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| | D. | | Deffand (Madame du), 50. | | | De Quincey (T.), on Janus Weathercock, 86. | | | Derby Day, 180. | | | De Soyres (John), E. F.G.'s nephew, 230. | | | De Soyres (Mrs.), E. F.G.'s sis- ter, her death, 162. | | | Devrient, his Theory of Shake- speare's Sonnets, 244. | | | Dickens (Charles), 70 ; E. F.- G.'s admiration for him, 49, 122 ; his passion for colours, 51. | | | Donne (Blanche), 45, 107, 233. | | | Donne (Charles), 91, 108, 127. | | | Donne (Mrs. Charles), her death, 103. | | | Donne (Mowbray), 8, 27, 35, 59, 82, 91, 108, 135, 178, 186, 188, 191, 199, 200, 205, 215, 219, 233, 247, 249, 251 ; visits E. F.G., 83. | | | Donne (Valentia), 4, 16, 107, 155, 192 ; her marriage, 123. | | | Donne (W. B.), mentioned, 1, 2, 4, 6, 15, 45, 57, 61, 75, 95, 99, 107, 117, 175, 200, 205, 215, 219, 220, 233 ; his Lectures, 8 ; his ill- ness, 33, 35, 37, 39 ; retires from his post as Licenser of Plays, 45, 47 ; his successor, 47 ; re- views Macready Memoirs, 72 ; his death, 234. | | | Ducis, 210. | | | Dunwich, 134. | E. | | Eastern Question (the), 113. | | | Eckermann, a German Boswell, 150. | | | Edwards (Edwin), 134, 135, 153 ; his death, 150 ; exhibition of his pictures, 160, 162, 163. | | | Elio (F. J.), 116. | | | Elliot (Sir Gilbert), pastoral by, 79. | | | Euphranor, 62. | F. | | Fawcett ( Professor), 238. | | | FitzGerald (Edward), parts with his yacht, 2 ; his reader's mis- takes, 2 ; his house at Wood- bridge, 6, 16 ; his unwillingness to have visitors, 6, 7 ; his mother, 9 ; reads Hawthorne Notes of Italian Travel, 10 ; Memoirs of Harness, 11 ; can- not read George Eliot, 13, 36, 165 ; his love for Sir Walter Scott, 13, 220 ; visits his brother Peter, 13 ; on the art of being photographed, 22, 23 ; reads Walpole, Wesley, and Boswell Johnson, 25, 26 ; in Paris in 1830, 28 ; cannot read Goethe Faust, 29, 120 ; reads Ste. Beuve's Causeries, 38, and Don Quixote, 38, 43 ; has a skeleton of his own, bronchitis, 43, 44, 72 ; goes to Scotland, 46 ; to the Academy, 47 ; reads Dick- ens, 49 ; Crabbe, 52 ; condenses the Tales of the Hall, 56, 61, 114 ; death of his brother Peter, 61 ; translations from Calderon, 60 ; tries to read Gil Blas and La Fontaine, 62 ; admires Cor- neille, 70 ; reads Madame de Sévigné, 70 ; writes to Notes and Queries, 79 ; begins to 'smell the ground,' 80 ; his rec- ollections of Paris, 81 ; reads Mrs. Trollope ' A Charming Fellow,' 92 ; on framing pic- tures, 93, 96, 98, 102 ; transla- tion of the Agamemnon, 93, 100, 103, 107 ; meets Macready, 99 ; his Lugger Captain, 100, 111, 114 ; prefers the Second Part of Don Quixote, 104 ; scissors and paste his ' Harp and Lute,' 122 ; reads Dickens' Great Expectations, 122 ; on nightingales, 124 ; wished to dedicate Agamemnon to Mrs. Kemble, 125 ; reads The Heart | -256- | | |
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Publication Information: Book Title: The Letters of Edward Fitzgerald to Fanny Kemble. Contributors: William Aldis Wright - editor, Edward FitzGerald - author. Publisher: Macmillan. Place of Publication: New York. Publication Year: 1895. Page Number: 256.
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