Index

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Note: PBS refers to Percy Bysshe Shelley; RLS refersto Robert Louis Stevenson; MW refers to Mary Wollstonecraft.

Adam-Salomon, Antoine Samuel, 202, 203

Alfredo, 167-70

Antwerp, 42

Apollinaris, Father, 31-2, 34, 37

Arnold, Matthew, on Shelley, 152, 182, 197-8

Auden, W. H., 205

Aussandon, Dr, 251

Backman, Elias, 112

Bagni di Lucca, 144-50, 156

Balzac, Honoré de, 224, 229, 233, 242, 257

Barlow, Joel, 117; in Paris, 102, 104, 106-7, 111-12; writings, and White’s Hotel group, 89

Barlow, Ruth, 112, 117; and MW, 102, 106, 115; MW’s letters to, 104-5, 118, 119

Bastille prison, 80

Baudelaire, Charles, 210, 233, 238; and Gautier, 247; on photography, 202; photographs of, 205-7

Beaupuy, Michel, 82, 85

Belgium, Nerval in, 230-1

Bell, George, 252, 259

Beresina river, French army crosses, 218

Berlioz, Hector, La Damnation de Faust, 222

Bernhardt, Sarah, photograph, 205

biography, writing, 27, 66-9, 115-16, 119-20, 130-1, 135-6, 249; artform?, 202; autobiography, 55, 207-8; “central consciousness”, 208-9; focusing effect, 114, 148; intimacy, 66, 120, 143-4, 173-4; objectivity, 67-9; photographycompared with, 150, 178-9, 202-3, 204-5; and possibilities, 168; andprivacy, 207-8; process of, 27, 66-69; self-identification with subject, problem of, 66-7, 264-5; and time, 179; trust in character, 173-5; see also past, the

Blake, William, 76

Blanche, Dr Emile, 251-2, 255, 257, 258-9; Nerval’s letters to, 257, 258, 260; account of Nerval’s death, 261-2

Blanche, Dr Esprit, 236, 237, 239, 251

Blois, Wordsworth at, 81-2

Blood, Fanny, 94, 119

Bojti, Dr, 159

Borel, Petrus, 223

Boris, 167-70

Boucher, Antoine, 217, 219-21, 265

Boucher, Mme (grandmother of Nerval), 222

Bregantz, Aline (Mme Fillietaz), seeFillietaz family

Brissot de Warville, Jacques Pierre, 95, 102, 106

Brussels, Nerval in, 229, 231, 243, 244

Byron, George Gordon, Lord, 137, 146; and Claire Clairmont, 141, 155-6; and daughter Allegra, 141, 144, 155; and PBS, 138, 156, 177, 184, 185, 195; villas of, 144, 145, 146, 154, 178

CRS (Compagnies Républicaines de Sécurité), 78

Cairo, 167; Nerval at, 244, 245, 246

Camisards, the, 48-9, 61, 63-4

Carlyle, Thomas, 97

Casssagnas, 60-1

Cazotte, Jacques, 248, 250; Diable Amoureux, 248

Cévennes, storms of the, 25

Champfleury, Jules, 252

Chantilly (Valois), 271-3; château, 226; Les Fontaines, 271-2, 273; Lovenjoul Library, 270, 271, 272

character, human, consistency of, 173-175, 260

Charpentier (publisher), 235

Chastel, Jean, 24, 25

Chateaubriand, François René, Vicomte de, 233, 234

Chatterton, Thomas, 73, 224

Cheylard, 29, 30

Chiappa, Villa dei, 144, 146-50

Clairmont, Allegra, 140, 149, 155, 156, 171; with Byron, 141, 144; Clairevisits, 156, 157; death, 184, 187

Clairmont, Claire, 136, 137, 140; in Kentish Town, 1814-15, 155-6; and Byron, 155-6, 195; in Italy with Shelleys, 142, 144, 145, 146; alone with PBS, 1818, 156-7, 170; letter from PBS, 1818, 158-9; mother of Elena?, 170-7; in Rome, 163-5; away from PBS, in Florence, 159-62, 179-80; at Casa Magni, 160, 184, 188, 189, 191, 194, 195; leaves Italy, 154-5; papers surviving, 182; and daughter Allegra, 149, 155, 171, 184; visits Allegra, 156, 157; and Mary Shelley, 172, 176, 183, 191, 194; relations with PBS, 151, 152, 153-4, 155-62, 163-165, 174, 179-83, 187, 195; attractiveness, 181; journal, 154-5, 163-164, 165, 175-6; trans. Faust, 195

Clarisse (inn servant), 55-6

Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, 76, 77, 85;Biographia Literaria, 126

Colon, Jenny, 229, 243-4, 251, 264, 265

Colvin, Sidney, 43, 44, 45, 63, 64

communes, 76, 181; Paris Student, 88

community, PBS’s view of, 142-3

Condorcet, Marie Jean, Marquis de, 94, 95, 103, 106

Connolly, Cyril, 209, 278

Constantinople, Nerval in, 245-7

Corday, Charlotte, 110

Costaros, 21-2

Courbet, Gustave, The Artist’s Atelier, 206

Crèspy family, 13-15, 16

Curran, Aemilia, 165

Danton, Georges Jacques, 117

Dawes, Sophie (Duchesse de Feuchère), 226, 267

De Gaulle, Charles, 75

Delacroix, Ferdinand Eugène, Femmes d’Alger, 234

de Quincey, Thomas, 76

Deschamps, Anthony, 239, 240

Desmoulins, Camille, 117

dogs, 60, 275

donkeys, 16-17; Modestine, 17, 18, 19-20, 28, 50, 52-3, 62

doppdgänger. Nerval, 263-4; PBS, 195-196 Doré, Gustave, photograph, 205

dreams, 26-7, 30, 143, 150-1; PBS’s, 192-7

du Camp, Maxime, 203

du Condé, Duc, 226, 271

du Goulet, Montagne, 50

Dumas, Alexandre: collaborates with Nerval, 222, 229, 231; publishes”El Desdichado” and attacks Nerval in print, 255-6; and Nerval’s collected works, 256-7; La Tour de Nesle, 224

Dusetgneur, Jehan, 223

Duval, Jean, 206

Edinburgh, RLS in, 15, 32, 45

Egypt, Nerval in, 244, 245, 246-7

Eliot, T. S., The Waste Land, 212, 268

Elise (nurse), see Foggi, Elise

Este, Villa Capuccini, PBS at, 156-7, 172

Feuchère, Duchesse de (SophieDawes), 226, 267

Fillietaz family, 95, 97, 102, 106, 107

Finiels, Pic de, 52-5

Fitzgerald, Lord Edward, 89

Florac, 19, 59

Florence, 175; Claire Clairmont in, 159, 161, 174, 180

Foggi, Elise (nurse), 156-7, 171, 172, 173, 174

Foggi, Paolo (manservant), 144, 172, 175-6, 177 Fonfrède, Joseph, 234, 245

Fontmort, Plan de, 61

Ford, Ford Madox, 209

Fourier, Charles, 227

Fouzilhac, 28, 29

France: RLS in, 14-63; MW in, 94-130; Wordsworth in, 75, 79-85;see also place names

Françoise, 74, 214-16, 235, 268, 275

French Revolution, 1789-94, 75, 88;1790-2, witnessed by Wordsworth, 79-86, 89; 1792-5, witnessed by MW, 95-106, 110-13, 115-16, 117-19, 123, 128; Maximum Laws, 106, 110, 128; English Romanticattitude to, 76-7, 86, 89; relapsefrom, 77-8, 127-8; final Englishimpact of, 131

French Revolution, 1968, 73, 74-6, 77, 78, 87-8

Fuseli, Henry, 93-4, 95

Gautier, Théophile, 224, 234, 254, 270; early career, and Nerval, 212-13, 221, 223; relations with Nerval, 213, 259-60; in Doyenné, 228-9; abroad with Nerval, 230-1; writesof Nerval, 214, 221, 229, 230-1, 239, 243-4, 245, 248, 263; letters to Nerval, 231-2, 268-9, 272-3; openletters, 246-7; on Nerval’s madness, 235, 236, 237, 248; Nerval writes of, 259; at Nerval’s death, 261; face, 205, 210; parents, 221, 223, 238; house, 217

Mlle de Maupin, 233; La Péri, 232, 246-7

Genlis, Stéphanie de, 95

German Army, 272

Germany, Nerval in, 231, 251, 257

Gévaudan, 23, 25, 26, 28-9; Beast of, 24-5

Girondists, 82, 83, 84; MW and, 94-5, 102-3, 128; arrested, 96, 106

Gisborne, John and Maria, letters to: from Mary Shelley, 171, 192-3; from PBS, 175, 176-7

Godwin, Mary (later Mrs PBS), seeShelley, Mary

Godwin, Mary (née Wollstonecraft), seeWollstonecraft, Mary

Godwin, William: and revolution, 77-8, 104; and MW, 92, 120, 130, 131; Memoir of MW, 95, 108, 110; edits MW’s works, 120-1; and PBS, 141; Political Justice, 77

Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von, 222;Faust, trans, by Claire Clairmont, 195; by Nerval, 222

Goudet, 20-1

Gouges, Olympe de (Marie Gouze), 95, 110

Gounod, Charles Francois, 251

Grez-sur-Loing, 39, 40, 42-3

Guevara, Che, 76

Guiccioli, Teresa, 177

Hamilton-Rowan, Archie, 124-5, 130

Hazlitt, William, 76-8; The Spirit of the Age, 76-8

Hemingway, Ernest, A Moveable Feast, 201

Hogg, Thomas Jefferson, 142-3, 155

Hoppner, Richard Belgrave, 157

Houssaye, Arsène, 228

Hugo, Victor, 221, 222, 223, 238;Hernani, 223, 224

Hunt, Leigh, 142-3, 185, 189, 190; Mary Shelley’s letter to, 188

Ile de France: villages, 263; see alsoValois

imagination: internalised, Nerval’s, 236; powers of, MW, 126-7; andreason, 86, 87-8, 127, 131-2; andrevolution, 86, 87-8, 127-8; PBS, rebirth of, 165

Imlay, Fanny: birth, 118-19; infancy, 119-23, 124, 125, 130; death, 130, 141

Imlay, Gilbert: and French Revolution, 102, 106; trading scheme for, 111-112; relations with MW, 102-3, 105-16, 117-18, 120; registers MW as wife, 111; at Le Havre-Marat with MW, 117-18, 120;

Imlay, Gilbert—contd.

leaves MW at Le Havre-Marat, 123-4; reunited, 124; as father, 121-3; in London, 125-6, 129, 130; subject of play by MW, 131; writings, 102-3

Italy, 136-9; Nerval in, 230, 247, 273-274; PBS in, 138, 139-98; see also place names

Jackson, Rev William, 89

James Henry, 174, 209

Janin, Jules, 222, 224, 241; mock-obit. of Nerval, 239; Nerval’s replies to, 240-1, 242-3; letter to Nerval, 250; reviews L’Imagier, 252

Jeunes-France, the, 223, 239

Johnson, Joseph, 89, 90; and Girondists, 90, 94; and MW, 91-2, 93, 95, 96, 130; letters from MW, 100, 101; publishes MW, 118, 120

Jones, Robert, 79

Journal de Constantinople, Le, 246-7

Journal des Débats, 239-41

Karr, Alphonse, 203, 270

Keats, John, 150, 211

Kentish Town, Shelleys in, 155

Kerouac, Jack, 13, 66-7

Labrunie, Etienne: career and marriage, 217-19; and son (Nerval), 218-19, 222, 223, 224, 227, 229, 233-4, 238; when Nerval mad, 238-9; letters from Nerval, 231, 232-3, 244, 247, 257-8

Labrunie, Gérard, see Nerval, Gérardde

Labrunie, Mme (aunt of Nerval), 261

Labrunie, Marguerite (née Laurent):marriage and death, 217-18, 219; letters to son (Nerval), 217, 265

Laing, R. D., 236-7

Lamartine, Alphonse de, 234

Landos, 23

Langogne, 23, 24, 25-7; bridge, 26, 27, 67

Laurent, Eugenie, 222

Laurent, Marguerite, see Labrunie, Marguerite

Le Bleymard, 50-1

Le Bouchet, 21, 22

Leclerc, Edmond, 242

Le Havre-Marat, MW at, 112, 114-24, 129-30

Le Monastier, 13-15, 16-17, 18

Lérici, 137-9, 188, 194-5; harbour, 137-8, 183-4; see also San Terenzo

L’Estampe, 50

Liberal, The, 185

Livorno, Shelleys at, 154, 159, 175-7, 188, 191

lobsters, significance of, 212-16

Loisy (Valois), 220

London magazine, 45, 47

Louis XVI, King of France, in Revolution, 75, 82, 83, 96, 97-8, 99; journeys to Tuileries, 100

Low, William, 39, 42

Luc, 30

Mars, Mont, 48-9, 61

Marx, Karl, 88, 227

Mason, Mrs (Countess Margaret Lady Montcashell), 160, 183

Maupassant, Guy de, 251

Medwin, Tom, 179, 180

Méry, Joseph, 251, 252

Mimente, valley, 50, 59-61

Mirecourt, Eugène de, biography of Nerval, 260

Monde Dramatique, Le, 228, 229, 243-4

Monica, 166-7, 169

Montvert, Pont de, 55-7

Moravians, 58

Morin, Edgar, 88

Mortefontaine (Valois), 217-18, 219-20, 221, 222, 226, 242, 253

Mousquetaire, Le, 255-6

Murger, Henry, 233, 238; photograph, 205; Scènes de la Vie de Bohème, 233

Musset, Alfred de, Confession d’un Enfant du Siècle, 226

Nadar, Felix (Tournachon), 203-4, 209-10, 214; and Nerval, 203, 209, 210, 254, 259-60; personality, 209; photographs by, 204-7, 208-9;Quand j’é tais photographe, 210 Naples: Nerval in, 230, 247, 273-4; suicide attempt at Posilippo, 270, 273-4; PBS in, 140, 141-2, 170-1, 172; his “Neapolitan charge”, 170-177

Nerval, Gérard de: childhood and education, 217-20, 221; early publications, 221-2, 224; wild life in Paris, 223-4, 228-9; inheritance, 227-9, 230; theatrical aspirations, 224, 228, 229, 251-2; travel, 229-35, 251, 252; to East, 244-7; early suicide attempts, 269-71, 273-5; return to Paris, 247-8; madness, 235-9, 243, 244, 249, 251, 253-5, 258, 259-60; in asylum, 266; attacked in print by Janin, 239; replies, 239-41, 242-3; by Champfleury, 252; by Dumas, 256; suicide, 210, 216, 261-2, 269; papers surviving, 265

L’Académie, 221; L’Alchimiste, 229;Amours de Vienne, 232; Aurélia, 220, 243, 249, 251, 259, 260-1, 263-4, 265, 266, 267-8, 269; “Chansons et Légendes du Valois”, 250-1; Le Chariot d’Enfant, 251; Les Chimères, 226, 257, 267, 270; Le Christ aux Oliviers, 257; Confessions Galantes…(projected), 231; “La Cousine”, 225; “El Desdichado”, 210-11, 255-6, 267; Elégies Nationales, 221;Faust, trans., 222; “Fantaisie”, 225-6; Les Filles du Feu, 256; “LaGrandmère, 222, 225; Les Illuminés, 220, 250, 251; L’Imagier de Harlem, 251, 252; Lara, 224; Leo Burckhart, 229, 231; Mes Prisons, 224; Les Monténégrins, 251; Les Nuits d’Octobre, 254-5; Octavie, 244, 256-257, 265, 270-1; Pandora, 232, 256;Les Petits Châteaux de Bohème, 228, 259; Piquillo, 229, 243, 244; Prince des Sots, 224; Promenades et Souvenirs, 257, 265; La Reine de Saba, 224; Le Rêve et la Vie, 261; Un Roman à Faire, 244; Scènes de la Vie Orientales, 248;Sylvie, 225, 226, 227, 253, 255, 265;Voyage en Orient, 234-5, 244, 245, 250

appearance and photograph, 210, 268-9; personality, 262, 263-4; names, 241-3, 263; and Jenny Colon, 243-4, 251, 264-5; and father, 218-19, 222, 223, 224, 226, 227, 229, 233-4, 238-9, 258-9; and Gautier, see under Gautier, Théophile; and Nadar, 203, 209, 210, 254, 259-60; lost mother, 267; and women, 230, 231, 232, 243-4, 273-4; isolation, 238-9, 274; journalism, 212-13, 234; reliterary career and money, 232-4; mythology and symbols, 212-16, 221, 249, 250, 262-3, 267-8; religion, 220-1; as Romantic figure, 213-14, 262-3

Nerval, dos de (Valois), 220, 242

Neuilly, 107-9, 111, 112

Nîmes, Nerval in, 247-8

Norway, MW in, 132

Notre Dame des Neiges (monastery):RLS at, 29, 31-4, 36-9; today, 34-36

Old St Pancras Church, 131

Ollier, Dr, 16

O’Meara, Frank, 39, 42

Opie, Amelia, A Wife’s Duty, 113

Opie, John, 131

Orientalism, 234

Osbourne, Belle, 41, 42, 43

Osbourne, Fanny (née Vandergrift; later Mrs RLS): early life, 40-1; first marriage, 41-3; in Europe, 41-4; meets RLS, 39, 43; nurses RLS, 44; in London, 44-5; returnsto USA, 47-8; relations with RLS, 44-6, 47-8, 54-5, 56, 62, 63, 64; marriage to RLS, 40, 65; appearanceand personality, 40, 41-2, 45

Osbourne, Hervey, 41, 42

Osbourne, Lloyd, 41, 42, 43, 47

Osbourne, Sam, 41, 42, 43

Paddington, lodgings in, 73

Padua, PBS in, 157

Paine, Tom, 92, 94; in Paris, 86, 89, 100, 106; imprisoned, 111, 115, 118

Palmaria, island, 138

Paris: in French Revolution, see French Revolution; Osbournes in, 42, 43, 44; Second Empire, 209; early photographers in, 202-7; Nervalin, 219, 221-4, 228-9, 235-41, 251-2, 254, 260-1; Nerval writesof, 254-5; 1968 disturbances, 73, 74-6, 77, 78, 87-8; 1973, 201-2, 207-8, 210-11, 235, 269, 275; Bibliothèque Royale (Nationale), 222, 267; Doyenne, 228-9; Ecole Normale Supérieure, 207; Lycée Charlemagne, 219, 221; Paris Opera, 246-7; Théâtre Français, 223

past, the: distance, 27; speaking of one’s own, 207-8; traces remaining, 67-8; see also biography

Peacock, Thomas Love, Nightmare Abbey, 181

Pellegrini, Maria, 148; son, 149, 150

photographs, 149-50; attitude of subjectsto, 210; and biography, 178-9, 202-3, 204-5; early portraits, 202-3, 204-7

Pisa: Palazzo Lanfranchi, 178; PBS in, 11, 140, 159, 160, 171, 177-80; TreDonzelle Inn, 144

Plymouth Brethren, 58, 59

Presse, La: Gautier writes for, 212, 214, 231, 233; Nerval writes for, 212, 229, 231, 251; “open letter”from Gautier to Nerval in, 246, 247

Proust, Marcel, 212, 225, 253

pseudonyms, 241

Rearden, Timothy, 41, 43

reason, and imagination, 86, 87-8, 127, 131-2

Renduel (publisher), 222

revolution: classic, 88; and imagination, 86, 87-8, 127-8; and Romantics, 76-7, 127-8; PBS, 151-2; and Virtue, 104; see alsoFrench Revolution

Revue de Paris, 260-1

Robespierre, Maximilien, 82, 83, 86, 96, 123; and Paine, 100, 115; attacks Girondists, 106; Festival of Supreme Being, 116

Roger-Viollet, 204

Rogier, Camille, 223, 228, 248

Roland, Jean Marie, 102, 106

Roland, Marie Jeanne, 95, 102, 105, 106, 112

Romanticism, in Europe, 210, 221, 225, 226-7, 236, 239, 255, 262-3, 268;petit-cénacle, 223, 226-7

Romantics, the English, 76, 86, 126-8, 135, 224; and revolution, 127-8, 131

Rome, 162-70; Arch of Titus, 169, 170; Bagni di Caracalla, 166, 170; Coliseum, 164-5; Conversazione, 165; Via di Tre Conti, hostelleria, 166-70

Roscoe, William, 90, 92

Rouget de l’Isle, Claude Joseph, 125

Russell, Thomas, 130

Sabatier, Mme (courtesan), 272 Saint-Beuve, Charles Augustin, 222, 227

St Germain-de-Calberte, 18, 62, 63

St Jean-du-Gard, 62, 63

San Francisco, 41

San Terenzo (Lérici), 137-9, 183-98; Casa Magni, 139, 183-4, 186-94, 195, 196-7

Saturnin (patient at Passy), 266

schizophrenia, 236-7

Schlabrendorf, Count Gustav von, 102, 124

Schweizer, Jean-Gaspard, 102, 124

Schweizer, Madeleine, 102, 124

Séguier, “Spirit”, 48, 49

Severn, Joseph, picture of PBS, 166

Shelley, Clara (daughter of PBS), 140, 141, 144; death, 158

Shelley, Elena Adelaide (“Neapolitan charge”), 157, 170-7

Shelley, Harriet (née Westbrook; first wife of PBS), 141, 153

Shelley, Mary (née Godwin; second wife of PBS): birth, 130; elopes with PBS, 126, 131, 171, 177; in Kentish Town, 155; life in Italy with PBS, 141, 144, 156-7, 165; death of daughter, 158; relations with PBS, 153-4, 160-2, 179-81, 182, 189-91; and Claire, 172, 176, 183, 191, 194; at Casa Magni, 139, 186, 187-95; miscarriage, 190-1; letter to Hunt, 188; and PBS’s dreams, 192-5; at PBS’s death, 197; portrayed by Peacock, 181; journal, 154, 163-4, 172, 175; “The Choice”, 189; Mathilda, 141

Shelley, Percy Bysshe: elopes with Mary, 126, 131; 1814-15, Kentish Town, 155; travels, 135; travels in Italy, 136-7, 138, 139-40, 141, 144; 1818. house hold in Italy, 140-141; creative output, 140; Naples, 141-2; Pisa, 144-9; Este, 156-7; Padua, 157; death of daughter, 157; letter to Claire, 158-9; 1819: Rome, 150, 163-6, 168-9; death of son, 149-50; “Neapolitan charge”, 157, 170-7; 1819-20, Livorno, 154, 175-7; 1820-1, Pisa, 177-80; 1820-2, separated from Claire, 159-61;1821, scandal, 157, 161, 172; black-mail, 172, 175-6; 1822, San Terenzo, 140, 183-5, 186-97; final dreams, 192-7; drowned, 197

Adonais, 150, 187; “Ariel to Miranda”, 187; The Assassins, 143; The Cenci, 154, 170, 172; elegy to son, 149;Epipsychidion, 140, 152, 161, 180, 184; “Evening: Porte al Mare, Pisa”, 178-9, 180; Hellas, 185;The Mask of Anarchy, 154; Mont Blanc, 196; “Ode to Liberty”, 176;Prometheus Unbound, 126, 140, 151, 164, 170, 195-6; The Revolt of Islam, 182; “Stanzas Written in Dejection”, 141-2; Symposium, trans., 144; The Triumph of Life, 140

boat, 138, 183-4; character andregime, 140-1, 151, 182; attitude to children, 174; and Claire, see underClairmont, Claire; ideas of community, 142-3; and families, 141; attitude to marriage, 152-4, 181-3; and Mary, see under Shelley, Mary; politics, 143, 151-2, 182, 185; reputation and image, 135-6, 152, 182, 197-8; and revolution, 76, 142-4, 151-2

Shelley, Percy Florence (son of PBS), 177, 184-5

Shelley, William (son of PBS), 140, 141, 144, 145, 149, 150; death, 149;PBS’s elegy to, 149-50

Shields, Milly (maidservant), 144

Singer, Mlle (in Lozère), 16

Sitwell, Fanny, 43, 44

Smythe, Sir Robert, 89

Southey, Robert, 76-7, 209

Stadler, Eugène de, 254

stars, 249-50

Stevenson, Bob (cousin of RLS), 39, 42-4, 64

Steventon, Robert Louis: childhood, 15, 32; career and youth, 15; early travels, 15; at Grez, 39, 43; ill, 1877-8, 44-5; and Fanny Osbourne, see under Osbourne, Fanny; 1878, journey in France, 14, 15-16, 17, 21, 22-4, 26-7, 28-9, 30-1, 48-62; equipment, 17-18; route, 17, 18; and donkey, 17, 18, 19-20, 28, 50, 52-3, 62; depression, 50; at Trappist monastery, 29, 31-4, 36-9; night in open at Finiels, 52-5; later life, 40, 63-4, 65

A Child’s Garden of Verses, 51; An Inland Voyage, 15; A Mountain Town in France, 16; The Pentland Rising, 48;The Silverado Squatters, 65; Travels with a Donkey in the Cévennes, 16, 31, 33, 37, 38-9, 48, 58-9, 62, 63-5; school edition, 65; route, today, 68;Virginibus Puerisque, 45-7

artistic vocation, 37-9; re boyishness, 46-7; re Camisards, 48-9; child-hood in books of, 67; and children, 22-3; dreams of children, 27; and father, 15, 45, 58, 59, 64; remarriage, 45-6, 208; religion, 29, 32-3, 36-7, 58-9; re travel, 15, 29, 30-1, 33, 51; attitude to women, 29, 38-9, 54, 56, 60, 62

Stevenson, Thomas (father of RLS), 15, 45, 58, 59, 64

Stone, John Hurford, 102

Talleyrand, Charles Maurice de, 91, 94

Tarot cards, 215-16, 226, 249, 268

theatre, French, 223, 224, 228, 229, 251, 252

time, 20-1, 179; in Nerval’s work, 225-226, 253, 270; see also past, the

Trappist monks, 29, 31-9; today, 34-6

travel, 15, 29, 30-1, 33, 51

Treason Trials, 1794, 89, 115

Trelawny, Edward John, 139, 146, 177, 190; as biographer, 168, 194; and Claire Clairmont, 154, 181; letterre PBS, 181-2

United Irishmen, 124, 130

Vallon, Annette, 81, 82, 84, 85, 96

Valois: Nerval’s childhood in, 217-18, 220, 262; Nerval writes of, 250-1, 253, 262-3

Vandergrift, Fanny, see Osbourne, Fanny

Venice, Shelleys in, 156-7, 158

Verne, Jules, De la Terre à la Lune, 209

Vienna, Nerval in, 231-2

Vigny, Alfred, Comte de: Chatterton, 224; Servitude et Grandeur Militaires, 226

Walpole, Horace, 92

Westbrook, Harriet, see Shelley, Harriet

Wheatcroft, John, 115

White’s Hotel, Paris, 87-8, 103; group, 86, 87-9

Williams, Edward, 177, 179, 183, 189, 190, 192, 193

Williams, Helen Maria, in Paris, 79-80, 89, 95, 103, 105; and MW, 97, 102, 117; arrested, 86, 111;Memories of the Reign of Robespierre, 86

Williams, Jane, 177, 184, 187, 188, 189, 190, 193; letter from Claire Clairmont, 156; letter from Mary Shelley, 197

Winckelmann, Johann, 164

Wollstonecraft, Edward John (father of MW), 91, 94

Wollstonecraft, Eliza (sister of MW), 94, 116

Wollstonecraft, Elizabeth (mother of MW), 94

Wollstonecraft, Evarina (sister of MW), 94; MW’s letters to, 95, 97, 116, 125

Wollstonecraft, Mary, 76; early life and family, 90-4; in France, 1792-5, 94-130; Paris, 1792-3, 94-106; Neuilly, 1793, 107-9; Paris, 1793-4, 111-14; registered as Gilbert Imlay’s wife, 111; Le Havre-Marat, 1794, 114-24; Paris, 1794-5, 124-9; journey home, 1795, 129-30; London, 7795, 130; marriage to Godwin, and death, 130

History of the Revolution, 96, 97-8, 99, 107, 110, 115, 118; “Lessons for Children”, 120-3; Letters to Imlay, 126; Letters Written in Sweden, 109, 118, 130, 131-2; “On the Present Character of the French Nation”, 103-4; A Vindication of the Rights of Woman, 91, 94; The Wrongs of Women, 120

appearance and character, 91-4, 110, 131; and imagination and rebellion, 126, 127-8, 131; and Gilbert Imlay, see under Imlay, Gilbert; letters to Imlay in London, 126-7, 128-9; motherhood, 119-23

wolves, 23, 24-5

Wordsworth, William: in France, 1790, 75, 79; Paris, 1791-2, 79-81, 82-5; Blois, 81-2; returns to England, 84-5; The Prelude, 81, 82, 84, 85

Zoroaster, 196