop, and the scheme of Pantisocracy, and Mr. Coleridge
Letters from Mr. Southey concerning "Early Recollections"
Letter from Mr. Southey: his Western journey
Letter from Mr. Southey. Melancholy foreboding
Mr. Southey's mental malady
Letter from Mr. Foster, relating to Mr. Southey
Mr. Cottle's letter to Mr. Foster, respecting Mr. Southey
Sixteen letters from Mr. Coleridge to Thomas and Josiah Wedgewood, Esqs.
List of works promised by Mr. Coleridge, but not written
Mr. Coleridge sound in health, in 1800
--- --------- his health undermined by opium soon after
Dr. Carlyon, relating to Mr. Coleridge (Note)
Extracts from Mr. Poole's letters, respecting Mr. Coleridge
Dr. Adam's letter to Mr. Gillman, respecting Mr. Coleridge
Mr. Coleridge domesticates with Mr. Gillman
Letter of Mr. Foster, respecting Mr. Coleridge
Prayer of Mr. Coleridge, 1831
Mr. Coleridge's Epitaph on himself
Mr. Coleridge's monument
APPENDIX.
Character of John Henderson
Controversy of Rowley and Chatterton
The Weary Pilgrim, a Poem
* * * * *
REMINISCENCES.
* * * * *
Ten years ago I published "Recollections of S. T. Coleridge." This work I have revised, and embodied in the present "Reminiscences of S. T. Coleridge, and Robert Southey." My views and motives have been explained in the Introduction.
If some Readers should consider that there are occasional documents introduced into
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