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Alexandrian Christians, 52, 112,
171-2; Jews, 266.

Alfred, King, 380.
Aliquid ex nihilo, 368.
All in each, 83 n., 181.

All and the whole, 203, 217.
Allegory, Christian, 278; Dante's,
273.

Allsop, Thomas, his recollections
of S. T. C., 411-74.
Allston, Washington, 51.
Amanda, 378.

American language, 464; naval
discipline, 150; political sensi-
tiveness, 103, 124, 226; war,
104. See United States.

Amiable, the, 386.
Amphibious fish, 370.
Amusement, 436.
Anabaptists, 353.

Anarchy, mental, 132.

Andrewes, Lancelot, 290.
Androgynous, great minds, 201.
Cf. 168, 198, 470.

Angels, 393.

Anima naturaliter Christiana, 42,
404.

Animals, 75, 85-6, 270, 427.
Animal magnetism, 83, 331.
Antinomianism, 203.

Ants, 86.

Apocalypse, the, 338-9.

Apollos and the Epistle to the
Hebrews, 52, 112.

Apostles' Creed, the, 399.
Appearances deceptive, 81.
Appetite and passion, 96, 240, 337.
Apuleius, 318.

Aqua Vitae, 349.

Aquinas, St. Thomas, 380.

Arab poetry (Book of Job), 91,
104.

Arabian Nights, The, 91, 106, 285.
Arabic, 94, 270.

Architecture, 200, 248-9.
Argument, temper in, 386.
Arians, 43, 279, 311, 398-9.
Ariosto, 73.

Aristocracy, 126, 181, 433.
Aristophanes, 103.

Aristotle, 83, 118, 316; and Des-
cartes, 343; and Plato, 118; on
laughter, 273; on memory and
recollection, 368.
Arminianism, 398, 432.
Arminius, 419.

Army, the, 87, 213; French, 126-

7.

Arnauld, Antoine, 98.

Arthurian Romance, 93, 279.
Articles, Thirty-nine, 203, 419.
Arts, the fine, 117, 140. See also
Painting, Sculpture, &c.
Ascension, the, 407.

Asgill, 146, 167, 179, 197, 242.
Association, 376; historical

260.

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Ball, Sir Alexander, 299.
Bankruptcy, national, 413.
Baptism, 98, 196, 289, 399.
Barbauld, Mrs., 106, 461.
Barclay, Robert, 380.
Barnabas, St., 291.

Barnabas, Epistle of, 112, 171, 291.
Barrington, Sir Jonah, 445.

Barrow, Isaac (1630–77), 72, 255,
312.

Bartram's Travels, 61-2.
Basil, St., 73.

Bathurst, Lady Sarah, 454.
Baxter, 432; and the modern
Dissenters, 72 n., 311; his Life,
114, indispensable as Church
history, 72 n. ;
quoted,

389; his veracity, 72.

Beards, 369.

Beaumont and Fletcher, disregard
for fame, 212; Little French
Lawyer, 67, 211; love in

232, 239; Monsieur Thomas,
67; plots, 211; Rollo, 67;
style, 213, 251; text of
212, 296; versification, 212, 295-
6; wit, 67.

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Berengar (Berengarius, d. 1088),
335.

Berkeley, 39, 74, 461.
Bertram, Maturin's, 440.

445;

Bible, 108 n., 113 n., 284; as a
book, 110, 171; authority of,
397, 399; 'Authorized Version',
style of, 68, 115, 181; biblio-
latry, 112, 144, 191, 358, 419;
canon of the Scriptures, 112, 171;
characters: Abraham, Isaac,
and Jacob, 95-6; David, 60,
100, 105 n.; Saul, 52, 55;
Church and the
Coleridge's study of the
51; commentators on, 88, 98-9,
133-4, 246, 338; doctrines of,
192 n., 244; English Reformers
and the
110; inspiration
of the
170, 196, 379;
Luther's translation, 110; mys-
tical interpretations, 105 n., 291;
Purver's translation, 325; and
Science, 360; the statesman's

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text-sparring,

manual, 468;
111, 144, 358; Unitarian inter-
pretations, 55, 308, 397, 431.
Bible, books of the :

Old Testament, 51,76; Mosaic
books, 49, 100, 191, 196; Genesis,
39, 80, 95, 274-5, 285; Ezra,
time of, 105; Nehemiah, time
of, 191; Job, date of, 105; pure
Arab poetry, 91, 104-5; Satan
in
104-5; Psalms, their
authorship, 60;
devotional
character, 105 n., 109; mystical
import, 105 n., 266; translation
of, 105; Proverbs, Ecclesiastes,
authorship, 60; date, 191; lan-
guage of, 59, 191; Prophets, the,
196; Isaiah, 468; language of,
59, 191; rhythm, 262 n.; sub-
limity, 262; Jeremiah, 76;
Daniel, authority, 42, 76; lan-
-guage, 59; Sir Isaac Newton on
134.

New Testament, 172, 246; Sy-
noptic Gospels, 43; St. John's
Gospel, 42-3, 113, 170, 308, 380;
Romans, 245, 262; Ephesians,
102. 246; Colossians, 102; Ti-
mothy, 246; Titus, 246; He-
brews, authorship, 42-3, 52, 112,
172; canonicity, 43, 112; gnosis
in, 112, 172,291; 1 Peter, Leigh-
ton's Commentary on, 379;
1–3 John, 42, 113, 380; Revela-
tion, 134, 338.
Bible, texts commented on:

Genesis i. 49; i. 1, 80; i. 26,
39; ii. 7, 39; Exodus iii. 14, 325;
Joshua iii. 79; 1 Samuel x. 5,
50; xxviii. 54-5; 2 Kings iii.
15, 50; Job xix. 25, 26, 104;
Psalms xxii, 105 n.; cx. 105 n. ;
Ecclesiastes xii. 1, 359; Isaiah
viii. 9, 468; Ezekiel xxxvii. 3,
91; Matthew xxvi. 26, 240;
63, 99, 100, 102; xxvii. 46,
105 n.;
Mark iii. 35, 170;
xiv. 61, 99; xv. 34, 105 n. ;
Luke xvi. 31, 424; John i. 1, 2,
43; ii, 4, 170; v. 39-47, 424;
vi. 97, 98, 431; vi. 60, 98; viii.
58, 83 n.; xv. 28, 55; xix. 11,
98; xix. 34, 42; Acts ii. 1-21,

339; xv. 78; xxviii, 2, 4, 199;
Romans xii. 19, 380; 1 Corin-
thians, viii. 1, 291; x. 4, 240;
xiii. 13, 427; Galatians ii. 78;
Ephesians v. 31-2, 131; Colos-
sians i. 15, 267 n.; 1 Timothy
iii. 2 (Greek), 392; 1 John ii.
22, 243; v. 7, 42.
Billington, Elizabeth (1768-1818),
365.

Biographia Literaria, S. T. C.'s.,
quoted, 23-4, 212 n., 223 n.,
249 n., 295 n.; referred to, 22,
311, 429, 470.
Biography, 97.
Bion, 41.

Bishops and Charles II, 115;
their incomes, 303.
Bitters and tonics, 41, 174.
Black, 178.

Blackstone, 180.

Blackwood's Magazine, 238, 425.
Blank verse, 295, 305.
Blindness, inward, 341.
Blood, circulation of the, 342.
Blumenbach, the physiologist, 59,
84 n.
Blushing, 83.

Body and mind, 435, 458.
Böhme (Behmen), Jacob, 73.
Bolingbroke, 72, 469.

Books and conversation, 455.
Boswell, 256.

Bourrienne, 119.
Bowdlerization, 281.

Bowyer, Headmaster of Christ's
Hospital, 103, 198.
Brandy, 349.

Bridge Street Gang, 422 n.
Brooke, Lord, 311.
Brougham, 430.

Brown, Thomas (1778-1820), 85.
Brown, Tom, 255 n., 312.
Browne, Sir Thomas, 351, 376.
Bruno, Giordano, 336, 342, 345.
Brunonian system, 336.
Buckland, Prof., 56.
Bull, Bishop, 69, 261.
Bulls, 337, 381.
Bunyan, 108, 373.

Grace Abounding, 114.
Pilgrim's Progress, 107-8,
107 n., 108 n., 373, 447.

Buonaparte, Bourrienne on, 119;
and France, 140; Napier on

and small

139;
states, 457; invasion of Spain,
46.

Burdett, Sir Francis, 36, 456.
Burke's conversation, 256; elo-
quence, 242; a great man, 225;
Pitt and Fox, 245; and the
revolutionary spirit, 471; his
statistics, 345; on the Sublime,
73; writes best in a passion, 41.
Burnet, Bishop, 116.
Burns, 249 n., 440.
Butler, Bishop, 85.
Byron and current Christian apolo-
getics, 440; Don Juan, 58; a
fashionable favourite, 282; and
Goethe, 210; his relations with
the Lake poets, 27; self-por-
traiture, 452; versification, 34,
58; and Horace Walpole, 296.

Caen Wood, 64 n., 420.
Calderon, 327.
Callimachus, 281.

Calvin apostrophized, 380; and
Luther, 400; and Servetus,
134, 287; Jeremy Taylor and,
111.
Calvinism and Arminianism, 432;
blasphemous, 427; Bunyan's,
108; and Quakerism, 88, 289;
and Unitarianism, 173.
Cambridge, S. T. C. at, 249, 316,

319; King's College Chapel,
249; University of, 300, 343.
Campbell, 282, 453.
Canada, 183.

Canning, 11, 45, 92, 119, 274-5,
471.

Canonical writings, 42, 112, 171–2,
291.

Cant, religious, 70, 87.
Capitalists, 46, 119, 234.
Cardan (Girolamo Cardano, 1501-
76), 336.

Carey, William, 379.
Carlile, Richard, 422.

Caroline divines, 110 n., 182 n.,
204, 255.

Carolingians, the, 342.
Carte, Thomas, 229.

Castlereagh, Lord, 424, 432.
Catholic Emancipation, 48, 60,
163, 305-6.

Catholicity, 43, 112, 171, 291.
Cato, 450.
Catullus, 182.

Cause and effect, 110, 447.
Cavalier slang, 254-5, 312. See
also Royalists.

Celibacy of the Clergy, 231, 235.
Ceremonies, Religious, 376.
Cerinthus, 335.

Cervantes. See Don Quixote.
Chaldaic, 191.

Chantrey, Sir Francis, 251.
Chapone, Mrs., 386.

Characters, 128, 180, 387, 392.
Charlemagne, 119.

Charles I and his times, 150 n.,
236, 285; execution of, 432;
as a Prince, 247.

Charles II, persecutes Baxter, 432;
and the Church of England, 111,
115; and the Presbyterians,
115; his times, 148, 150 n.
Charlotte, Queen, 454.
Charms, 183.

Chaucer, 247, 294, 348-9, 441.
Chemistry, 85, 201, 248.
Chiabrera, 375.
Childhood, 166, 418.
Chillingworth, William (1602–44),
144.
China, 38.

Choice, faculty of, 362.
Christ and Christology, 42, 55,
76-7, 99-100, 106 n., 267 and n.,
285, 308, 397, 399, 405, 407,
421-2, 431. See also Trinity,
Socinianism, Unitarianism, &c.
Christianity is assurance, 130;
and Christ, 421-2; and Dis-
senters, 165-6; doctrinal con-
tent of, 77, 102, 289; evidences
of, 403; and Gibbon, 263; and
Greek Tragedy, 417;
tellect, and morality, 284;
and Lamb, 421; and mytho-
logy, 278; natural to man, 42,
192 n.; and philosophy, 130;
and prophecy, 76; and Pro-
testantism, 48; and Puritan-
ism, 112; the sacraments are

in-

INDEX

Christianity itself, 289;
and
St. Simonianism, 147; self-
evident, 43; and sin, 407; and
Spinozism, 60; and Jeremy
Taylor, 110 n.; and toleration,
288; and the doctrine of the
Divine Unity, 77; a world-
religion, 398-9.

the

in

Christ's Hospital, 103, 183, 198.
Chrysostom, St., 73, 97, 110.
CHURCH, THE, 167. Church au-
thority, 110 n., 111;
only pure democracy, 97, 126,
165, 228; discipline, 165;
Churches of East and West,
their common creed, 77; and
education, 11; Established
Church, 214, 445;
Ireland, 60, 163, 206; Church
history, 290; idea of the
Church, 126, 144-5; and the
individual, 192; and the Jews,
78; the primitive, 301; before
the Reformation, 313; and
Reunion, 115; and the Sab-
bath, 301-2, 328; and State,
311; unity of the Church, 399.
CHURCH OF ENGLAND, the, 47;

S. T. C. and, 11-12, 86, 86 n.,
139; Charles II or James II
and, 111; a curse upon, 214
(126); disendowment, 11-12;
Dissenters and, 166, 206-7, 311,
469; enemies of, 11, 86, 139,
300, 303, 305-6, 311, 316, 469;
one of its founders, 328; the
National Church, see National;
and the professions, 176, 420;
prospects of, 205; and Pro-
testantism, 206; Puritans and,
115; over-prudent, 126, 214;
and the Reformation, 125;
revenues of, 303; and the royal
prerogative, 125, 205, 302.
Cicero, dialogues, 188; on good-
ness, 426; on Malta, 199; style
of, 182, 318.

Cid, the romances of the, 93.
Circulation of the blood, 342.
Citizenship, 180, 423.

Civil War of Seventeenth Century,
74, 235-6; enduring interest of,
37, 285, 416.

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Clarendon, 239.

479

Clarissa Harlowe. 436.
Clarke, Samuel (1626–1701), 99.
Clarkson, Thomas, 356, 382, 426,
457.

Claude, 141-2.

Claudian, 268, 278, 368.

Clement, St., on the Eucharist, 97,
431.

Clementina (in Sir Charles Grandi-
son), 357.

Clergy, the, celibacy of, 231, 235;
high opinion of, 214 n.-215 n.,
304, 420.

Clerisy', 175, 234, 235.
Clichés, 176.

Cline, bust of, 251.
Clubs, 468.

Cobbett, his manners, 201; his
style, 242, 429; speaks truth
malgre lui, 413; versus 'The
Times', 250.

Cocceius (Johannes Koch, 1603-
69), a Dutch theologian, 88.
COLERIDGE, Derwent (son), 419;
Hartley (son), 419, 429; James
(brother), 190; Mr. Justice J. T.,
(nephew), reminiscences by, 51,
145 n., 314; Sara (daughter),

194.

COLERIDGE, SAMUEL TAYLOR,
affinities with German philo-
sophers, 22-6; churchmanship,
11-12, 86 and n., 139; con-
fession of faith, 405, 419;
conversation, H. N. C. on, 3,
5-10, 257 n.; S. T. C. on his
own, 250, 274; Patmore on,
vii; De Quincey on, 8-9.
Coleridge on himself: apologiae
pro vita sua, 393, 438; and the
Church, 86, 139; his Christianity,
42, 192 n., 422; no horror
of death, 81, 157, 313, 420;
and his feelings, 462-3; and
the French Revolution, 189,
473; early happiness, 425;
experiences of illness, 157-8,
187, 284; not intrusive, 273;
on his Lay Sermons, 425; on
his own life, 393, 438-9, 448;
love for others, 463;
on his
marriage, 439, 465-6; his

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