fc»i^ fyxmll WLnmxmty ptog Ijnglidh Collection THE GIFT OF lames morgan Hart * M*3 3-+ xllff/f/or- uornen university Library Z8227.8 .M26 Thomas De Quincey a bibliography based olin 3 1924 029 637 570 A Cornell University 9 Library The original of this book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://archive.org/details/cu31924029637570 De Quincey Biblio^rapRy. De Quincey Bibliography. The " Bibliography " contains, besides the titles of works already in the Collection, a number of desiderata. The Chief Libra- rian would be glad to have an opportunity of adding to the Collection the items bear- ing the following numbers in the " Biblio- graphy." Nos. 7B, 52, 62, 76 vol. 1, 231, 268, 272, 273, 274, 275, 299, 357, 360, 362, 364, 366, 373. 379, 392, 408, 4!0, 4". 412, 413, 4 J 4» 416, 417, 420, 422, 424, 429, 431, 433, 435, 435A, 436, 437, 438 (vols. 1, 2, 3), 439, 439A, 440, 443, 465, 469, 47o, 473, 480, 481, 489, 491, 498, 502, 507, 511, 513, 514, 523, 525, 530, 533, 534, 535, 537, 538, 539, 541, 553, 554, 557, 562, 566, 575, 580A, 583, 599, 628, 629, 630, 631, 639, 640, 641, 642, 644, 647, 652A, 671, 673, 674, 700, 710, 732, 734, 75o, 778, 786. Perhaps lovers of De Quincey into whose hands the " Bibliography " may fall, will help to complete the De Quincey Collection by presenting these items ? Reference Library, Manchester. MANCHESTER. PUBLIC FREE LIBRARIES, <6- "* lIioma5 0^ Quincey. A BIBLIOGRAPHY BASED UPON THE DE QUINCEY COLLECTION IN THE MOSS SIDE LIBRARY. >? Compiled by J. A. GREEN. "*>? MANCHESTER : Free Reference Library, King Street. Moss Side Library, Bradshaw Street. igo8. ZD CONTENTS. Page. Preface ... v. De Quincey Bibliography. — I. — Bibliography i II. — Chronological list 2 III. — Collected works ... 2 4 IV. — Autographs and Manuscripts ... 42 V. — Editions of " Confessions of AN English Opium Eater" ... 44 VI. — Smaller collections ... 50 VII. — Selections ... 5<5 VIII. — Biography and criticism ... 58 IX. — Scrap books ... 92 X. — Portraits ... 96 Index ... 99 PREFACE. "TTTHEN the Moss Side Public Library was * " founded it was intended that, in addition to a good general collection of books, it should contain several special collections. Two of those consequently formed— namely the Mrs. Gaskell and the Thomas De Quincey collections — are now of more than local importance. The connection of Thomas De Quincey's family with the district in which the Library stands was most intimate. De Quincey has himself told his early memories of " Greenhay," the house built by his father in 1791. Earlier references to the district occur in letters headed "The Farm, Moss Side." The present bibliography includes all the De Quincey items in the Moss Side collection, and refers also to a considerable number which are not, at present, in the collection, but which would be acceptable additions to it. The De Quincey collection, which now contains 405 items and includes several rare issues, owes much to the scholarly zeal of Mr. W. E. A. Axon, the first chairman of the Moss Side Public Library Committee. The daughters and granddaughters of Thomas De Quincey have shown a generous interest in the col- lection by presenting to it a portrait and an auto- graph of a portion of the Sphinx's Riddle. The late Dr. R. C. Christie presented a characteristic autograph letter and a copy of the pamphlet on the Convention of Cintra, with a correction in the hand- writing of Wordsworth. The collection contains copies of the first five editions of the Confessions of an English Opium-eater, and twenty-five reprints by various editors, including the rare French trans- lations by Baudelaire and De Musset, and the German translation by L. Ottmann. There is also a fine copy of Walladmor, which was formerly in the possession of the Rev. C. L. Dodgson (" Lewis Carroll "). Five sets of De Quincey's works, includ- ing sixteen volumes of the first American edition, contain practically all of his published writings. One of the sets recently acquired is the American edition, revised and published about 1877, in twelve volumes, with an introduction and a very full index. Complete as this edition is, another volume or two could be made up from newly-discovered papers indicated in this bibliography. In addition there are many biographies, criticisms, and magazine articles. An interesting addition to the collection is a framed photograph of the "Prince's Tavern," which was demolished a few years since. This tavern was known traditionally, though, perhaps, erroneously, as the birthplace of Thomas De Quincey. The photograph was presented by the Scottish Amicable Life Assurance Society, whose offices occupy the site, at the corner of Albert Square, Manchester, where the tavern formerly stood. The latest acquisition is the fine bust of De Quincey, presented by the artist, Mr. John Cassidy. Owing to the amalgamation of the district of Moss Side with the City of Manchester, the Library and its collections now form a part of the system of Libraries under the control of the Free Libraries Committee. J. Albert Green. November, igo8. otra §t ($mnag. I.-BIBLIOGRAPHY. i. Bohn (H. G.) ed. Lowndes' Bibliographer's manual of English literature. London : 1864. 4 vols. 8vo. Article, Quincey (T. De), vol. 3, O-S., pp. 2026-9. 2. British Museum Catalogue (a) 1886 and (A) 1902, 3. Masson (D.) Appendix to vol. 14. Works of De Quincey, 1890. pp. 373-90. 4. Green (J. A.) MS. List of the De Quincey Collec- tion in the Moss Side Public Library, 1898. 5. Axon (W. E. A.) The De Quincey Collection at Moss Side. A paper reprinted from The Library Association Record, August, 1900. II.— CHRONOLOGICAL LIST. 6. The Juvenile Library. London 1800 7. Translation from Horace, Ode 22. Lib. I., by Thomas Quincey, aged 15, vol. I, 1800. PP- 349-350. In addition to this first appearance in print of De Quincey, there are others by Leigh Hunt, Dr. George Ormerod, T. L. Peacock, W. J". Fox, and Henry Kirke White. 7A. Concerning the relations of Great Britain, Spain, andPortugal . . as affected by the Con- vention of Cintra. . . By William Wordsworth. . . London : 1809. 8vo. pp. vi. 216. This pamphlet was seen through the press by De Quincey who added a postscript. The Moss Side copy contains an allegorical bookplate, and a correction pro- bably written by Wordsworth, p. 109. 7B. Close comments upon a straggling speech. Kendal: Airey and Bellingham, Printers, 1818. 8vo. pp. 16. A copy of this rare tract, fading with age, is pre- served in the Bibliotheca Jacksoniana at Tullie House, Carlisle— possibly the only copy in existence. Its discovery is due to Mr. W. E. A. Axon, who found a reference to it in Crabb Robinson's Diary. 8. Westmorland Gazette r 1819 9. Danish origin of the Lake-country dialect. November 13th, December 4th and 18th, 1819, and January 8th, 1820. These and other articles by De Quincey, are reprinted in the pamphlet by Mr. Charles Pollitt : "DeQuincey's Editorship of the Westmorland Gazette, 1890" g.v. io. London Magazine. Vol. 4 1821 1 1. Confessions of an English opium-eater, pp. 293-3I2; 353-379- The first and briefer version, afterwards absorbed into the enlarged edition of 1856 ; also issued separately in 1822. 12. Letter in reply to James Montgomery, pp. S84-6. 13. John Paul Frederick Richter, pp. 606-612. 14. Analects from Richter, pp. 613-620, viz. : — (1) The Happy life of a parish priest in Sweden ; (2) Last will and testament, the House of Weeping. 15. Confessions of an English opium-eater... 1822 London : printed for Taylor and Hessey, Fleet Street. 8vo. pp. vi. 206. This volume consists of the two parts of the " Con- fessions" already published in the "London Magazine" and an Appendix, pp. 187-206, dated Sept. 30th, 1822. For description of successive editions see Section V. 16. London Magazine. Vol.6 1822 17. Confessions of an English opium-eater, Appendix, December, pp. 512-17. This article was prefaced by a note frorn the publishers in which they express their regret at being unable to furnish a Third Part of the *' Confessions " as had been previously announced. The Appendix was here reprinted for the benefit of subscribers to the London Magazine without having to purchase the separate little volume which was already before the public. 18. London Magazine. Vol. 7 1823 19. Letters to a young man whose education has been neglected, pp. 84-90; 189-194; No. III.: On languages, pp. 325-335; 556. 20. Anecdotage, No. I.: Miss Hawkins's Anec dotes, pp. 261-264. 21. Death of a German great man [Herder] PP- 373-3 80 - 22. Mr. Schnackenberger ; or, two masters foi one dog. [From the German], pp. 493-5°5 646-659. 23. London Magazine. Vol. 8 ..182; 24. Letters to a young man whose educatior has been neglected. No. V. : OntheEnglisl notices of Kant, pp. 87-95. 25. The Dice [from the German], pp. 117-131. 26. Notes from the pocket-book of a late opium eater : — No. I., Walking Stewart, pp. 253-260. No. II , Malthus, pp. 349-353 ; On the knocking a the gate in Macbeth, pp. 353-356. No. III., English dictionaries, pp. 493*496 ; Reforma does, p. 496 ; Proverbs, pp. 496-7 ; Antagonism, p. 497 To the Lakers, pp. 497-8 ; On suicide, pp. 498-501. 27. The King of Hayti [from the German pp. 517-529. 28. Letter in reply to William Hazlitt on Mai thus, pp. 5<59-573- 29. Malthus on the measure of value, pp. 586-E 30. Popular tales and romances of the norther nations. In three volumes. London ...182 31. The fatal marksman [translation from th German], vol. 3, pp. 141-198. This story is from the German of Johann Augui Apel. The original first appeared in the first volume c the Gespensterbuchi a book of ghost stories, published at Leipzig in 1S10-14, under the title " Der Freischutz." About a year before the appearance of De Quincey's translation, the story was made famous by being used for the libretto of Weber's renowned opera. 32. London Magazine. Vol 9 1824 33. Historico-critical inquiry into the origin of the Rosicrucians and Free-masons, pp. 5-13 ; 140-15 1 ; 256-261; 652-662. Digested from a German work on the subject by Professor J. G. Buhle. 34. Analects from Richter, continued, pp. 1 17* 121, viz. : — (3) Complaint of the bird in a darkened cage ; (4) On the death of young children ; (5) The prophetic dew- drops ; (6) On death ; (7) Imagination untamed by the coarser realities of life ; (8) Satirical notice of reviewers ; (9) Female tongues; (10) Forgiveness; (n) Nameless heroes ; (12) The grandeur of man in his littleness ; (13) Night ; (14) The stars ; (15) Martyrdom ; (16) The quarrels of friends ; (17) Dreaming; (18) Two divisions of philosophic minds; (19) Dignity of man in self- sacrifice; (20) Fancy; (21) Innate feeling and acquisi- tion; (22) Use of opposites ; (23) Deafness. 35. Dream upon the universe [from Richter], pp. 242-244. 36. The services of Mr. Ricardo to the science of political economy, pp. 308-10. 37. Dialogues of three Templars on political economy : — Advertisement, pp. 341-2 ; Preliminary dialogue, pp. 342-7; and Dialogues I., pp. 347-355; II., pp. 427-8 ; III., IV., V., and VI., pp. 547-566. 38. Kant on national character in relation to the sense of the sublime and beautiful, pp. 381-388. 39- Education of boys in large numbers, pp. 410-16; 503-13. 40. Kant's Abstract of Swedenborgianism, pp- 489-92. 41. Notes from the pocket book of a late opium- eater, continued, viz. : — No. IV., False distinctions, pp. 642-5; Madness, p. 645 ; English physiology, p. 646. 42. London Magazine. Vol. 10 1824 43. Notes from the pocket book of a late opium- eater, continued, viz. : — No. V., Superficial knowledge, pp. 25-7; Manuscripts of Melmoth, p. 28 ; Scriptural allusion explained, p. 28. No. VI., Falsification of the history of England, pp. 625-632 ; Falsification of English history by Hume, p. 632. 44. Goethe as reflected in his novel of Wilhelm Meister, pp. 189-197; 291-307. 45. Walladmor, Sir W. Scott's German novel, review, p. 353 ; analysis of the story, p. 357 ; general character of the work, pp. 380-2. 46. Kant's Idea of a universal history on a cosmo-political plan, pp. 385-393. 47. Knight's Quarterly Magazine. London... 1824 48. "The Incognito"; or, Count Fitz-Hum [from the German], vol. 3, 1824, pp. 153-56. 49. London Magazine. New series. Vol. 1. January 1825 50. The Street companion ; or, the young man's guide and the old man's comfort in the choice of shoes. By the Rev. Tom Foggy Dribble. This amusing skit upon the Rev. Thomas Frognall Dibdin appears to have eluded tbe research of De Quin- cey 's various editors. Its authenticity has been estab- lished_ by Mr. W. E. A. Axon, who makes a reference to it in his article on De Quincey in The Bookman for February, 1907. 51. Knight's Quarterly Magazine. London. .1825 52. "The Love-charm" [from the German of Tieck]. 1825. In the autumn of the year 1825, Charles Knight attempted to revive the Quarterly Magazine, but owing to the Panic, only one number appeared. To this solitary number De Quincey contributed "The Love- charm," a translation from Tieck with a notice of the author. The tale was not reprinted in the Collected Works (1853-59), though it was in Knight's opinion " perhaps the most interesting of his translations from the German." It was reprinted for the first time by Mr. James Hogg in 1800, and also by Professor Masson in the same year. The single and last number of Knight's Quarterly Magazine is now very rare. 53. Walladmor : " freely translated into German from the English of Sir Walter Scott," and now freely translated from the German into English. London, 1825. 8vo. 2 vols.... 1825 The German original from which this is * freely trans- lated" (or rather entirely re-written) was by G. W. H. Hiring. De Quincey's account of the genesis of this novel appears at pp. 132-145 (Works, vol. 14), with sup- plementary notes by Professor Masson . 8 54- Blackwood's Magazine 1826-7 55. Lessing : with a translation from his " Lao- coon." Nov., 1826, pp. 728-744; Jan., 1827, pp. 9-24. 56. Kant [prefatory to the next item], pp. 133-4. 57. The last days of Immanuel Kant, from the German. Feb., 1827, pp. 135-158. 58. On Murder considered as one of the fine arts. Feb., 1827, pp. 199-213. [See also No. 118.] 59. Blackwood's Magazine 1828 60. Toilette of the Hebrew lady, exhibited in six scenes [a digest from the German] March, 1828, pp. 295-308. 61. Rhetoric. [Rev. of Whately's "Elements of Rhetoric."] Dec, 1828, pp. 885-908. 62. Edinburgh Literary Gazette 1829 63. Sketch of Professor Wilson [In a letter to an American gentleman]. June 6, 20, and July n. Sixty-one numbers of The Edinburgh Literary Gazette appeared between May 16th, 1829, and July loth, 1830. Mr. James Hogg states that as the paper had become so scarce the American publishers of De Quincey's works photographed their " copy " from that contained in the Advocates' Library, Edinburgh. There is also a rile in the British Museum. No other contribution from De Quincey's pen has been authen- ticated 64- Blackwood's Magazine 1830 65. Kant in his Miscellaneous essays, Aug. 1830, pp. 244-268. 66. Richard Bentley. September, pp. 437-463 ; October, 644-673. 67. Blackwood's Magazine 1831 68. Dr. Parr and his contemporaries, vol. 29, pp.61, 376, 763,901. 69. Klosterheim ; or, the masque 1832 By the English Opium-eater. Edinburgh : W. Blackwood, 1832. 8vo. pp. 305 Another edition, with a biographical preface by R. S. Mackenzie, was issued at Boston in 1855. 70. Blackwood's Magazine 1832 71. The Caesars [Introduction, Julius Caesar, and Augustus] ; I. October, pp. 551-612; II., December, pp. 949-955. 72. James's History of Charlemagne, November, pp. 786-80. 73. Blackwood's Magazine 1833 74. The Caesars, III. — Caligula, Claudius, and Nero, January, pp. 43-60. 75. Revolution of Greece, and Supplement on the Suliotes. April, pp. 476-502. 76. The Gallery of Portraits. London 1833 77. Lite of Milton, vol. 1, pp. 43-S4. This article was afterwards reprinted in several publications issued by Charles Knight, such as " Dis- tinguished men of modern times"; "Portrait gallery of British worthies," etc. 78. Tait's Magazine 1833 79. Kant On the age of the earth, November, pp. 165-179. 80. Recollections of Hannah More, December, PP- 293-321. 8 1 . Tait's Magazine. Vol. 4, Jan 1834 82. Animal magnetism, pp. 456-474. This article has escaped the research of De Quincey students until recently. Mr. W. E. A. Axon mentions it in The Bookman for February, 1007. He found an editorial reference in Tait's Magazi?ie for 1838, p. 460, as follows : " It will -save many of our readers a world of trouble, if, at the outset of this paper, we recall to their recollection an article on Animal Magnetism, which appeared in a former number of this Magazine [January, 1834], from the able, and^ on this subject— at once psychological and physiological — the congenial pen of Mr. De Quincey." 83. Tait's Magazine. New series. Vol. 1 (Feb.- Dec.) 1834 84. Sketches of life and manners : from the Autobiography of an English opium-eater, pp. 18-30; 83-96; 196-204; 263-273; 482- 487; 797-802. 85. Samuel Taylor Coleridge, pp. 509-520 ; 588- 596; 685-690. 86. Blackwood's Magazine 1834 87 The Caesars [The patriot emperors, IV.], June, pp. 961-981. 88. The Csesars [Chap. V.], July, pp. 67-81 ; and VI., conclusion, pp. 173-189. 89. Tait's Magazine. N. S., vol. 2 1835 90. Samuel Taylor Coleridge [concluding ar- ticle], pp. 3-10. 91. Sketches of life and manners : from the Autobiography of an English opium-eater. Concluding articles : Oxford, pp. 77-83 ; 366-377 ; 541-55°. 92. A Tory's account of Toryism, Whiggism and Radicalism, pp 769-776. 93. Encyclopaedia Britannica. Ed. by Professor Napier. Part LVIII. Edinburgh : 31st January 1835 94. Goethe (J. Wolfgang von), pp. 596-603. 95. Tait's Magazine. Vol. 3 1836 96. A Tory's account of Toryism, Whiggism and Radicalism [concluding article], pp. 1-10. 97. Autobiography of an English opium-eater, PP- 3S -36o. On the German language and the philosophy of Kant. Continuation of the "Sketches of life and manners." 98. Tait's Magazine. Vol. 4 1837 99. Autobiography of an English opium-eater : literary connexions or acquaintances. Deals with a Manchester Swedenborgian (the Rev. John Clowes), and a Liverpool literary coterie pp. °5"73 » ana Sir Humphry Davy ; Mr. Godwin ; Coleridge ; Mrs. Grant of Laggan, pp. 169-176. An angry letter from Dr. Shepherd in reference to De Quincey's remarks is dealt with by the Editor, pp. 337- 340. 12 ioo. Blackwood's Magazine 1837 101. Revolt of the Tartars ; or, flight of the Kalmuck Khan and his people from the Russian territories to the frontiers of China, July, pp. 89-115. 102. Encyclopaedia Britannica 1837-8 Parts CIV. and CV. Edinburgh: 1st Dec, 1837, and 1st Jan., 1838. 103. Pope (Alexander), pp. 391-404. 104. Blackwood's Magazine 1838 105. The Household wreck [a tale], Jan., 1838, pp. 1-32. 106. The Avenger [a tale], pp. 208-233. 107. Encyclopaedia Britannica. Edinburgh. ..1838 108. Schiller (J. C. F. von). Vol. XIX., part II., pp. 680-685. 109. Shakspeare. Vol. XX., part I., pp. 169- 188. no. Tait's Magazine. Vol. 5 1838 in. Sketches of life and manners: from the Autobiography of an English opium-eater. My brother Pink, pp. 152-163 ; Recollections of Charles Lamb, pp. 237-247 ; 355-366. 112. Walladmor [a pseudo-Waverley novel], PP- 5S9-563- 113. A brief appraisal of the Greek literature in its toremost pretensions [first article], pp. 763-77S- ii4- Blackwood's Magazine 1839 1 15. The English language, April, pp. 455-462. 1 16. On Hume's argument against miracles [as subjects of testimony], July, pp. 91-99. 117. Casuistry [first part], Oct., pp. 455-466. 118. On murder considered as one of the fine arts [second paper], November, pp. 661-668. 119. On the true relations to civilisation and barbarism of the Roman Western Empire, November, pp. 644-653. This paper is printed by Masson with the title "Philosophy of Roman meals," Works, vi. pp. 429- 447 ; it was not reprinted by De Quincey in his edition of his collected writings. 120. On Milton, December, pp. 775-780. 121. Dinner real and reputed, Dec, pp. 815-831. 122. Tait's Magazine 1839 123. Lake reminiscences, from 1807 to 1830. l.-III. — William Wordsworth, pp. 1-12 ; 90-103 ; 246-254. IV. — William Wordsworth andlRobert Southey, pp. 453;464- V. — Southey, Wordsworth, and Coleridge, pp. 513- 124. Sketches of life and manners: from the Autobiography of an English opium-eater — continued. Recollections of Grasmere, pp. 569-581 ; The Sara- cen's Head, pp. 804-808. 125. A brief appraisal of the Greek literature in its foremost pretensions. No. II. — The Greek orators, pp. 374-380. '4 126. Blackwood's Magazine 1840 127. On the Essenes: — Jan., I. — pp. 105-116; April, II. — 463-473 ; May, III.— 639-649. 128. Theory of Greek tragedy, Feb., pp. 145-153. 129. Casuistry [second partj, Feb., 1840, pp. 260-272. 130. Modern superstition, April, pp. 553-574. 131. The Opium question with China in 1840 : with postscript on the Duke, Mar., pp. 368 ; June, 717 ; and 847. 132. Style. I., July, pp. 1-17; II., Sept., pp. 387-398; III., Oct., pp. 508-521. 133. Tait's Magazine 1840 134. Sketches of life and manners: from the autobiography of an English opium-eater — continued. Westmoreland and the dalesmen, pp. 32*39 ; Society ot the Lakes — Reminiscences of Charles Lloyd, pp. 159-167 ; Miss Elizabeth Smith, pp. 346-352 ; The Syrapsons, pp. 353-4 ; The K family, pp. 354-6 ; Professor Wilson, pp. 525-6 ; Mrs. Siddons and Mrs. Hannah More, pp. 530-2 ; Walking Stewart, pp. 629- 631 ; Rev. Edward Irving, pp. 631-2 ; Gradual estrange- ment from Wordsworth, pp. 632-6 ; Further remarks on Walking Stewart, pp. 636-7 ; London, Talfourd, " The London Magazine," Mr. Taylor and his book on "Junius," pp. 765-771; John Clare, pp. 771-2 ; Allan Cunningham, pp. 772-6. 135. Blackwood's Magazine 1841 136. Style, IV. Feb., pp. 214-228. 137. Plato's Republic. July, pp. 40-59. 138. Homer and the Homeridse. Oct., Nov., Dec, pp. 411-427. 139. Tait's Magazine 1841 140. Sketches of life and manners : from the autobiography of an English opium-eater — continued. Libellous attack by a London journal, and thoughts on duelling, pp. 97-109. 141. Blackwood's Magazine 1842 142. Philosophy of Herodotus, Jan., pp. 1-21. 143. The Pagan Oracles, Mar., pp. 277-295. 144. Cicero, July, pp. 1-22. 145. Modern Greece, July, pp. 120-138. 146. Ricardo made easy ; or, what is the radical difference between Ricardo and Adam Smith? With an occasional notice of Ricardo's oversights. Sept., pp. 338-353 ; October, pp. 457-469; December, pp. 718- 739- 147. Blackwood's Magazine .1843 148. Ceylon. November, pp. 622-636. 149. Blackwood's Magazine 1844 150. Secession from the Church of Scotland, Feb., pp. 221-242. 151. Greece under the Romans, October, pp. S24-S38- i6 152, Logic of political economy 1844 Edinburgh : W. Blackwood & Sons. 1844. 8vo. pp. xii. 260. Another edition, with additional papers, was issued at Boston in 1859. 153. Blackwood's Magazine 1845 154. Coleridge and opium-eating. Jan., 1845, pp. 1 17-132. 155. Suspiria de profundis : — Part I., vol. 57, pp. 269-285 ; 489-502 ; 739-751 ; and vol. 58, pp. 43-55. Part II. commenced, but left unfinished. 156. Tait's Magazine 1845 157. On Wordsworth's poetry, pp. 545-554. 158. On the temperance movement of modern times, pp. 658-665. 159. Notes on Gilfillan's Gallery of literary portraits :— I., William Godwin; II., John Foster; III., William Hazlitt; IV., P. B. Shelley; pp. 7249; 756-761. 160. Tait's Magazine 1846 161. Notes on Gilfillan's Gallery of literary por- traits : — IV., Percy Bysshe Shelley, con- tinued; V., John Keats; pp. 23-29; 249- 254- 162. The Antigone of Sophocles as represented on the Edinburgh stage in December, 1845, pp. 111-116; 157-162. '7 163. Memoirs and correspondence of the Mar- quess Wellesley, pp. 193-6. 164. On Christianity, as an organ of political movement, pp. 215-220 ; 341-348. 165. Glance at the works of Mackintosh, pp. 414-424. 166. System of the heavens, as revealed by Lord Rosse's telescopes, pp. 566-579. 167. Tait's Magazine 1847 168. Notes on Walter Savage Landor, pp. 18- 23; 96-104. 169. Orthographic mutineers, pp. 157-162. 170. Joan of Arc, pp. 184-190 ; 535-542- 171. Milton versus Southey and Landor, pp. 253-259. 172. The Nautico-Military Nun of Spain, pp. 324-333; 369-376; 431-440. 173. Secret societies, pp. 513-522; 661-670. 1 74. Schlosser's Literary history of theeighteenth century, pp. 575-583 ; 690-696. 175. Conversation, pp. 678-681. 176. Protestantism, pp. 758-765 ; 843-850. 177. The Glasgow Athenaeum Album. 1848, 4to. pp. 84 1848 178. Sortilege on behalf of the Glasgow Athe- naeum, pp. 9-19. 179. Astrology, 19-32. i8o. Tait's Magazine 1848 j8i. Protestantism, pp. 84-88. 182. North British Review 1848 183. Oliver Goldsmith, May, pp. 187-212. [Review of Forster's " Life of Goldsmith."] 184. The Poetry of Pope, August, pp. 300-333. [Review of Roscoe's edition of Pope's Works.] 185. Charles Lamb, Nov., pp. 179-214. [A review of Talfourd's " Final memorials of Charles Lamb."] 186. Blackwood's Magazine 1849 187. The English mail-coach, Oct., pp. 485-500. 188. The Vision of sudden death, Dec, pp. 741- 755- 1S9. Hogg's Instructor 1850 190. Conversation. Vol. 4, N.S., pp. 65-8. 191. The Sphinx's riddle, pp. 177-80. 192. Logic, pp. 225-8. 193. Professor Wilson, pp. 353-6. 194. Hogg's Instructor 1850 195. French and English manners, vol. 5, pp. 33-5- 196. Presence of mind : a fragment, pp. 193-5. 1Q 197. Hogg's Instructor 1851 198. On the present stage of the English lan- guage, vol. 6, pp. 97-101. 199. A Sketch from childhood [afterwards incor- porated in the Autobiography], pp. 145-151 ; 232-237. This sketch was prefixed by a letter to the Editor of the Instructor, thanking him for a copy of an engraved portrait, enlarged from the daguerreotype original. 200. Tait's Magazine 1851 201. Lord Carlisle on Pope, pp. 229-237; 311- 315; 407-412. 202. Hogg's Instructor 1852 203. Sir William Hamilton, vol. 8, pp. 401-4. 204. A Sketch from childhood [continued], pp. 1-4; 97-9; '77-9; 273-7; 337-9. 205. Hogg's Instructor 1852 206. California, vol. g, pp. 1-5. 207. Mary of Buttermere, pp. 215-6. 208. Sir William Hamilton, with a glance at his logical reforms, pp. 273-7 ; Z 9 I_ 5- 209. Hogg's Instructor 1853 210. On the supposed Scriptural expression for eternity, pp. 1-6. 211. Judas Iscariot, pp. 337-42. 212. Dryden's Hexastich on Milton, p. 513. 213- Pope's Retort upon Addison, pp. 513-15. 214. On the final catastrophe of the gold-digging mania, pp. 401-4. Afterwards added to the article on California, No. 206. 215. Hogg's Instructor 1853 216. How to write English — Introductory paper, N.S., vol. 1. July-Dec, 1853, pp. 79-83. 217. Author's Collected Edition. Vol. I. ...1853 Commencement of the Edinburgh edition of De Quincey's collected writings : from this date until his death, De Quincey was occupied in recasting and revising most of the articles named in the foregoing list. The volumes of the collected edition appeared at intervals during 1853-60, and the titles are given here to complete Section II. Chronological list. The contents are set out in Section III. — Collected works. Vol 1 contains a revision, recast, and enlargement of the autobiographical articles which had appeared in Taifs Magazine of 1834 and 1838, Blackwood's Magazine, of 1845, and Hoggs Instructor, of 1851-2. 218. Author's Collected Edition. Vol. II. ...1854 Closing chapters of the Autobiography, viz.- :— " Lax ton, Northamptonshire," and " The Priory, Chester." 219. Author's Collected Edition. Vol. III. .. 1854 Postscript to the paper on the "System of the heavens," entitled — 220. "The true relations of the Bible to merely human science.' 22i. Author's Collected Edition. Vol. IV.. ..1854 New matter annexed to the essays " On murder con- sidered as one of the fine arts," entitled — 222. "Postscript." This long postscript (pp. do- ll 1) includes an account of the Williams and M'Kean murders (for which no earlier original has been found). 223. Author's Collected Edition. Vol. V....1856 224. Confessions of an English opium-eater. A new and enlarged edition, absorbing all the matter of the original edition of 1822 ; also 225. The Daughter of Lebanon, pp. 276-282. 226. Titan 1856 227. Shakspeare's text. 228. Storms in English history : a glance at the reign of Henry VIII, 229. Author's Collected Edition. Vol. VI. ...1857 230. Notes to " Whiggism in its relations to literature," pp. 178-193. 231. Titan 1857 232. .rElius Lamia [under the title " Suetonius unravelled "]' 233. Lake dialect [a letter to the Editor]. 234. The Chinese question in 1857. 235. Hurried notices of Indian affairs [Sep- tember], 236. China 1857 A revised reprint of articles from Titan : with preface and additions. Edinburgh : James Hogg. 1857. 8vo. pp. iv, 152. Wrapper. 237. Author's Collected Edition. Vol. VII. ...1858 238. Supplementary note on the Essenes [ap- pended to the article on "Secret societies "], pp. 295-310. 239. Author's Collected Editon. Vol. VIII...1858 With additions to some of the articles. 240. Author's Collected Edition. Vol. IX. ...1858 With postscripts to some of the articles. 241. Author's Collected Edition. Vol. X. ...1859 Addition to the article on Milton, entitled— 242. " Postscript on Dr. Johnson's Life of Milton." 243. Author's Collected Edition. Vols. XI.-XIII. 1859 244. Author's Collected Edition. Vol. XIV.. 1859-60 This volume was partly prepared during 185a before De Quincey's death on December 8th, but was not published until i860. 244A. "An Essay on novels," by T. De Quincey. The Archivist and Autograph Review, No. 2, June, 1888. The essay is given in facsimile from an unpublished manuscript. The editor (Mr. S. Davey) refers to the facsimile in a note on page 1. 23 244B. On novels : an unpublished essay. The Book- worm, v. 2, 1889, pp. 325-6. 244c. The wider hope : essays . . on future punish- ment . . with a paper "On the supposed scrip- tural expression for eternity," by Thomas De Quincey, [pp. 1-29]. London : 1890. 8vo. 244D. " Two newly-discovered papers," by De Quincey. The New Review, No. 19, December, 1890. I. — The Dark interpreter. II. — The loveliest sight for woman's eyes, pp. 503-9. 244E. " Further newly-discovered papers," by De Quincey. The New Review, January, 1891, pp. 29-40. I. — On miracles. II. — Why the Pagans could not invest their Gods with any iota of grandeur. III. — Great forgers: Chatterton and Walpole, and "Junius." 24 III.— COLLECTED WORKS. Note.— The books marked * have not been seen by the compiler. According to the Boston Athenaeum Library Catalogue the two last books (274 and 275) were issued a few years after the first set, thus making the original American edition consist of twenty-four volumes. 245. De Quincey's Writings. Boston : Ticknor and Fields. 1851-59. i6mo. 22 volumes, each with an independent title. This edition of De Quincey's writings was edited by Mr. J. T. Fields, 'and was published with the permission and assistance of the author. Syllabus of the contents : — 246. Confessions of an English opium-eater ; and Suspiria de profundis. Boston ; 1851. i6mo. pp. 288. Portrait. 247. Biographical essays. Boston: 1851. i6mo. pp. 288. Shakspeare. Pope. Charles Lamb. Goethe. Schiller 248. The Csesars. Boston: 1851. i6mo. pp.295. This is arranged as a complete volume, in six chapters, pp. 262 ; Notes, pp. 263-295. 249. Miscellaneous essays. Boston: 1851. i6mo. pp. 276. On the knocking at the gate, in Macbeth. Murder considered as one of the fine arts. Second paper on murder. Joan of Arc The English mail-coach. The vision of sudden death. Dinner, real and reputed. Orthographic mutineers. 250. Life and manners. Boston: 1851. i6mo. pp. 347- Early days. London. Ireland. The Irish rebellion. Premature manhood. Travelling. My brother. Oxford. German literature. 25 251. Literary reminiscences ; from the Autobio- graphy of an English Opium-eater. Boston : 1 85 1. i6mo. 2 vols. 252. I. Sir. H. Davy. Mr. Godwin. Mrs. Grant. Recol- lections of Charles Lamb. Walladmor. Samuel Taylor Coleridge. William Wordsworth. Pp. 366. 253. II. Southey, Wordsworth, and Coleridge. Recollections of Grasmere. The Saracen's Head. Society of the Lakes. Charles Lloyd. Walking Stewart. Edward Irving. William Wordsworth. Talfourd. The Lon- don Magazine. Junius. Clare. Cunningham. Libel- lous attack by a London journal. Duelling, Pp. 337. 254. * Memorials, and other papers. Boston : 1851. i6mo. 2 vols. 255. I. Explanatory notices. The orphan heiress. Oxford. The Pagan oracles. Revolution of Greece. 256. II. Klosterheim. The Sphinx's riddle. The Templar's dialogues. 257. Autobiographic sketches. Boston : 1853. i6mo. pp. 384. Pp. 5-8.— Letter from Mr. De Quincey to the American editor of his works ; pp. 9-24, — Preface to the English edition. Contents .-—The affliction of childhood. Dream echoes of these infant experiences. Dream echoes fifty years later. Introduction to the world of strife Infant literature. The female infidel. I am introduced to the warfare of a public school. I enter the world. The nation of London. Dublin. First rebellion in Ireland. French invasion of Ireland, and second rebellion. Travelling. My brother. Premature manhood. Note. — The publishers announced that "This volume takes the place in this Series of ' Life and Manners.' It is a reproduction of that volume, with additional matter, and is printed from Mr. De Quincey's own revision." 26 258. Narrative and miscellaneous papers. Boston : 1853. i6mo. 2 vols. 259. I. The Household wreck. The Spanish nun. Flight of a Tartar tribe. Pp. 280. 260. II. System of the heavens as revealed by Lord Rosse's telescopes. Modern superstition. Temperance move- ment. On war. The last days of Immanuel Kant. Pp- [iv]. 302- 261. Essays on the poets, and other English writers. Boston : 1853. i6mo. pp. [iv]. 296. The poetry of Wordsworth. Percy Bysshe Shelley. John Keats. Oliver Goldsmith. Alexander Pope. William Godwin. John Foster. William Hazlitt. Walter Savage Landor. 262. Historical and critical essays. Boston : 1853. i6mo. 2 vols. 263. I. Philosophy of Roman meals. The Essenes. Philo- sophy of Herodotus. Plato's Republic. Homer and the Homeridae. Pp. [iv], 345. 264. II. Cicero. Style, Rhetoric. Secret societies. Pp. [iv]. 354- 26$. Essays on philosophical writers, and other men of letters. Boston : 1854. i6mo. 2 vols. 266. I. Sir William Hamilton. Sir James Mackintosh. Kant in his miscellaneous essays. Herder. John Paul Frederick Richter, Analects from Richter. Lessing, Pp. [vi]. 292. 267 II. Bentley. Parr. Pp. [vi]. 291. 268. *Theological essays, and other papers. Bos- ton : 1854. i6mo. 2 vols. 269. I. Christianity as an organ of political movement. Protestantism. On the supposed Scriptural expression for eternity. Judas IscanoU On Hume's argument against miracles. Casuistry. Greece unde the Romans. 2 7 270. II. Secession from the Church of Scotland. Toilette of the Hebrew lady. Milton. Charlemagne. Modern Greece. Lord Carlyle on Pope. 271. Letters to a young man, and other papers. Boston : 1854. i6mo. pp. [ivj. 300. Letters to a young man. Theory of Greek tragedy. Conversation. Language. French _ and English manners. California and the gold mania. Presence of mind. 272. *Note-book of an English Opium-eater. Boston : 1855. i6mo. Three memorable murders. True relations of the Bible to merely human science. Literary history of the eighteenth century. The Antigone of Sophocles. The Marquess Wellesley. Milton versus Southey and Landor. Falsification of English history. A peripa- tetic philosopher. [Walking Stewart.] On suicide. Superficial knowledge. English dictionaries. Dryden's Hexastich. Pope's retort upon Addison. 273. "Klosterheim. With biographical introduc- tion by R. S. Mackenzie. Boston : 1855. i6mo. 274. *The Avenger, and other papers. Boston : [1859]. i6mo. 275. * Logic of political economy, and other papers. Boston : r'Ssg]- i6mo. 276. Works. Edinburgh : 1853-60. 14 vols. 8vo. [Half-title : Selections grave and gay, from writings published and unpublished, by Thomas De Quincey.] 28 Syllabus of the contents : — 277. I.-II. — Autobiographic sketches. 1853-4. 278. (i). The affliction of childhood. Dream-echoes of these infant experiences. Dream-echoes of fifty years later. Introduction to the world of strife. Infant literature. The female infidel. I am introduced to the warfare of a public school. I enter the world. The nation of London. Dublin. First Rebellion in Ireland. French invasion of Ireland, and Second Rebellion. Travelling. My brother. Premature manhood. Pp. xxiv. 368. 279. (ii). Laxton. I. — Cymon and Iphigenia. II. — The orphan heiresses. III. — Female students in theology. The Priory. Early memorials of Grasmere. Samuel Taylor Coleridge. William Wordsworth. William Wordsworth and Robert Southey. Pp. vi. 348. 280. III.-IV.— Miscellanies. 1854. 281. (i). The Spanish military nun. The last days of Immanuel Kant. System of the heavens as revealed by Lord Rosse's telescopes. Joan of Arc. The casuistry of Roman meals. Modern superstition. Pp. vi. 346. 282. (ii). On murder considered as one of the fine arts. Revolt of the Tartars ; or, flight of the Kalmuck Khan and his people from the Russian territories to the frontiers of China. m Dialogues of Three Templars on political economy, chiefly in relation to the principles of Mr. Ricardo. On war. The English mail-coach : — I. — The glory of motion. II. — The vision of sudden death. III.— Dream-fugue. Pp. xvi. 356. 283. V. — Confessions of an English opium-eater- 1856. Contains the 1821 preface, pp. v.-x ; and prefatory notice, signed November, 1856, pp. xi.-xv. 1-290. 284. VI. — Sketches, critical and biographic. 1857, pp. xvi. 396. Percy Bysshe Shelley. Whiggism in its relations to literal lire. 01 iver Goldsmith. On Wordsworth 's poetry. John Keats. Homer and the Homerida;. 2 9 285. VII. — Studies on secret records, personal and historic. With other papers. . . . 1858, pp. xvi. 334. Judas Iscariot. Richard Bentley. Cicero. Secret societies. Milton. Appendix. 286. VIII. — Essays sceptical and anti-sceptical, on problems neglected or misconceived. 1858, PP. viii. 352. Walking Stewart. The Marquess Wellesley. Schlosser's Literary history of the eighteenth century. Protestantism. The pagan oracles. Miracles as sub- ects of testimony. Casuistry. Greece under the Romans. 287. IX. — Leaders in literature, with a notice of traditional errors affecting them. 1858, pp. xii. 332. Alexander Pope. Theory of Greek tragedy. Language. French and English manners. Charles Lamb. Philosophy of Herodotus. Plato's Republic. Sortilege and astrology. Notes on Walter Savage Landor. 288. X. — Classic records reviewed or deciphered. 1859, pp. xii. 311. The Caesars. The Theban Sphinx. The Essencs. ./EHus Lamia. 289. XI. — Critical suggestions on style and rhe- toric, with German tales, and other narrative papers. 1859, pp. xxiii. 326. Prefatory memoranda. The Incognito; or, Count Fitz-Hum. Rhetoric Lite of Milton. The Revolu- tion of Greece. Style. The Dice. 3° 290. XII. -XIII. — Speculations, literary and philo- sophic, with German tales, and other narra- tive papers. 1859. 291. (i). Prefatory note. Ceylon. The King of Hayti. Coleridge and opium-eating. Toilette of the Hebrew lady. National temperance movements. Milton versus Southey and Landor. The fatal marksman. On Christianity as an organ of political movement. Notes on Gilfillan's literary portraits— Godwin— Foster— Hazlitt. Falsification of English history. Pp. viii. 334. 292. (ii). Lord Carlisle on Pope. Glance at the works of Mackintosh. Anecdotage. Herder. Idea of a uni- versal history on a cosmopolitieal plan. Charlemagne. Goethe's Wifhelm Meister. Lesshag [includes a trans- lation of "Laocoon"]. Appendix [on Pope]. Pp. iv. 316. 293. XIV. — Letters to a young man whose educa- tion has been neglected, and other papers. i860, pp. 336. Portrait. Letters to a young man whose education has been neglected. Orthographic mutineers. John Paul Frederick Richter. Conversation. Presence of mind. On the knocking at the gate in Macbeth. The Anti- gone of Sophocles. Traditions of the Rabbins [by George Croly]. Mother Greece. 294, Works. Second edition. Edinburgh : 1862-3, 15 vols. 8vo. %* The publishers announced this (second English) edition as complete in fifteen volumes, but supple- mentary volumes were afterwards added. In the list below only the additional papers are noted. The edition was issued In blue cloth, with printed labels. 295. XII. — Speculations, literary and philosophic. 1863, pp. xviii. 303. The Preface, pp. vii.-xviii., consists of a reply to an anonymous critic of the author's paper entitled "Lor Carlisle on Pope." In this volume it precedes that paper. The article appeared first as an appendix to Works, xii., 1859. 3i 296. XIII. — The Art of conversation, and other papers. Edinburgh : 1863, pp. 332. "The Traditions of the Rabbins," by Dr. George Croly, is again reprinted, pp. 234-287. 297. XV. — Biographies of Shakspeare, Pope, Goethe, and Schiller, and on the Political parties of modern England. 1863, pp. x. 376. Shakspeare. Pope. Goethe. Schiller. A Tory's account of Toryism, Whiggism, and Radicalism. On the political parties of modern England. General Index, by H. B. Wheatley. 298. XVI. — Suspiria de profundis : being a sequel to the Confessions of an English opium-eater, and other miscellaneous writings. 1871, pp. viii. 534. Suspiria de profundis. _ Memorial chronology. Pro- fessor Wilson. Sir William Hamilton. California. China. Walladmor. The Juggernaut of social life. The Avenger. Historico-critical inquiry into the origin of the Rosicrucians and the Freemasons. Kant on national character. Notes from the pocket-book of a late opium-eater. Index. 299. XVII. — Kant in his Miscellaneous essays, and Logic of political economy. 1878. This volume was issued for the benefit of subscribers to the earlier editions which for some unexplained reason omitted the articles. It is entered here as belonging to the set, as it was bound similarly in blue cloth, with paper label, and printed vol. xvii. Copies are now scarce. 300. Works. Third edition. Edinburgh: 1871. 16 vols. 8vo. This edition is uniformly bound in red roan roxburghe, top edges gilt, and dated 1871. It is a re-issue of the 1862-3 edition, with additions in vols. 12, *3> *5> anc * i6- The several volumes have separate titles, and retain the earlier dates 1862 and 1863. 3 2 301. Works. Riverside edition. Boston and New York. 1877. 12 vols. i6mo. This is a re-issue of the Fields edition with great improvements, notes, and general index to the series. It is called by the publishers the Popular, edition, and it has been several times reprinted. The copy at Moss Side, from which the following list of contents is taken, is without date. 302. I. — Confessions of an English opium-eater, and kindred papers, pp. 615. Confessions of an English opium-eater. Suspiria de profundis. Additions to the Confessions : De Quincey. My guardians. A Manchester home. At the Man- chester Grammar School. Elopement from Manchester. Wanderings in North Wales. From Wales to London. Plans laid for London life. Barbara Lewthwaite. The Daughter of Lebanon. Notes on the use of opium. Coleridge and opium eating. The English mail coach. The glory of motion. The vision of sudden death. Dream fugue. Notes. 303. II. — Autobiographic sketches, pp. vi. 594. Introduction : personal sketches of De Quincey, by the Editor. — The affliction of childhood. Dream echoes of these infant experiences. Dream echoes fifty years later. Introduction to the world of strife. Infant literature. The female infidel. I am introduced to the warfare of a public school. I enter the world. The nation of London. Dublin. First Rebellion in Ireland. French invasion in Ireland, and Second Rebellion. Travelling. My brother. Premature manhood. The orphan heiress. Oxford. 304. III. — Literary reminiscences ; from the Auto- biography of an English opium-eater, pp. 712. Introduction, by the Editor. — Literary novitiate. Sir H. Davy.— Mr. Godwin.— Mrs. Grant. Recollec- tions of Charles Lamb. Walladmor. Samuel Taylor Coleridge. William Wordsworth. Wordsworth and Southey. Southey, Wordsworth, and Coleridge. Recollections of Grasmere. The Saracen's Head. Society of the Lakes. Charles Lloyd. Walking 33 Stewart.— Edward Irving. — William Wordsworth. — Talfourd. — The London Magazine. — Junius. —Clare. — Cunningham.— Libellous attack by a London journal. — Duelling. 305. IV. — Literary criticism, pp. [viii]. 577. Theory of Greek tragedy. The Antigone of Sophocles, as represented on the Edinburgh stage. Homer and the Homeridse. Style. Rhetoric Language. English dictionaries. Dryden's hexastich. Notes on Walter Savage Landor. Milton versus Southey and Landor. Orthographic mutineers, with a special reference to the works of Walter Savage Landor. On Wordsworth's poetry. On the knocking at the gate in Macbeth. Notes. 306. V. — The Eighteenth century in scholarship and literature, pp. xxiv. 632. Introduction [on Dr. Parr, Schlosser, Goldsmith, and Pope, pp, viii. -xxiv] Richard Bentley. Dr. Parr and his contemporaries. Schlosser's Literary history of the eighteenth century. Oliver Goldsmith. Alexander Pope. Pope : a biography. Pope's Retort upon Addi- son. Lord Carlisle on Pope. 307. VI. — Biographical and historical essays, pp. 620. Shakspeare. Life of Milton. Milton. Charle- magne. Joan of Arc. The Marquess Wellesley. Charles Lamb. Percy Bysshe Shelley. John Keats. William Godwin. John Foster. William Hazlitt. A peripatetic philosopher [Walking Stewart]. Professor Wilson. Goethe. Goethe as reflected in his novel of Wilhelm Meister. Schiller. John Paul Frederick Richter. Analects from Richter. Anecdotage. Notes. 308. VII. — Essays in ancient history and anti- quities, pp. 636. The Cassars [six chapters]. Cicero. Philosophy . of Roman history. Greece under the Romans : with a reference to Mr. George Finlay*s work upon that sub- ject. Philosophy of Herodotus. Plato's Republic. Dinner, real and reputed. Toilette of the Hebrew lady. The Sphinx's riddle. Aelius Lamia. Notes. 34 309. VIII. — Essays on Christianity, paganism, and superstition, pp. viii. 645. On Christianity as an organ of political movement. The Essenes. Secret societies. Supplementary note on the Essenes. Judas Iscariot. The true relations of the Bible to merely human science. On the supposed Scriptural expression for eternity. On Hume's Argu- ment against miracles. Protestantism. Secession from tjie Church of Scotland. The Pagan oracles. Modern superstition. Sortilege on behalf of the Glasgow Athenaeum. Notes. 310. IX. — Essays in philosophy, pp. viii. 623. Letters to a young man whose education has been neglected. Memorial chronology. Casuistry. On suicide. System of the heavens as revealed by Lord Rossc's telescopes. Sir William Hamilton. Sir James Mackintosh. Herder. Lessing. Kant, The last days of Immanuel Kant. Notes. 311. X. — Politics and political economy, pp. x. 623. The logic of political economy. Dialogues of Three Templars on political economy. Malthus. Measure of value. California. On war. National temperance movements. Falsification of English history. Ceylon. A Tory's account of Toryism, Whiggism, and Radi- calism, in a letter to a friend in Bengal. On the political parties of modern England. Notes. 312. XI. — Romances and extravaganzas, pp. 663. Klosterheim. The Household wreck. The Avenger. The Fatal marksman. The Incognito ; or, Count Fitz Hum. The Dice. The King of Hayti. On murder considered as one of the fine arts. Supple- mentary paper on murder considered as one of the fine arts. Three memorable murders. Notes. 313. XII. — Narrative and miscellaneous papers, pp. xxiv. 586. List of the writings of Thomas De Quincey as con- tained in this series, with the place and date of their original publication indicated so far as .ascertained, 35 pp. ix-xvi. Introduction to the series, dated Cambridge, Mass., June, 1877, pp. xvii.-xxiv. Flight of a Tartar tribe. The Spanish nun, China. The Revolution of Greece. The Suliotes. Modern Greece. Conversation. French and English manners. Superficial knowledge. Presence of mind : a frag- ment. Sketch of Professor Wilson. Notes. General index. 314. Works. Fourth edition. Edinburgh: 1878 1 6 vols. 8vo. This is a re-issue of the 1871 edition, with excep- tions noted below. Vol. 1 has a general title dated 1878, but the other fifteen volumes have separate titles with the earlier dates 1862-3. The publishers appear to have retained these old dates, and occasionally they have inserted additional dates within brackets, thus {Reprinted iSSj]. A note to volume 1 states that the following articles, omitted from earlier editions, are now incorporated. 315. Vol. XII. — Kant in his Miscellaneous essays, and Problem of a perpetual peace. 316. Vol. XIII. — Logic of political economy. Another publishers' note refers to the paper on the " Traditions of the Rabbins" having been discovered to be the work of Dr. Croly, is now omitted, and its place supplied by Logic of political economy. The note is dated February 18, 1876. Date on the title is 1863. 317. The Collected writings of Thomas De Quincey. New and enlarged edition by David Masson. Edinburgh : 1889-1890. 14 vols. 8vo. 318. I. — Autobiography, from 1785 to 1803. pp. xxvii. 416. General preface by the editor. Editor's preface. De Quincey's own general preface in 1853. Parentage and the paternal home. Affliction of childhood. Dream echoes. Introduction to the world of strife. Infant literature. The female infidel. I am intro- duced to the warfare of a public school. I enter the world. The nation of London. Dublin. First Irish 36 Rebellion of 1798. French invasion of Ireland, and Second Rebellion of 1798. Travelling in England in old days- My brother Pink. Premature manhood. Laxton, Northamptonshire : I. — Cymon and Iphigenia ; II.— The orphan heiresses; III. — Female students in theology. At Manchester Grammar School. The Priory, Chester. Illustra tioris : —Portrait of De Quincey (aged 65) after an engraving by Frank Croll, 1850 ; Group of De Quincey l8l > 2 °5, 206, 228, 257, 334; ii., 14, 76-80, 83, 102, 153, 155-8, 171, 332, 374. 510. Gosse (E.) Modern English literature: a short history. London: 1905. 8vo. Thomas De Quincey, pp. 322-3, with plate engraving of portrait by Gordon. 51 1. Gould (George M.) Biographic clinics: the origin of the ill-health of De Quincey, Garlyle, Darwin, Huxley, and Browning. London : 1903. 8vo. De Quincey, pp. 15-40. 66 512. Grand Dictionnaire Universel ; ed. par Pierre Larousse. Paris : [1866-74]. — Vol 6, p. 497— Article on Thomas De Quincey. 513. Griswold (Mrs. Hattie) Home life of great authors. Chicago: 1886. i2mo. Thomas De Quincey, pp. 54-63, 514. Hailstone (H.) Poems of nature. Manchester: 1893. 8vo. Sonnet on De Quincey, p. 79. 515. Hedderwick (James) Backward glances; or, some personal recollections. Edinburgh: 1891. 8vo. De Quincey referred to, pp. 56-7. 516. Herford (C. H.) The Age of Wordsworth. London : 1897. 8vo. De Quincey, pp. 69*71. 517. Hill (G. B.) Talks about autographs. London : 1896. 8vo. Includes anecdotes of,and a letter by Thomas De Quincey, and an engraving of Nab Cottage, his resi- dence at Grasmere, pp. 95-100. 518. Hill (R. and F.) Memoir of Matthew Davenport Hill. London : 1878. 8vo. References to, and reminiscences of De Quincey, pp 57i <5s> 85, 981 ->45> 366, and 493-5. 519. Hodgson (S. H.) Outcast essays, and verse translations. London : 1881. 8vo. Essays : (r) The genius of De Quincey, pp. 3-65 ; (2) Dc Quincey as political economist, pp. 68-98. 67 520. Hogg (James) ed. DeQuincey and his friends: personal recollections, souvenirs, and anecdotes. London : 1895. 8vo. Note.— The reminiscences, etc., collected in this volume, are indexed at the names of the writers. Sec Bertram, Brown, Burton, Carlyle, Cotton, Fields, Findlay, Garnett, Gillies, Gordon, Hodgson, Hood, Jacox, Japp, Knight, Moir, Payn, Robertson, Scott, Smith (Col. B.), Smith (Mrs. B.). Tait, Wilson (J.), and Woodhouse. 521. Hood (Thomas) Literary reminiscences of De Quincey [in Hogg (J.), No. 520]. 522. Hotten (John Camden) Macaulay : the historian, statesman, and essayist. . . London : i860. 8vo. Anecdote of De Quincey, pp. 37-8. 523. Hutton (L.) Literaryilandmarks of Edinburgh. London : 1891. Svo. Notices of De Quincey, pp. 66, 67-8. With view of the cottage at Lasswade, and portrait. 524. Hutton (Laurence) Literary landmarks of London. London : 1885. 8vo. Thomas De Quincey, pp. 78-79. 525. Ingleby (C. M.) Essays; edited by his son. London : 1888. 8vo. Thomas de Quincey, pp. 270-291. 526. Jacox (Francis) Recollections of Thomas De Quincey [in Hogg (J.), No. 520. pp. 219-234]. 527. Japp (A. H.) Thomas De Quincey : his friends and associates [in Hogg (J.), No. 520. pp. 1-70]. t)S- 528. Japp (A. H.) Was it fair or just ? . . printed for the author. 1894. 8vo. pp. x. 84. Numerous references to De Quincey, including a brief report of James IT Fields' lecture on De Quincey* 529. Knight (Charles) Passages of a working life during half-a-century. London : 1864-5. 3 v0 's. 8vo. References to De Quincey — i., 271, 272, 3^15, 327, 328, 329, 330, 339, 340; ii., 109, 248, 294, 306 ; 111., 31. 530. Knight's English cyclopaedia : Biography. London : 1856. 4to. Vol. 2. — Thomas De Quincey, cols. 567-8. 531. Landreth (P.) Studies and sketches in modern literature : periodical contributions. E d i n - burgh : 1861. 8vo. Thomas De Quincey, pp. 275-297. 532. Lobel (Michael) Lecture on De Quincey ; delivered July 14, 1899. Typewritten. 4to. pp. 9. 533. Lowndes (W. T.) Bibliographer's manual of English literature. London : 1864. 4 vols. 8vo. Notes on De Quincey, and a list of his writings, vol. 3, pp. 2026-g. 534. Lucas (E. V.) Life of Charles Lamb. London : 1905. 2 vols. Numerous references to De Quincey in each volume. 535. McCulloch (J. R.) Literature of political eco- nomy. London : 1845. 8vo. Note on De Quincey's "Dialogues of three Templars," p. 33. 69 536- Mackay (Charles) Forty years' recollections of life, literature, and public affairs, 1830-1870. London : 1877. 2 vols. 8vo. Professor J. P. Nichol and Thomas De Quincey, pp. 313-326. 537. Mackenzie (R. S.) Memoir of the life of Thomas De Quincey. Boston : 1855. 538. Macnish (Robert) Anatomy of drunkenness. 1832. References to De Quincey as an opium-eater. 539. Mantegazza (Paolo) Quadri della natura umana. Milano: 1871. 2 vols. 8vo. Chapter on opium (with a bibliography), and refer- ences to De Quincey, vol. 2, pp. 349-438. 540. Martineau (Harriet) Biographical sketches. London : 1869. 8vo. Thomas De Quincey, pp. 409-17. 541. Mason (Edward T.) ed. Personal traits of British authors. New York .- 1885. 8vo. Vol. 2, entitled Scott, Hogg, etc., contains some accounts of De Quincey not included by Japp or Hogg. 542. Masson (David) Essays, biographical and critical, chiefly on English poets. 1855. 8vo. 544. Masson (D.) Wordsworth, Shelley, Keats, and other essays. London : 1874. Prose and verse : De Quincey, pp. 253*305. 545- Mill (J. S.) Principles of political economy. 1848. References to De Quincey in Book Hi., chapters i., ii. 546. Minto (William) A Manual of English prose literature, biographical and critical. Edin- burgh: 1886. 8vo. Chapter I. — Thomas De Quincey, 1785-1859, pp. 31-76. 547. Moir (D. M.) " De Quincey's revenge." A balled in three fittes [in Hogg (J.), No. 520. pp. 267-292]. 548. Mortimer (John) Some notes on Thomas Quincey. [Reprinted from The Manchester Quarterly, April, 1900]. Manchester: Sherratt and Hughes, 1900. 8vo. pp. 17. This account of the father of Thomas De Quincey includes several references to the opium-eater. 550. Nichol (John) Article on Thomas De Quincey in the " Imperial dictionary of universal bio- graphy." London : Mackenzie, vol. 2. pp. 72-3. SSi. Oldham (Roger) A Manchester alphabet, lllus. 1906. A verse on De Quincey p. 36, and sketch of Greenhay Hall, p. 37. 552. Oliphant (Mrs. M. O. W.) Literary history of England. London : 1882. 3 vols. Notices of De Quincey, vol. 2, pp. 22-34, 25, 28, 29, 33. 553- OHphant (Mrs. M. O. W.) Annals of a pub- lishing house : William Blackwood and Sons. Edinburgh, 1897-8. 3 vols. 8vo. 1. — Chapter IX. — Coleridge — De Quincey, pp. 406-444. 554. Parliamentary Gazetteer of EnglandandWales Vol. 3. London : Fullarton and Co., 1843. The article on Manchester concludes with a list of eminent persons connected with that town. Thomas De Quincey is here "said to have been born in the house known as the Prince's Tavern in Cross Street, corner of Princes' Street, in Manchester." A lobtnote attached to this article states that "at the age of 15 this singular prodigy . of learning as well as genius, ' not only composed Greek verses in lyric metres, but could converse in Greek fluently, and without embarrassment so perfectly,* that one of his own masters, who was himself a scholar, has said of him, * that boy could harangue an Athenian mob better than I could an English one. 1 " 555- Payn (James) Some literary recollections. 1885. 8vo. Notices of De Quincey, pp. 56-60. 556. Pollitt (Charles) De Quincey's editorship of the Westmorland Gazette, with selections from his work on that journal from July, 1818, to November, 1819. Kendal: 1890. 557. Procter (Bryan Waller) Autobiographical fragment and biographical notes. London : 1877. 8vo. Notice of De Quincey, pp. 212-14. 558. Rickett (Arthur) Personal forces in modern literature. London : 1906. 8vo. ! Treats of De Quincey as a vagabond, pp. 205-18. 7 2 559. Rickett (Arthur) The vagabond in literature. With six portraits. London: 1906. 8vo. pp. xviii. 207. Thomas De Quincey, pp. 35-54- A copy of the 1850 portrait is 'given. 560. Robertson (Dr.) Reminiscences of De Quincey [in Hogg (J.), No. 520. pp . 57-8]. 561. Robinson (Henry Crabb) Diary, reminiscences, and correspondence ; ed. by T. Sadler. London : 1872. 2 vols. 8vo. Several notices of De Quincey in vol. 1. 562. Russell (W. C.) Book of authors : a collection of criticisms, etc. London : 1871. l2mo. Notices of De Quincey. 563. Saintsbury (G.) Essays in English literature (1780-1860). London : 1890. 8vo. De Quincey, pp. 304-338, and Appendix A, De Quincey, pp. 440-43. 564. Saintsbury (G.) History of nineteenth century literature (1780-1895). London : 1896. 8vo Thomas De Quincey, pp. 194-198. 565. Salt (H. S.) Literary sketches. London : 1888. 8vo. Some thoughts on De Quincey, pp. 208-235. 566. Sandford (Mrs. H.) Thomas Poole and his friends. London : 1888. 2 vols. 8vo. References to De Quincey in volume 1. 567. Scott (Sir W.) Description of De Quincey [in Hogg (J.), No. 520. p. 125]. 73 568. Sellar (Mrs. E. M.) Recollections and impres- sions. Edinburgh : 1907. Recollections of De Quincey. 569. Sessions (Frederick) Literary celebrities of the English Lake-District. Illus. London : 1905. 8vo. The English opium-eater : Thomas De Quincey, pp. 1-18. (1) The man ; (2) His books. Portrait. 570. Shaylor (Joseph) Saunterings in bookland. London : 1899. Contains a selection from De Quincey entitled " What is literature? " taken from his essay on " The poetry of Pope," pp. g-21. 571. Shaylor (Joseph) Some favourite books and their authors. London : 1901. 8vo. Thomas De Quincey, 1785-1859, pp. 82-87. 572. Smith (Colonel Baird) Description of De Quincey [in Hogg (J.), No. 520. p. 124]. 573. Smith (Mrs. Baird) Description of De Quincey [in Hogg (J.), No. 520. p. 216]. 574. Smith (G. Gregory) Article on Thomas De Quincey in " Chambers's Cyclopaedia of Eng- lish literature," vol. 3, 1903, pp. 92-9. With portrait after Sir J. W. Gordon. S7St Smith (Rev. Jeremiah Finch) ed. The Ad- mission Register of the Manchester Grammar School. Manchester : 1866-1874. 3 vols. 8vo. Biographical sketch of De Quincey, supplemented by two notes, one by John Sudlow and the other by James Crossley, ii. pp. 224-7. 577- Stansfield (Abraham) Essays and sketches. Manchester: 1897. 8vo. pp. viii. 312. A neglected Manchester man : Thomas De Quincey, PP- 3-23- 578. Stephen (Sir Leslie) Thomas De Quincey {in Dictionary of National Biography, vol. 14, 1888, pp. 385-39I)- 579. Stephen (Sir L.) Hours in a library. London : 1899. 8vo. De Quincey, pp. 237-268. 580. Stirling (J. H.) J err old, Tennyson, and Macaulay, etc. Edinburgh : 1868. 8vo De Quincey and Coleridge upon Kant, pp. 172-224. 580A. Stuart. — Letters from the Lake Poets, S. T. Coleridge, William Wordsworth, Robert Southey, to Daniel Stuart, 1800-1838. Printed for private circulation. 1889. [Edited by Mr. Ernest Hartley Coleridge.] Notices of De Ouincey, pp. 125, 155-158, 169-170. 581. Symons (Arthur) Studies in prose and verse. London : 1904. 8vo. A word on De Quincey, pp. 47-51. 582. Tait (W.) Notices of De Quincey [in Hogg (JO, No. 520. p. 55]. 583. Thomas (Joseph) Universal pronouncing dic- tionary of biography and mythology. Phila- delphia : 1905. 8vo. Article on De Quincey, pp. 804-5. 75 584. Waterston (Mrs. Anna C. Q.) The visible and invisible in libraries. Reprinted from "The Atlantic Monthly," Nov., 1865 [misprinted 1855J. Manchester : R. Holt, 1873. 8vo. pp. 20. Note of an interview with De Quincey, p. 12. 585. Wheeler (James) Manchester : its political, social, and commercial history. London : 1836 (Printed by Wheeler and Son, Manchester). 8vo. Biographical notice of De Quincey, p. 535. 586. Wilson (Jessie A.) Memoir of George Wilson. Edinburgh: i860. 8vo. References to De Quincey, pp. 48-9, 62. 587. Wilson (John) Noctes Ambrosianae. Edin- burgh : Blackwood, 1864. 4 vols. 8vo. Vols. 2 and 3 — Chapters xxiii., pp. 325-381 ; xxiv., pp. 382-428; xxv., pp. 1-51. Thomas De Quincey is referred to more than once in the course of these dialogues. In the above chapters he is introduced as an interlocutor, and the general character of his conversation has been imitated not infelicitously by his friend the Professor. Vide Footnote, p. 325, v. 2. An excellent portrait after Sir J. W. Gordon appears in vol; 4, facing p. 305. An edition of Wilson's ' ' Noctes Ambrosianse " was issued by Robert Shelton Mackenzie in 1854, and reprinted 1861, 1866— New York. Mackenzie appears as editor or biographer of De Quincey several times in this bibliography. 588. Wilson (John) Reminiscences of De Quincey [in Hogg (J.), No. 520. p. 245]. 589. Woodhouse (R.) Notes of conversations with De Quincey [in Hogg (J.), No. 520. pp. 71-103]. 7 6 59°i Wotton (Mabel E.) Word portraits of famous writers. London : 1887. 8vo. Notices of De Quincey, pp. 238-42. iii— MAGAZINE ARTICLES. 591. Academy, July 21, 1877, p. S3- Review of Japp's " Life of De Quincey." 592. Academy, Jan. 7, 1882, p. 3. Review of Mas- son's " De Quincey," by R. L. Leighton. 593. Academy, vol. 40, 1891, p. 107. Review of Japp's " Posthumous works of De Quincey," vol. 1. 594. Academy, vol. 44, 1893, p. 581. Review of Japp's " Posthumous works of De Quincey," vol. 2. 595. Academy, Jan. 9, vol. 51, 1897, p. 47. Thomas De Quincey [with plate engraving of portrait after Sir J. W. Gordon].' 596. Academy, vol. 56, 1899, p. 478. Review of " Confessions of an English opium-eater." 597. Academy, Dec. 31, 1904, p. 653. De Quincey's cottage, Grasmere, from a drawing by George Adams. 598. Academy, Feb. 17, 1906, p. 159. De Quincey and the "grand style," by H. P. Robinson. 599. Appleton's Journal, New York, New series, vol. 3. De Quincey, by R. H. Stoddard. 600. Athenaeum, Dec. 17, 1859, p. 814. Obituary notice of Thomas De Quincey. 77 6oi. Athenaeum, Jan. 31, 1882. "The fatal marks- man " : a letter by Theodore Watts. €02. Athenaeum, Feb. 4 and 18 and Mar. 4, 1882. Letters on Masson's Monograph on De Quincey, by John Hogg. 603. Athenaeum, Dec, 1893, p. 873. Review of De Quincey's " Conversation and Coleridge." 604. Athenaeum, Jan. 4, 1896, p. 13. Review of Hogg's " De Quincey and his friends." 605. Athenaeum, June 3, 1905, p. 681. A reference to an incident in De Quincey's married life. 606. Atlantic Monthly, Nov., 1877, p. 569. Some aspects of De Quincey, by G. P. Lathrop. 607. Atlantic Monthly, Feb., 1896, p. 183. Note of a visit to De Quincey, by Rose H. Lathrop. 608. Atlantic Monthly, vol. 12, 1863, p. 345. Thomas De Quincey, by H. M. Alden. 609. Atlantic Monthly, vol. 40, Nov., 1877, p. 569. Some aspects of De Quincey, by G. P. Lathrop. 610. Atlantic Monthly, Feb., 1896, p. 183. A reference to De Quincey, by Rose H. Lathrop. <5i 1 . Belgravia, October, 1870, p. 450. Article on Praed's country [containing reference to De Quincey's "weird wild story, the Stranger's grave "], by Mortimer Collins. 612. Bentley's Miscellany, vol. 37, 1855, p. 251. Thomas De Quincey, by Monkshood [i.e., Francis Jacox ?]. 78 613. Blackwood's Magazine, vol. 48, 1848, p. 578. " De Quincey's revenge." A ballad in three fittes, by D. M. Moir. 614. Blackwood's Magazine, vol. 122, Dec, 1877, p. 717. The Opium-eater. [Review of Japp's " Life of De Quincey "]. 615. Blackwood's Magazine, vol. 154, 1893, p. 16. De Quincey's love of children. 616. Blackwood's Magazine, April, vol. 155, 1894, p. 480. Emerson's meeting with De Quincey, by P. L. 617. Bookman, February, 1907, pp. 207. Thomas De Quincey, by W. E. A. Axon. Illustrated by many of the portraits and views referred to in this bibliography. 618. Boston Traveller, March 20, 1878. Lecture on Thomas De Quincey, by James T. Fields. 619. British Critic, No. 50, vol. 20, 1822, p. 474. Review of " Confessions of an opium-eater." 620. British Quarterly Review, July, 1854, p. 163. De Quincey and prose writing. 621. British Quarterly Review, vol. 38, July, 1863, p. 1. Review of De Quincey's works. 622. British Quarterly Review, Oct., 1864, p. 433. Knighfs anecdotes of De Quincey. 623. British Quarterly Review, vol. 66, No. 132, Oct., 1877, p. 415. Review of Japp's "Life of De Quincey." 624. British Quarterly Review, vol. 75, 1882, p. 192. Review of Masson's " De Quincey." 79 625. British Workman, April, 1897. Public men I have met, by Robert Rae. 626. The Century, April, 1891, p. 853. Early intercourse of the Wordsworths and De Quincey, by A. H. Japp. 627. Chambers's Journal, No. 723, vol. 14, 1897, p. 710. Letter from Thomas De Quincey. 628. Christian Examiner, vol. 54, p. 428. Writings of De Quincey, by H. T. Tuckerman. 629. Christian Examiner, vol. 74, Jan., 1863, p. 77. Review of De Quincey's works, 630. Christian Examiner, n.s., vol. 80, 1866, p. 154. De Quincey and the religion of the Greeks. 631. Christian Remembrancer, vol. 29, p. 155. Review of De Quincey's "Autobiographic sketches." 632. Christian Review, vol. 19, pp. 72, 208. Notice of De Quincey, by H. Giles. 633. Christian Spectator, No. 3, vol. 1, 1860, p. 173. Leigh Hunt, De Quincey, Macaulay, by H. W. P. 634. Colburn's New Monthly Magazine, vol. 96, p. 142. Humour of De Quincey. 635. Colburn's New Monthly Magazine, vol. 98, p. 389. Pathos of De Quincey. 636. Colburn's New Monthly Magazine, vols. 101 and 105, pp. 338, 87. On De Quincey's " Mis- cellanies." 637. Co-operative News, May 25 and June 29, vol. 20, 1889. The Confessions of an English opium-eater, by C. Wallack, So 638. Cornhill Magazine, vol. g, n.s., p. 192. De Quincey, by Leslie Stephen. 639. Critic, 1853. Review of De Quincey's " Selec- tions," by George Gilfillan. 640. Critic, 1854- Two papers on De Quincey, by George Gilfillan. 641. Critic, 1857. Review of De Quincey's " Sketches," by George Gilfillan. 642. Critic, 1858. Four papers on De Quincey's "Works," by George Gilfillan. 643. Daily Picayune, Dec. 16, 1892. Opium in literature [De Quincey's experiences]. 644. The Dial, Chicago, vols. 11 and 12. Notices of De Quincey, by M. B. Anderson. 645. Dublin University Magazine, vol. 43, April, 1854, p. 409. Life and adventures of an opium- eater. 646. Dublin University Magazine, vol. 44., Sept., 1854, p. 331. Life and adventures of an opium- eater [concluded]. 647. Dumfries Herald, 1840. Article on De Quincey, by George Gilfillan. 648 East and West, Feb., 1904, p. 161. Opium in literature [chiefly about De Quincey], by A. H. Japp. 649. Eclectic Review, vol. 27, April, 1850, p. 397. Review of " Confessions " and " Logic of poli- tical economy," by George Gilfillan. 650. Eclectic Review, vol. 91, p. 397. Life and writings of De Quincey. Si 651. Eclectic Review, n.s., vol. 8, Oct., 1854, p. 385. Review of "Selections, grave and gay." 652. Eclectic Review, August, 1868, p. 95. Review of De Quincey's works. 652A. Every Saturday, vol. g, p. 82. On De Quincey, by H. M. Alden. 653. Fortnightly Review, October, 1867, p. 377. De Quincey and Coleridge upon Kant, by J. H. Stirling. 654. Fortnightly Review, March, 1871, p. 310. On the writings of De Quincey, by Leslie Stephen. 655- Fraser"s Magazine, vol. 61, Dec, i860, p. 781. Life and writings of Thomas De Quincey, by H. W. S. 656. Fraser's Magazine, vol. 62, Jan., 1861. p. 51. Life and writings of Thomas De Quincey, second paper. 657. Gentleman's Magazine, vol. 96, p. 142. Humour of Thomas De Quincey, by Sir Nathaniel [Francis JacoxP]. 658. Gentleman's Magazine, vol. 203, Aug., 1857, p. 107. Review of De Quincey's works. 658.V Gentleman's Magazine, vol. 261, 1886, p. 117. Some unconscious confessions of De Quincey, by A. H. Japp. 659. Glasgow Medical Journal, March, 1897, p. 178. Inaugural address [including a reference to De Quincey], by A. Simpson. S2 60. Great Thoughts, April 22, 1899, p. 52. Thomas De Quincey, by W. J. Dawson. 66i. The Guardian [London], June 5, 1901, p. 770. Poetic prose [on De Quincey's claim to have invented a "mode of impassioned prose"], by J. H. Fowler. 662. Harper's Magazine, vol. 62, 1880-1, p. 177 The English Lakes and their genii, by M. D. Conway. 663. Harper's Magazine, Feb., 1890, p. 446. Nights and days with De Quincey, by James Hogg, 664. Hogg's Instructor, vol. 9, 1852, p. 57. ' Der Englisch Opiumesser.' A fragment from a German. [On De Quincey's " Confessions," and other works.] 665. Hogg's Instructor, vol. 3, July, 1854, p. 1. De Quincey and his works. 666. Humane Review, vol. 5, 1905. p. 242. De Quincey and his critics. 667. Humanity : Journal of the Humanitarian League, Oct., 1898, p. 75. De Quincey as humanitarian. 668. Illustrated London News, May 30, 1891, p 710. Review of Japp's " Memorials of De Quincey," by J. Dykes Campbell. 669. Ladies' Companion, Sept., 1851, p. 158. Review of " Literary reminiscences." 670. Leisure Hour, vol. 40. Feb., 1891, p. 241. De Quincey, by John Dennis. 83 671. The Library, July, 1907. De Quincey and T. F. Dibdin, by W. E. A. Axon. 672. Library Association Record, Aug., 1900. The De Quincey Collection at Moss Side, by W. E. A. Axon. 673. Literary World, Dec. 9, 1881, p. 393. Review of Masson's " De Quincey." 674. Literary World, Mar. 12, 1886. De Quincey's later years. 675. London Quarterly Review, vol. 8, April, 1857, p. 198. Review of works of De Quincey. 676. London Quarterly Review, vol. 49, October, 1877, p. 35. Review of works of De Quincey. 677. Macraillan's Magazine, vol. 12, 1865, p. 74. Dead men I have known — Dr. Samuel Brown — Hugh Miller — De Quincey, by David Masson. 678. Macmillan's Magazine, June, 1890, p. 101. De Quincey, by George Saintsbury. 679. Manchester City News, April 25, 1896. The birthplace of Thomas De Quincey ; letter from Fred Leary. 680. Manchester City News, April n, 1896. Letters on De Quincey's birthplace, by G. Milner and J. D. Manning. 681. Manchester City News, April 25, 1896. Birthplace of Thomas De Quincey, by Fred Leary. 682. Manchester City News, Oct. 13, 1900. Letter on Mr. John Cassidy's bust of De Quincey, from the Rev. J. B. McGovern. »4 683. Manchester City News, May 16, 1903, Green- heys, Moss Side, and Mr. Quincey's house, by C. Roeder. 684. Manchester Guardian, Oct. 10, 1885. De Quincey's birthplace. 685. Manchester Guardian, Aug. 31, 1891. De Quincey's Highwayman, by W. E. A. Axon. 686. Manchester Guardian, Oct. 12, 1897. Review of Mrs. Oliphant's "William Blackwood and his Sons." Discusses De Quincey's dealings with the Blackwoods. 687. Manchester Guardian, Oct. 12, 1897. De Quincey and the Blackwoods, by W. E. A. Axon. 688. Manchester Guardian, Sept. 4, 1899. Thomas De Quincey and Wordsworth, a letter by T. Swindells. 689. Manchester Guardian, Sept 6, 1899. Thomas De Quincey and Manchester; letter from the Rev. J. B. McGovern. 690. Manchester Guardian, Dec. to, 1900. Some De Quincey documents, by W. E. A. Axon. 691. Manchester Guardian, Feb. 11, 1901. The Manchester Grammar School a century ago [De Quincey's schooldays], by W. E. A. Axon. 692. Manchester Guardian, Sept. 17, 1902. Tradi- tional birthplace of De Quincey [on the taking down of the " Prince's Tavern "]. 693. Manchester Guardian, Aug. i, 1903. De Quincey on Animal magnetism, by W. E. A. Axon. 8S 694. Manchester Guardian, Dec. 16, 1903. A daughter of Thomas De Quincey [Notice of the death of Mrs. Florence Baird Smith, the daughter of Thomas De Quincey], by W. E. A. Axon. 695. Manchester Guardian, Dec. 24, 1903. Scott and De Quincey, by W. E. A. Axon. 696. Manchester Guardian, Dec. 24, 1903. The Portraits of De Quincey, by W. E. A. Axon. 697. Manchester Guardian, Aug. 20, 1904. De Quincey and Wordsworth, by H. S. Salt. 697A. Manchester Guardian, Nov. 9, 1904. Illus- tration of Mr. John Cassidy's bust of De Quincey, with article on his characteristics. 698. Manchester Guardian, Sept. 28, 1907. De Quincey as electioneer, by W. E. A. Axon. 699. Manchester Herald, Sept. 16, 1899. The De Quincey Collection at Moss Side, by W. E. A. Axon. 700. Manchester Illustrated News, vol. 1, No. 1, 1892, p. 3. Lancashire worthies : I. — Thomas De Quincey. Por. and, illus. 701. Manchester Monthly. Illus. Vol. 1, 1894, pp. 1, 22, 46, 96. Eminent Manchester men : I. — Thomas De Quincey, by A. Stansfield. 702. Manchester Quarterly, Oct., 1892, p. 343. Thomas De Quincey, by Abraham Stansfield. 703. Manchester Quarterly, vol. 24, 1898, p. 268. De Quincey and J. F. Ferrier, by W. E. A. Axon. 86 704. Manchester Quarterly, April, 1900, p. 146. Some notes on Thomas Quincey, by John Mortimer. 705. Manchester Quarterly, July, 1903. Frontis- piece : bust portrait of De Quincey, after John Cassidy. 705A. Manchester Quarterly, Jan., 1904. De Quincey as self-pourtrayed, by Laurence Clay. 706. Manchester Weekly Times, Aug. 8 and 15, 1890. Thomas De Quincey. 707. Millgate Monthly, February, 1906, p. 275. Thomas De Quincey, by W. E. A. Axon. 708. The Mirror, Nov. 23, 1839, p. 335. A reference to De Quincey. 709. Monthly Review, vol. 100, March, 1823, p. 288. Notice of " Confessions of an opium-eater." 710. Nation [New York], vol. 52, Mar. 19, 1891, p. 242. The De Quincey family [Review of Japp's " De Quincey Memorials,"], by G. Woodberry. 711. The Nation [New York], Dec. 26, 1907^.586. Letter on De Quincey and "The Stranger's grave," by W. E. A. Axon. 712. National Review, vol. 3, 1884, p. 157. Chris- topher North [Notes of conversations with Professor John Wilson in 1843, including a curious description of De Quincey's habits and dress], by Lord Cranbrook. 713. New Quarterly Magazine, July, 1875, p. 2S7f De Quincey, by the Editor. 87 7i4- New York Daily Tribune, Jan. 19, 1896. De Quincey : his eccentricities described by those who knew him. 715. New York Times, July 9, 1898. Thomas De Quincey : features of his life and the charm of his writings, by Jean S. Satterlee. 716. New York Truth [ ]. The hand- some highwayman's skeleton [an omitted De Quincey passage], by A. H. Japp. 717. North American Review, vol 18, p. 90. On the " Confessions of an opium-eater," by W. Phillips. 718. North American Review, vol. 74, p. 425. On the writings of De Quincey, by S. G. Brown. 719. North American Review, vol. 88, 1859, P- 113. Review of " Writings of De Quincey," by G. S. Phillips. 720. North British Review, vol. 39, 1863, p. 62. Review of De Quincey's Works. 721. Notes and Queries, Seventh series, April 13, 1889, p. 281. Note on Thomas De Quincey, by C. C. Dove. 722. Notes and Queries, Seventh series, vols. 8, 9, 10. Reviews of Masson's edition of Works of De Quincey. 723. Notes and Queries, 9th series, vol. 2, p. 21. Note on "The Student of St. Bees," by W. E. A. Axon. 724. Notes and Queries, vol. 6, 9th series, p. 401. De Quincey and Hugo Grotius, by W. E. A. Axon. 88 72S- Notes and Queries, gth series, vol. 6 22, igoo, p. 487. De Quincey, and the si Aladdin, by W. E. A. Axon. 726. Notes and Queries, Aug. 6, 1904, p De Quincey's editorship of the "Westmi Gazette," by W. B. Kempling. 727. Notes and Queries, May 4, 1907. De Qi and animal magnetism, by W. E. A. Axoi 728. Palatine Note Book, 1881, vol. 1, Birthplace of Thomas De Quincey. 729. Palatine Note Book, 1882, vol. 2, p. De Quincey and his sister " Little Jane." S J. E. [i.e., John Evans], 730. Pall Mall Gazette, Feb. 16, 1885. recollections of De Quincey. 731. Pall Mall Gazette, June, 1899. Letl De Quincey's grave, by R. Mackay. 732. Papers of the Manchester Literary vol. S, '879. De Quincey and Manchest John Mortimer. 733. Papers of the Manchester Literary vol. S, 1879, p. 244, Birthplace of De Qu : by John Evans. 734. Papers of the Manchester Literary vol. 6, r88o, p. 219. De Quincey and Cole 735. People's and Howitt's Journal, vol. 1, p. 217. The English opium-eater, by F Frank [i.e., Francis Jacox]. 89 736. People's Friend, June 3 [ J. Anecdote of De Quincey : how his manuscripts were rescued from a landlady's wrath, by David Pae. 737. Phonographic Lecturer, vol. 5, pp. 65, 116. Life and writings of Thomas De Quincey, by S. Davey. 738. Quarterly Review, July, 1861, vol. no, p. 1. Review of " Selections, grave and gay," by T. E. Kebbel. 739. Revue des Deux Mondes, 15 Fevrier, 1893, p. 907. La Jeanne d'Arc de Thomas De Quincey, by Comte G. de Contades. 740. St. Bees School Magazine, April, 1899, pp. 50-3. "The Student of St. Bees"— De Quin- cey's narrative, with notes by the editor, Rev. W. H. Alderson. 741. Saturday Review, June 2, 1877, p. 675. Review of Japp's " Life of De Quincey." 742. Saturday Review, Dec. 17, 1881, p. 763. Review of Masson's " De Quincey." 743. Saturday Review, May 16, 1885. Review of " Confessions of an opium-eater." 744. Saturday Review, vol. 66, July 7, 1888, p. 329. Review of "Select essays of De Quincey." 743. Saturday Review, vol. 69, Feb. 8, 1890, pp. 171, 391, 714, Reviews of De Quincey's Works and Life. 746. Saturday Review, May 16, 1891, p. 602. Notice of the " Posthumous works of Thomas De Quincey." go 747. Saturday Review, vol. 79, Feb. 23, 1895, p, 246. How De Quincey worked, by E. Dowden, 748. Scottish Review, April, 1855, p. 97. Review of the works of De Quincey. 749. Scribner's Magazine, vol. 5, 1889, pp. 462, 5-9. A second shelf of old books [including notices of De Quincey, with portrait from a bas-relief], by Mrs. J. T. Fields. 750. Sheffield Iris, December, 1821. Notice of " Confessions of an English opium-eater," by J. Montgomery. 751. Speaker, Feb. 17, 1894, p. 196. Review of Japp's " Posthumous works of De Quincey." 752. Spectator, London, vol. 64, i8go, p. 730. De Quincey and his editors, by J. Dennis. 753. Sun Magazine, Nov., 1890, p. 97. Thomas De Quincey, by A. H. Japp. 754. T. P's Weekly, Nov. 8, 1907, p. 602. A note on Thomas De Quincey. 755. Temple Bar. On "Walking Stewart" [and De Quincey], by H. S. Salt. 756. Temple Bar, April, 1906, p. 289. Thomas De Quincey, by Edward Thomas. 757. Time, vol. 17, p. 447. Some thoughts on De Quincey, by H. S. Salt. 758. Tinsley's Magazine, Aug., vol. 27, 1880, p. 129. My copy of " An English opium-eater," by Richard Dowling. 759. The Unitarian, September, 1897, p. 425. Notice of " Flight of a Tartar tribe." 9' 760. Ulula [Manchester], May, 1899, p. 55. Article on De Quincey, with engraving of his bust (after Sir John Steell) exhibited at the Manchester Grammar School. 761. Universal Review, No. 19, Nov. 15, 1889, p. 393. A reminiscence of De Quincey, by Colin Rae-Brown. 762. University Correspondent, May 26, 1900, p. 326. De Quincey's " Confessions of an English opium-eater," by J. F. Stout. 763. Varsity Opinion [Manchester], vol. 1, March, April, May, October, 1905. Hours in a library : Thomas De Quincey. 764. Victorian Magazine, No. 2, Jan., 1892, p. 98. Further confessions of the opium-eater, by A. H. Japp. 765. Westminster Review, vol. 61, 1882, p. 519. Thomas De Quincey and his works, by H. A. Bright. 9 2 IX.— SCRAP BOOKS, ETC. The compiler has placed under this ^heading a few works illustrative of De Quincey's life and writings, including some items special to the Moss Side Collection. 766. Aikin (John) A description of the country from 30 to 40 miles round Manchester. London : 1795. 4t°- Includes many illustrations of Manchester as it was in De Quincey's early days. The map shows the posi- tion of the " late Mr. Quincey's house. 767. An account of the horrible and sanguinary murder of Elizabeth Bate . . by Alexander and Michael McKean, at the " Jolly Carter," Winton, near Manchester, May 2, 1826. Manchester : J. Pratt, 8vo pp. 26. This tract contains a report of one of the trials men- tioned in " Murder considered as one of the fine arts. " 768. Charles I. — Four tracts on the Trial and Sentence of King Charles. London : 1648. These tracts were formerly in De Quincey's library and were presented to the Collection by Mrs. Baird Smith. 769. Clowes (Rev. John) A Memoir of ; written by himself. Manchester: 1834. 8vo. pp. xiv. 313, 770. Cullingworth (C. J.) Charles White: an address. London : 1904. 8vo. Contains several extracts from the writings of De Quincey and personal references to him. 771. De Quincey and his writings. A volume of miscellaneous extracts. 60 items. The most important are noted in the bibliography, 93 ■fii. De Quincey (Francis John) On the religious objections to the use of chloroform in obstetric medicine. 31st March, 1849. A type-written copy of this unpublished medical thesis. It includes a long letter on the subject by Thomas De Quincey which afterwards appeared in Masson's edition of Worts xiv., pp. 286-293. 773. Dorset (St. John) Montezuma : a tragedy in five acts, and other poems. London : 1822. 8vo. This is one of the books formerly owned by De Quincey. It is inscribed " For the English Opium- eater, with Mr. Dorset's earnest respects." "St. John Dorset " was the pen-name of Hugo John Belfour, who was ordained in 1826 and died in the following year. The volume was presented to the Moss Side Collection by Mr, W. E. A. Axon. 774. Green (J. A.) comp. A De Quincey Scrap book, containing cuttings, views, portraits, and notices of books. The chief contents are included in this bibliography. 775. Kempferhausen (Philip) Letters from the Lakes. Ambleside : 1889. These letters appeared in "Blackwood's Magazine" in i8ig. In a prefatory note the publisher suggests that the melodious prose recalls the genius of De Quincey. 776. Knight (William) Official catalogue of the contents of Dove Cottage, Grasmere, Words- worth's home from 1799 to 1808 and afterwards De Quincey's residence. Ambleside : 1902. 8vo. 777. Lee (Mrs. Rrachel] F[anny] A[ntonina]) An essay on government. London : 1809. Referred to by De Quincey in " Autobiography, chap, v." The Moss Side copy formerly belonged to Mr. James Crossley, and Mr. J. E. Bailey. 94 778. Quincey (Thomas) Short tour in the Midland counties of England. [Anon]. 1775. 8vo. pp. 108. 779. Quincey (Thomas) Some De Quincey docu- ments, etc. Contains cuttings from the Manchester Guardian, Dec. 10, 1900 ; Type-written copy of Will of Thomas Quincey ; and copies of two letters by Thomas De Quincey. 780. Tales from "Blackwood," New series. Vol. 1. pp. 189-210. A recent confession of an opium-eater, by Major-Gen. E. B. Hamley [from Maga] Dec. ; 1856]. " This paper was written and published as a piece of good-humoured banter, during Mr. De Quincey s lifetime." 781. Trial of the brothers Gordon at the Oxford Assizes, March 5th, 1804, for the forcible abduc- tion Mrs. R. F. A. Lee. 8vo. pp. 31 [1]. This is a report of the trial described in Chap. V. of De Quincey's "Autobiography" under the title of "The female infidel." 782. Vibart (Col. H. M.) Addiscombe: its heroes and men of note. Westminster: 1894. Illus. Biography of Col. Baird Smith, pp. 461-470. His marriage with Florence De Quincey referred to, p. 469. 783. Vibart (Col. H. M.) Richard Baird Smith, the leader of the Delhi heroes in 1857. West- minster : 1897. Por. Col. Richard Baird Smith married De Quincey's daughter Florence, and their fortunes were anxiously followed during his last days. 95 X. -PORTRAITS. 1802. 784. De Quincey, aged 17. A miniature in the possession of Miss Baird Smith. Engraved in Masson's edition of Works, vol. 3, 1890, and in The Bookman, Feb., 1907. 1843. 783. Medallion portrait [aged 60], by Shakespeare Wood in bas-relief. This portrait is well known. It appears in Masson's edition of Works, vol. 1, 1889; Mrs. Fields' "A Shelf of old books," 1894; and The Bookman, Feb., 1907. 1845. 786. Half length. Portrait by an unknown artist, W. H. T. First published in Gilfillan's " Gal- lery of literary portraits, 1845." Signed Mr. Schenck, litho., Edinburgh. In the article accompanying the portrait, Gilfillan describes De Quincey's personal appearance : — "Conceive a little, pale-faced, woe-begone attenuated man, with short indescribables, no coat, check shirt, and neckcloth twisted like a wisp of straw, opening the door of his room in street, [Edinburgh], advancing towards you with hur- ried movement, and half-recognising glance ; saluting you in low and hesitating tones asking you to be seated ; . . His head is small, how can it carry all it knows ? His brow is singular in shape, but not particularly large or prominent : where has nature expressed his majestic intel- 9 6 lect? His eyes — they sparkle not, they shine not, they are lustreless : can that be a squint which glances over from them towards you ? No ! it is only a slight habit one of them has of occasionally looking in a different direction from the other ; there is nothing else particular about them ; there is not even the glare which lights up sometimes dull eyes into eloquence." 1845-59. 787. Three-quarters, seated in a chair. Painted by Sir John Watson Gordon, R.A., P.R.S.A Pre- sented by Henry George Watson, Esq., 1865, to the National Portrait Gallery. Engravings of this portrait appear in vol. 4 of Wilson's " Noctes Ambrosianae," 1864, and The Academy, vol. 51, Jan. 9, 1897, p. 47. 1850. 788. Daguerrotype, taken at Edinburgh by Howie in 1850 [De Quincey aged 65], and engraved by Frank Croll. This steel engraving appeared in Hogg's Instructor, vol. 6, 1851, p. 145, and was thought by the editor to be " the only one which can be considered satisfactory." An amusing letter from De Quincey indicates his approval of the portrait. 1855- 789. Chalk drawing [De Quincey aged 70], by James Archer, R.S.A. A family group con- sisting of De Quincey, with two daughters and one grandchild. The artist resided with the family at Lasswade for a short time. The 97 portrait of De Quincey in this group is some- times engraved separately, and a good copy of it appeared in The Bookman, Feb., 1907. A large photograph of the same was presented to the Moss Side Public Library in 1897, by the daughters and granddaughter of De Quincey. 1855. 790 A small oil miniature on ivory, in the possession of Miss Baird Smith, is illustrated in The Book- man, Feb., 1907. This was also the work of James Archer as shown by an extract from a letter of his given below. 1859-60. 791, A bust in marble, executed by Sir John Steell, R.S.A. In the possession of Miss Baird Smith. 792 A plaster bust (presumably the original of the above), modelled by Sir J. Steell, was presented to the National Portrait Gallery, by W. Bell Scott, Esq., 1889. 793. A replica of this bust is in the Manchester Grammar School. The following extract gives the probable date of this portrait [De Quincey having died Dec. 8, 1859]. _ The death mask referred to appears to be non-existent. "Ascertaining that there existed no adequate portrait of Mr. De Quincey in his later years, I suggested that a cast of his face should be taken. This was done by Mr. (now Sir John) Steell, R.S.A. ; and from this cast, aided by other materials, this eminent sculptor produced in the shape of a noble marble bust, a permanent record of the strikingly intellectual and refined lineaments of 'The English Opium- Eater.'"— Findlay's "Personal recollections of De Quincey," 1886, p. 68. 98 1904. 794. A painting, three-quarter length, De Quincey seated in a chair leaning forward, by James Archer, R.S.A. It was specially painted by the artist from private sketches and his own recollec- tion of the subject. The portrait was purchased by the Manchester Art Gallery Committee for the Permanent Collection, and may be seen at the Art Gallery, Mosley Street. The genesis of this picture and several others, is given in the following extract from an interesting letter written by Mr. Archer to the compiler. I stayed with Dc Quincey in his Lasswade cottage in the year 1855. The chalk drawing was a group con- taining De Quincey, his two daughters, and grandchild. . . . Besides the chalk drawing of the group I made one of Mrs. Baird Smith to leave behind her. I also made some oil miniatures on_ ivory of De Quincey and the two sisters, for Mrs. Baird Smith. 1904. 795. Plaster bust, modelled by Mr. John Cassidy, sculptor, of Manchester. Presented to Moss Side Library in 1904 by the artist. An illustra- tion appeared in The Manchester Guardian of Nov, 9th, 1904. 796. Mrs. Thomas De Quincey. A portrait of Margaret Simpson, from a miniature dated 1816, is engraved in Garnett's " History of English literature," 1903, vol. 4, p. 163. Portraits of other members of the De Quincey family appeared in the Feb. Bookman, 1907. INDEX TO SECTIONS II. & III. Addison (J.) 213, 272, 306, 328 iElms Lamia 232, 288, 308, 323, 334 Analects from Richter 14, 34, 266, 307, 328 Anecdotage 20, 292, 307, 322 Anglo-German dictionaries 334 Animal magnetism 82 Antagonism 26 Antigone of Sophocles... 162, 272, 293, 305, 327 Astrology 179, 287, 330 Augustus 71 Autobiographic sketches ...199, 257, 277, 303, 318 Avenger 106, 274, 298, 312, 329 Bentley (R.) 66, 267, 285, 306, 321 Bible true 220, 272, 309, 325 Biographies 284, 321, 322 Buhle (Prof.) 33 Burke (E.) 328 Buttermere, Mary of 207 Caesars, The ...71, 74, 87, 88, 248, 288, 308, 323 California 206, 214, 271, 298, 311, 326 Caligula 74 Carlisle (Lard) 201, 270, 292, 295, 306, 328 Casuistry ...117, 129, 269, 281, 286, 310, 324, 325 Ceylon 148, 291, 311, 324 Charlemange 72, 270, 292, 307, 322 Childhood, Affliction of 199, 257, 278, 303, 318 China 131, 234, 236, 238, 313, 324, 331, 334 Christianity 164, 269, 291, 309, 325 Chronology, Memorial 310, 331 Chrysomania 338 Church of Scotland Secession 150, 270, 309 Cicero 144, 264, 285, 308, 323 Cintra, Convention of 7a Civilisation 119 Clare (John) 134, 253, 304, 320 Claudius 74 Close comments upon a straggling speech... 7b Clowes (Rev. John) 99 Coleridge (S. T.) ...85, 90, 99, 123, 154, 252, 2 53, 2 79> 2 9*> 3? 2 > 3°4. 3 X 9> 3 22 > 33^ Complaint of the bird 34 Conversation. ..175, 190, 271, 293, 296, 313, 32.7, 338 Cosmo-political plan 46, 326 Count Fitz-Hum 312 Cunningham (A.) 134, 253, 304, 320 Cjymon 279, 318 Daughter of Lebanon 225, 302, 320 Davy (Sir Humphry) 99, 252, 304, 320 Deaf ness 34 Death, Visioii of sudden... 34, 188, 249, 282, 302, 33° Deaths of young children 34 De Quincey's reply to Hazlitt's letter 326 Dialogues of three Templars... 37, 256, 282, 311, 326 Dibdin (Rev. F. T.) 50 Dictionaries, English 272, 305 Didactic poetry 328 Dinner, real and reputed 121, 249, 308 Dream echoes 257, 303, 318 Dream-fugue 282, 330 Dream upon the universe 35, 293, 296, 300 Dreaming 34, 330 Dribble (Rev. F. T.) " The Street Companion". .50 Dryden (John) 212, 272, 305, 327 Dublin , 257, 27S, 303,318 Duelling 253, 304, 320, 334 Early days 250 Earth, Age of the 79, 331 Edinburgh 62, 93, 102, 107, 152, 294. 296, 300 Education '. 39, 333 England 318, 326 English dictionaries 26, 305 — History, Falsification of. ..43, 272, 291, 311, 326 — ■ — Storms in 228, 333 — How to write 216, 334 — in China 334 — in India 333 — language 115, 198, 331 — Mail coach 187, 249, 282, 302, 330 — manners 2S7 — Opium-eater. See Confessions. — physiology 41 Essenes 127, 238, 263, 288, 309, 324 Eternity 210, 269, 309 Events, Prefigurations of 333 Falsification of English History ...43, 272, 291, 3"> 3 26 Fatal Marksman 31, 291, 312, 329 Female infidel 257, 303, 318 Female students 279, 318 Finlay (G.) 308 Fit* Hum (Count) 48, r<8g, 312, 329 Forster's "Life of Goldsmith" 183 Foster (John) 261, 291, 307, 328 Fox (C. J.) .' 328 Freemasons, Origin of the 23, 298, 330 French invasion of Ireland 257, 278, 303, 318 — manners 287 Fugue 302 German language 333 — literature 250 — studies 319 — tales 289, 290 Gilfillan's (G.) literary portraits, notes on... 161, 291, 328 Godwin (Wm.)...99> 2 5 2 > 2DI > 2QI > 3°4> 3°7> 3 20 > 328 Goethe's Wilhelm Meister 44, 292, 307, 328 Goldsmith (O.) 183, 261, 284, 306, 321 Grant (Mrs.) of Laggan 99, 252,, 304, 320 Grasmere 124, 253, 279, 304, 330 Greece 75, 151, 293 — Modern 145, 270, 313, 324 — Revolution of 75, 255, 289, 313, 324 — under the Romans 269, 286, 308, 324 Greek literature 113, 125, 327, 333 — orators 125 — tragedy 271, 287, 305, 327 Hamilton (Sir. Wm.) 208, 266, 298, 310, 322 Hawkins's (Miss) anecdotes 20, 322 Hayti, King of 27, 291, 312, 329 Hazlitt (Wm.) 28, 261, 291, 307, 326, 328 Heavens, System of trie... 166, 219, 260, 281, 310, 3 2 5 io3 Hebrew lady, Toilette of... 60, 270, 291, 308, 323 Herder (J. G. von) 21, 266, 292, 310, 321 Herodotus, Philosophy of... 142, 263, 287, 308, 323 Hexastich of Dryden 212, 272, 305, 327 Historico-critieal inquiry 33, 298, 330 History, English, Falsification of ...43, 272, 291, 311, 326 storms in 228, 333 Hogg (James) 236, 332 Homer 138, 263, 284, 305, 323 Homeridse 263, 284, 305, 323 Horace's Ode, translation of 7, 331 House of weeping 14, 334 Human science 309, 325 Hume (David) 43> Il6 > 2 ' J 9> 3°9 Imagination 34 Imaginative essays 337 Incognito 48, 289, 312, 329 India, English in 333 Indian affairs, Notices of 235 Infant literature 257, 278, 303, 318 Iphigenia 279, 318 Ireland 250, 257, 278, 303, 318 Irvine (Edward) 134, 253, 304, 320 Iscanot (Judas) 211, 269, 285, 309, 325 Joan of Arc 170, 249, 281, 307, 322 Johnson (S.) 242 Junius 134, 244c, 253, 304,. 320, 328 K— familv 314, 3*9 Kalmuck Khan, flight of ioi, 282, 324 Kant (E.) ...24, 38, 40, 46, 56, 57, 65, 79. 2 °°> 266, 281, 298, 299, 310, 315, 319, 321, 325, 3 26 > 33>> 333 104 Keats (John) 161, 261, 284, 307, 328 Klosterheim 6g^ 256, 273, 312, 329 Knowledge, superfical 43, 272, 313 Laggan (Mrs. Grant of) 99, 252, 304, 320 Lake-country dialect 9, 233, 333 Lake reminiscences 123 Lakes, society of 134, 253, 304, 319 Lakers, To the 26 Lamb (ChaTles) ...no, 185, 247, 252, 287, 304, 307, 320, 322 Lamia, ^Elius 232, 288, 308, 323 Landor (W. S.) ...168, 171, 261, 272, 287, 291, 305, 328 Language 271, 287, 305, 327 — English H5, 198, 331 Languages 19 " Laocoon," Lessing's 55, 292, 328 Laxton 218, 279 Lebanon, Daughter of 225, 302, 320 Lessing (G. E.) 55, 266, 292, 310, 328 Letter of Wm. Hazlitt 326 Letters to a young man 19, 271, 293, 310, 327 Levana 330 Lewthwaite (Barbara) 302 Libel, Story of a 253, 304, 320 Life, Vision of 330 — Sketches of.. .84, 91, 97, in, 124, 134, 140,250 Literary acquaintances 99, 319 — -criticism 305 — history 174, 272, 286, 306, 328 — reminiscences from the Autobiography of an E.O.E 251, 304 Literature, Infant 257, 278, 303, 318 Literary speculation 290, 291; i°5 Liverpool literary coterie 319 Lloyd (Charles) 134, 233, 304, 310 Logic .,. 192 Logic of political economy... 152, 275, 299, 311, 316, 326 London i34j 2 S°j 2 57> 3 02 > 3°3j 3 iS — Journal, Libellous attack by a 253, 304 Love-charm 52, 329, 334 Macbeth 26, 249, 293, 305, 327 Mackintosh (Sir James) 165, 266, 292, 310, 325 Madness 41 Magnetism, Animal 82 Mail-coach, English 187, 249, 282, 302, 330 Malthus 26, 28, 29, 311, 326, 333 Man, Dignity of 34 — Grandeur of 34 Manchester Grammar School 302, 318 Manhood, Premature 250, 257, 303, 318 Manners, Sketches of 84, 91, 97, in, 124 — French and English 195, 271, 313, 331 Manuscripts of Melmoth 43 Marksman, Fatal 31, 291, 312, 329 Martyrdom ,... 34 Masson (D.) Works of De Quincey 3, 119 Masque, The 69, 329 M'Kean murders 222 Measure of value 311 Meister, Wilhelm 44, 292, 307, 328 Melmoth, MSS. of 43 Memorial chronology 310, 331 — suspiria .:.. 330 Milton (J.). ..77, 171, 212, 241, 242, 270, 272, 285, 289, 291, 305, 307, 321, 327, 328 Mind, Presence of 196, 271, 293, 313, 331 io6 Minds, Philosophic 34 Miracles 286, 325 — Hume on 116, 269, 309 Modem England 326 — superstition 130, 260, 281, 309, 325 Montgomery J.) Letter to 12 More (Hannah) 80, 134, 319, 331 Motion, Glory of 202, 302, 330 Murder 58, 118, 221, 249, 282, 312, 330 Murders, Williams and M'Kean 222 Mutineers, Orthographic ...169, 249, 293, 305, 328 My brother Pink no, 250, 257, 318 Nameless heroes 34 National character 298 — temperance movements 311, 331 Nero 74 Night 34 North Wales, Wanderings in 302 Notes from pocket-book 41, 43, 327 Novels 331, 333 Opium-eater. See Confessions. — pains and pleasures 320 — question with China 131, 331 Oracles, Pagan 143. 2 55> 2 ^> 3°9> 3 2 4 Orators, Greek 125 Oiphan heiress 255, 318 Orthographic mutineers ...169, 249, 293, 305, 328 Oiford 250, 255, 303, 319 Pagan oracles 143, 244c, 255, 286, 309, 324 Parentage 3 l8 Parr (S.) 68, 267, 306, 322 Patriot emperors °7 Peace, Problem of 3*5 io7 Philosopher, Peripatetic 272 Philosophic minds 34 Philosophy of Roman history 308, 323 — of Roman meals ng, 263 Physiology, English 41 Pink, My brother no, 318 Plato's Republic 137, 263, 287, 308, 395 Poetry, Didactic 328 — Wordsworth 328 Political economy... 36, 152, 275, 282, 299, 311, 3*6, 3 26 > 333 — movement 325 — parties 297, 311 Politics 326 Pope (Alex.) Biographies of 297 Pope (Alexander)... 103, 184, 2or, 213, 247, 261, 270, 272, 287, 292, 295, 306, 321, 328 Population, Malthus on 326, 333 Portraits, Gallery of 76 Premature manhood 250, 257, 303, 318 Presence of mind 196, 27r, 293, 313, 331 Priory, Chester 218, 279, 318 Problems 286 Protestantism r76, r8r, 269, 286, 309, 325 Proverbs 26 Public School warfare 257, 303, 318 Punishment 244c Rabbins, Traditions of the 293, 296, 316 Radicalism 92, 96, 297, 311, 326 Rambles from the Lakes 319 Reformadoes < 26 Revolt of the Tartars 100, 282, 324 Revolution of Greece 75., 255, 2S9, 313, 324 Revolutions 333 ioS Rhetoric 61, 264, 289, 305, 327 Ricardo (David) 36, 146, 282, 326, 333 Richter (J. P.) 13, 3S» 2 ° 6 » 293, 307, 328 — Analects from 14, 34, 266, 307, 328 Roman history, Philosophy of 308 — meals, Casuistry of 281, 324 Philosophy of 119, 263 — Western Empire iiij Roscoe's edition, Pope's Works 184 Rosicrucians, Origin of the 33, 298, 330 Rosse (Lord) 166, 260, 281, 310, 325 Saracen's Head 124, 253, 304, 319 Schnackenberger (Mr.) 22, 329, 334 Scotland, Church of 150, 270, 309 Schlosser's Literary history ...174, 286, 306, 328 Schiller (J. C. F. von) ...108, 247, 297, 307, 321 Science of political economy 36, 333 Scott (Sir W.) 45> S3. 34' Secret societies 173, 238, 264, 285, 309, 324 Scriptural expression for eternity 210, 269, 309 Shakespeare (W.)...io9, 227, 247, 297, 307, 321, 334) 33^ Shelley (P. B.) i6r, 261, 284, 307, 328 Shepherd (Dr.) 99 Siddons (Mrs. Sarah) 134, 319 Social life, Juggernaut of 29S Smith (Adam) 146, 326 Smith (Miss Eliz.) 134, 3*9 Society of the lakes 134, 253, 304, 319 Sophocles, Antigone of ...162, 272, 293, 305, 327 Sortilege 178, 287, 330 Southey (Robert). ..123, 171, 253, 272, 279, 291, 3°5' 3 r 9. 328, 338 Spanish military nun 172, 259, 281, 313, 330 log Sphinx's riddle 191, 256, 288, 308, 323 Stars 34 Stewart (Walking) ...26, 134, 253, 272, 286, 304, 307, 320 Street companion 50 Strife, World of 257, 303, 318 Style .••132. "36, 264. 289, 305, 327 Sudden death, Vision of... 34, 188, 249, 282, 302, 33° Suetonius 232, 334 Suicide 26, 272, 310, 325 Suliotes, The 75, 313, 324 Superficial knowledge 43, 272, 313 Superstition, Modern 13 j, 260, 281, 309, 325 Swedenborgianism, Abstract of 40, 331, 333 Swedish pastor 14 Suspiria de profundis...i55, 298, 330,337,246,302 Swift (J.) 328 Sympsons, The 134, 319 System of the heavens ...166, 219, 260, 281, 310, 3 2 S Talfourd (T. N.) 134, 185, 253, 304, 320 Tartar tribe, Revolt of a...ior, 259, 282, 313, 324 Taylor (John) 134, 320 Temperance movements. ..158, 260, 291, 311, 331 Templars, Three dialogues of.. .37, 256, 282, 311, 326 Theban Sphinx. See Sphinx's riddle. Three memorable murders 312 Toilette of the Hebrew lady 60, 270, 2gr, 323 Toryism 92, 96, 297, 311, 326 Traditions of (he Rabbins (by Dr. G. CroIy)...293, 296, 316 Tragedy, Greek .:.. 128, 287, 303, 327 Travelling 250, 257, 303, 318 Two masters for one dog 22, 329, 334 Universal history, Kant's Idea of... 46, 292, 326 Use of opposites 34 Value, Measure of 29S, 333 Vision of sudden death. .34, 188, 249, 282, 302, 330 Wales, Wanderings in 302 Walking Stewart. See Stewart. Walkdmor 45, 53, 112, 252, 304, 331, 341 Walpole (Horace) 244c War 260, 282, 311, 325 Wellesley (Marquess) 163, 272, 286, 307, 322 Wellington (Duke of) 131, 331 Westmoreland dalesmen 134, 319 Whiggism 92, 96, 230, 284, 297, 311, 326 Wilhelm Meister 44, 292, 307, 328 Williams murder 222 Wilson (John)... 134, 193, 298, 307, 313, 319, 322, 333 Woman's eyes 244c! Wordsworth (W.) ...123, 134, 252, 279, 284, 304, 305, 320, 328, 338 World of strife 257, 303, 318 John Hevwood Ltd., Excelsior Printing and Bookbinding Works, Manchester. Wmr^Mm