224; establishes the London Journal, iii. 226; Legend of Florence performed, iii. 246; latest productions, The Pal- frey, Jar of Honey, Imagina- tion and Fancy, Wit and Hu- mour, Stories from the Italian Poets, iii. 267; and other dra- matic writings in MS. iii. 257,et seq.; attachment to the Queen, iii. 262; removal to Kensing- ton, iii. 266; illness, iii. 267; habits of reading, &c. iii. 271; opinions concerning the lau- reateship, iii. 275; tributes to the Queen, iii. 279; avowals of opinion, iii. 276, et seq. Hunt, Mrs. Leigh, i. 312; ii. 145, 151, 265, 289; iii. 12, 13, 25 Hunt, Mary, the Author's mother, her public spirit and private tenderness and sensibility, i. 29, et seq.; conduct during a storm at sea, 30; to a beggar, 33; to an unvisited acquain- tance and an unfortunate ser- vant, 35; her horror of war, 69 Hunt, Robert, i. 19, 36, 214 Hunter, Rowland, ii. 36 Idealisms familiarized, iii. 185 ITALY-Voyage to, ii. 231, et seq.; arrival in, ii. 304; Genoa, ii. 73; adventure in, iii. 7; Leghorn, iii. 11; Italian man- ners, iii. 13; Pisa, iii. 25; Italian houses, iii. 28; Leaning Tower of Pisa, iii. 30; Bap- tistery, iii. 34; Campo Santo, iii. 37; Cathedral of Pisa, iii. 35; air of Pisa, iii. 45; its inhabitants, iii. 48; their pro- nunciation, 50; aspect of Pisa, 51; camels at, 51; Lerici, 54; Genoa, 57-68, et seq.; Genoese dialect, 93, et seq.; Florence, iii. 100; Church of Santa Croce, 101; Maiano, 102, et seq.; Italian landscape, 120;
Tuscan censorship, 122; Venus de' Medici, 126-130, et seq. ; Florentine gallery, 127; its busts of Roman emperors, 136; finger of Galileo, 138; insects of Italy, 139, et seq.; trees of Italy, 143; women of Italy, 147; deterioration of Italian character, 150; minestra, or maccaroni, 158; the Vetturino, 162; a sceptical postilion, 166; Modena, 168; Parma, and other Italian towns, 170; Turin, 171; the Alps at sun- rise, 174
James, G. P. R. iii. 271 Jenny Lind, i. 236 Jerrold, Douglas*
Jews and their synagogue, i. 172 Johnson, iii. 63
Jonson, Ben, i. 307 Jordan, Mrs. i. 244 June, verses on, iii. 182 Kean, Edmund, i. 285 Kean, Mrs. Charles, iii. 247 Kearsley, i. 9
Keats, John, ii. 201 Kelly, Michael, i. 227 Kemble, Charles, i. 244
Kemble, John, i. 243, 251, 285, 292 Killigrews, the, ii. 267 Kinnaird, ii. 36, 42 Kirkup, iii. 108, 139 Knight, Charles, iii. 214 Knighton, Sir William, ii. 153 Knowles, Sheridan, i. 72 Lablache, i. 235
Lamb, Charles, i. 94, 127, 174; ii. 217, et seq.; iii. 219 Lamennais, iii. 272 Lanfranchi, Archbishop of Pisa, iii. 30
Le Grice, Samuel, i. 125; Charles Valentine, i. 129
Leigh, Mr. i. 15, 38; Lord, ib. 41 Leslie, Lord, ii. 156
Lewis the comedian, i. 240 Liberal, the, iii. 58, et seq.
*Owing to an accident of haste at the moment, the following remark was omitted after the words "to ruin him," in vol. iii. p. 256. "I know not, it is true, how far a manager might not rather have invited than feared a dramatist of so long a stand- ing, and of such great popularity, as Douglas Jerrold; but it is to be doubted whether ven Douglas Jerrold, with all his popularity, and all his wit to boot, would have und the doors of a theatre opened to him with so much facility, had he not been a fournalist, and one of the leaders in Punch.
Liston, i. 242
Liverpool, Farl of, ii. 75
Llwyd, i. 205
Medina Sidonia, Duke of, ii. 267 Mediterranean Sea, its crowd of grand memories, ii. 286 Melbourne, Lord, iii. 261 Melodies, popular Italian, mis- taken for English, i. 74 Memmi, Simon, iii. 40 Mendelssohn, iii. 273
Metaphysics, hypochondriacal, i. 297
Mill, John, iii. 240 Millin, iii. 91
Milnes, Monckton, ii. 202 Milton, ii. 166, 209, 282 Mitchell, Thomas, i. 178; ii. 152 Monthly Repository, iii. 227, 240 Moore, Thomas, ii. 148, 308; character of, 311; his letters to Leigh Hunt, iii. 287 Morgan, Lady, iii. 48 Moschus, ii. 261
Morton, i. 288
Mowatt, Mrs. iii. 247 Munden, i. 238
Naldi, i. 235
Napoleon, ii. 7, 11, 49, et seq.
Newman, Francis Wm. iii. 272 News, the, 280, 283
North, Christopher, ii. 214; iii. 247
Nurse, who killed children, i. 53 O'Keeffe, i. 287 Orgagna, iii. 45 Orger, Mrs. iii. 247 Ovid, ii. 261
Owen (Pugh), i. 206 Owen, Robert, iii. 272
Paine, Thomas, i. 29
Painters, early Italian, iii. 40 Paganini, account of, and verses on, iii. 239
Paris, its impression on a lover of books, iii. 176
Parisot, Mme. i. 236
Parker, Theodore, iii. 272 Pasta, i. 233
Pastorini, Giambattista, iii. 91 Perry, James, ii. 68 Petrarch, ii. 297 Pignotti, iii. 38 Piozzi, Mrs. ii. 89 Pitman, ii. 152
Pitt, William, i. 84; ii. 45, 54 Pittites, ministry of, ii. 45 Pius the Ninth, iii. 161, 283 Playgoing, i. 247 Priestley, iii. 273
Prince Regent, see George IV. Punishment, eternal, impiety of that doctrine, i. 22, 64, 71; iii. 281
Queen Victoria, i. 95; ii. 55; iii. 144, 262, et seq.; 274-78, et seq.; 77, et seq.; 110, 116, 130 Ramsay, Allan, ii. 19
*Owing to the omission of a letter to a public journal, which I feared might seem ill-timed and superfluous, the present work does not contain, as I intended it should, a passage in which I had expressed my opinion of the great qualities of this patriot. I therefore insert it here, till occasion may enable me to incorporate it with the text. I differ with Mazzini, inasmuch as I prefer a limited monarchy to a republic without one; and I am for doing all things with the pen, and none with the sword; yet I consider him one of the ablest and noblest of men. His writings first gave me this impression, and everything related of him by those who knew him, confirmed it. I look upon him as one who dies daily' for the sake of principle, and I devoutly wish he may not become a martyr to it."
Redi, account of, and passages from his Bacchus in Tuscany, iii. 109
Reflector, the, ii. 83, et seq. Remoteness in nearness, iii. 224 Reynolds, Frederick, i. 289 Reynell, i. 19; Mrs. ib. Robinson, Mrs. ii. 86 Rochester, ii. 262
Rogers, Samuel, ii. 171, 269 Rousseau and Madame de Wa- rens, ii. 315; iii. 175 Rubini, i. 235
Russell, Lord John, i. 190; ii.
77, 110, 138; iii. 271 Sailors, portraits of various, ii. 242 Scott, Sir Walter, ii. 92, 101, 213 Sea, poets on the, ii. 282 Sea-voyages, opinions respecting, ii. 237, 260, et seq. Severn, Joseph, ii. 211 Shakspeare, ii. 282, 283 Shelley, ii. 32, 154; his charac- ter, 164, 179 et seq.; his generosity, 195; adventure at Hampstead, 198; iii. 12, 14; his person and tastes, 19 et seq.; his letters to the Author, iii. 307
Shelley, Mrs. ii. 189; iii. 57. Sheridan, Thomas, i. 11; Richd. Brinsley, ii. 121
Ships at sea, their discomfort, ii. 235; their mode of hailing one another, 293 Siddons, Mrs. i. 243
Swinburne, Sir John, ii. 153
Talfourd, Mr. Justice, iii. 265 Thackeray, iii. 271 Thomson, iii. 133
Thornton, Bonnell, i. 257 Thornton, Godfrey, i. 147; and his family, 154 Titian, iii. 45
Tramezzani, i. 235
Tree, Miss Ellen (Mrs. C. Kean), iii. 247
Trelawney, iii. 6
Trinder, Dr. i. 44, et seq. Tuscan government versus English magazine, iii. 122 Universities, the bad and good of, i. 193 Vaccà, iii. 13
Van de Weyer, M. iii. 216 Vaughan, Robert, iii. 273 Venus de' Medici, iii. 127, 130 Vestris, i. 236
Vestris, Madame, iii. 247 Vincent, i. 141 Virgil, ii. 260
Vitellius, iii. 137
Voltaire, i. 261, et seq. Volunteers, St. James's, i. 220 Wales, William, i. 104 Walton, Izaak, i. 48
War, Voltaire on, i. 271; break- fast sympathies on the miseries of, ii. 9
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