Letters of Edward FitzGerald Volume II Part 39
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Sellar (Professor), his article on Lucretius, ii. 58
Selwyn's Correspondence, i. 196
Seneca, i. 151, 182
Severn, his letters about Keats, ii. 276
Sevigne (Mad. de), ii. 184, 185, 196, 217, 310, 312; FitzGerald's Dictionary of the Dramatis Personae in her letters, 217, 289; Ste.
Beuve's saying of, 244, 249; subject for a picture from, 293
Shakespeare, his Sonnets, i. 14; FitzGerald buys the second and third Folios, 31; Oth.e.l.lo, ii. 251, 252
--(the Cambridge), ii. 47
Sh.e.l.ley, reviewed in the Edinburgh, i. 62; Trelawny's story of his death, ii. 189; disputed reading in, 250; too unsubstantial for FitzGerald, 251
Sheridan's School for Scandal the best comedy in the language, ii. 159
Siddons (Mrs.), ii. 137, 149
Sizewell Gap, ii. 290
Smith (Horace), i. 97
Sonnets, FitzGerald's indifference to, i. 84, 87; ii. 212
Sophocles, the Antigone of, i. 186, 188; FitzGerald's admiration for, ii.
85; his superiority to Euripides, 86, 87; translation of the two OEdipuses, 258, 275, 278, 279, 301, 315, 318, 319, 321; the OEdipus Tyrannus played at Harvard, 316; the Ajax at Cambridge, 339
Sophocles and AEschylus compared, i. 240; ii. 49, 259
Southey, Life of Cowper by, i. 40, 42; his Life and Letters, 256
Southey (Mrs.), Caroline Bowles, i. 97
Spedding (James), at school with FitzGerald, i. 2; living in Lincoln's Inn Fields, 43; reviews Carlyle's French Revolution in the Edinburgh, 73; mentioned, 76, 114, 115, 138, 164, 167, 177, 207, 228, 239, 272, 276; ii.
38, 152, 174; his portrait by Laurence, i. 77; his forehead, 77, 78, 83, 116; his character, 193, 257; ii. 299, 302, 308; Evenings with a Reviewer, i. 241; ii. 25; at Bramford with the Cowells, i. 262; his article on Euphranor, 266; death of his niece, 291; his edition of Bacon, 310, 322; ii. 1, 25, 55; forestalled by Hepworth Dixon, 20; paper on English hexameters, 25; FitzGerald's regret at his life wasted on Bacon, 38, 45, 46; should have edited Shakespeare, 38, 48, 135; his pamphlet on Authors and Publishers, 89; article on Twelfth Night, 103; Carlyle's letter on him, 175; his accident, 298; and death, 301, 303, 305, 307; FitzGerald suggests a collection of his letters, 307, 309; Mrs. Cameron's portrait of him, 338
Spenser, ii. 194
Spinoza, i. 204, 205, 209
Sprenger's Catalogue, i. 342
Spring Rice (Hon. S.), ii. 30, 32
Squirarchy, ii. 19, 20, 22
Squire Letters (the), i. 213, 216-220, 231; ii. 230, 235, 241, 242, 244, 331
Stephen (Leslie), review of Richardson's Novels in the Cornhill, ii. 102; his Hours in a Library, 208, 209; on Crabbe's want of humour, 341
Sterling (John), i. 43
Stobaeus, i. 122, 123
Strawberry Hill, i. 276
Suicide, i. 257
Sumner (Charles), Memoir and Letters of, ii. 243, 247
TACITUS, i. 60; ii. 164, 165
Talma, ii. 75
Tannhauser, ii. 29
Ta.s.sy (Garcin de), i. 324, 325, 327; his edition of the Mantic, 325, 330, 342; ii. 100; his paper on Omar, i. 329, 343, 345
Taste the Feminine of Genius, i. 255; ii. 226
Taylor (Jeremy), i. 34, 35, 42, 44
--(Tom), Diogenes and his Lantern, i. 254
Tenby, i. 338
Tennant (R. J.), at Blackheath, i. 43; candidate for a school at Cambridge, _ib._
Tennyson (A.), a contemporary of FitzGerald's at Cambridge, i. 3; his Mariana, 9; and Lady of Shalott, 10; his new volume, 17; the Dream of Fair Women, 20; fresh poems, 25; at Mirehouse and Ambleside with FitzGerald, 33; ii. 305-307, 310; in London, i. 51, 81; at Leamington, Stratford, and Kenilworth with FitzGerald, 68; preparing for the press, 93, 113; edition of his poems, 1842, 115, 119; undergoing the water cure, 151; staying at Park House, 176, 224; at Carlyle's, 181; In Memoriam, 187, 250, 263, 273; mentioned, 168, 190, 192, 277; new poem, 194; in the Isle of Wight, 207; The Princess, 237, 246, 249, 250, 253, 254; his portrait by Laurence, 242, 243; ii. 346; his opinion of Thackeray's Pendennis, i. 244; in chambers in Lincoln's Inn Fields, 250, 253, 254; his marriage, 263; at Twickenham, 285; goes to the Isle of Wight, 286, 287; King Arthur, 311; his saying of Hafiz, 320; his bust not at first admitted into Trinity College Library, ii. 12; his saying of the Dresden Madonna, 23, 181; FitzGerald regrets that he left Lincolns.h.i.+re, 47; his Maud, 60; at Greyshott Hall, Haslemere, 89; his Death of Lucretius, 89; Locksley Hall, 105; The Holy Grail, 111; his Gareth and Lynette, 143; his saying of Crabbe, 152; of Dante and Goethe, 193; of Milton's similes and his diction, 193; visits FitzGerald at Woodbridge, 202, 204; The Northern Farmer, 206; Ode on the Funeral of the Duke of Wellington, 216; Ballad on Lucknow, 267
Tennyson (Charles), his poems, ii. 259, 264, 294, 297; his death, 264
--(Frederic), his account of Cicero's villa, i. 123; urged to publish his poems, 164, 250, 258, 264; their publication, 285, 289; with FitzGerald at Woodbridge, ii. 55; lives in a World of Spirits, 65; FitzGerald sends him Lowell's Study Windows, 257
Tennyson (Hallam, now Lord), his Song of Brunanburh, ii. 206
--(Septimus), i. 152
Thackeray (Miss), afterwards Mrs. Richmond Ritchie, her story in the Cornhill, ii. 82; her Old Kensington, 140; meets FitzGerald at the Royal Academy Exhibition, 143
--(W. M.), at Cambridge with FitzGerald, i. 2; in Paris, 3, 38; mentioned, 17, 30, 77, 116, 125, 158, 257, 311; ill.u.s.trated Undine for FitzGerald, 29; his Paris Sketch Book, 73; his second Funeral of Napoleon, 79; his Irish Sketch Book, 141; contributes to Punch, 163; goes to the East, 177; at Malta, 181; writes in Fraser's Magazine, 193; Journal from Cornhill to Grand Cairo, 202; Mrs. Perkins's Ball, 214; Vanity Fair, 238, 244; ii. 53; Pendennis, i. 244, 250, 255; ii. 51-53; his illness, i. 250; Lectures on the Humourists, 272; Esmond, 275, 276; goes to America, 279; letter of farewell to FitzGerald, 280; The Newcomes, 288; ii. 50, 51; Lectures on the Georges, i. 317; edits the Cornhill Magazine, ii. 13; his death, 50, etc.; his Roundabout Papers, 127; describes Humanity in its depths, 135, 190; his saying of Lamb, 198, 243; his song, 'Ho, Pretty Page,' set to music by FitzGerald, 207, 213
Thirlwall (Bishop), i. 73; his Letters, ii. 328
Thompson (W. H.), at Cambridge with FitzGerald, i. 2, 79; at the water cure, 264; his letters, ii. 37; appointed Master of Trinity, 73, 74; his marriage, 81, 88; his edition of Plato's Gorgias, 123-126
Tichborne Trial (the), ii. 134, 135, 159, 170
Letters of Edward FitzGerald Volume II Part 39
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