INDEX 



219 



181-2; influence on Thomas Camp- 

 bell 182-4; influence on Felicia He- 

 mans, 184-8; influence on Charles 

 Lamb, 188; influence on Shelley, 

 188-9; influence on Rogers, Moore, 

 Byron, De Quincey, Hazlitt, and 

 " Christopher North," 189; influence 

 on Tennyson, 190-1; influence on 

 Carlyle, 191; influence on Emerson 

 and Thoreau, 192 ; influence on 

 Chivers, 192-3 ; influence on Hearn, 

 194; influence on Chateaubriand, 

 195-8; reasons for Bartram's in- 

 fluence, 199; his contribution to 

 literature, 200. 



Bartram, Colonel William, 30, 88. 



Bartram Garden, The, established, 2, 

 4; visitors to, 6, 24-6; influence on 

 William Bartram, 9; inherited by 

 John Bartram, Jr., 11. 



'" Bartram Library, The," 19 «. 



Bartram Memorial Library, The, 8, 19. 



Bartram Papers, 8, 9 n, 12, 17, 20 n, 

 21, 30, 34, 35, 45-7, 60, 71, 113, 

 199. 



"" Bartram Redivivus," 127 n, 198. 



Bartramia, 5. 



" Bartram's Garden," 8. 



Bedford, Grosvenor C, 178. 



Bedford, Horace Walpole, 178. 



Bedier, Joseph, 195. 



Belesenheit von William Wordsworth, 

 Die, 149 n. 



Bersch, Georg, 140 n, l4l, 144, 147. 



■' Bertram," name of the Scottish 

 branch of the Bartram family, 2 and 

 k; John Bartram referred to by 

 Crevecoeur, 3. 



Bibliotheca Botanica, lists "" Johannes 

 Bartram, Americanus," 4. 



Bingham, Caleb, 182 n, 186. 



Biographia Literaria, 148 and n, 148-9. 



" Biographical Sketch of William Bar- 

 tram," 23, 28, 29, 97. 



" Bird Migration Records of William 

 Bartram," 97 «. 



Birds, language of, 47-8, 103; Alex- 

 ander Wilson's list of, 29, 96; Bar- 

 tram's description of, 96-8, 105; the 

 whip-poor-will, 103, 162, 169, 

 172-3, 181 and n, 197; the Savanna 

 crane, 97, 105, 129, 151, 160, 169- 

 70, 171, 197; migration of, 97 k, 

 136; Coleridge's use of Bartram's, 

 136-7, 140; battle between a hawk 

 and a snake, 140, 144, 189; a peli- 



can, description of, 97, 109; Words- 

 worth's use of the pelican, 150, 

 161-2, 164, 165, 171, 174; Chateau- 

 briand's use of the pelican, 197; de- 

 scription of Spanish curlews, 171; 

 Chateaubriand's use of the nonpa- 

 reil, 182, 196, 197; the mocking 

 bird, 183, 196, 197. 



Bissell, Benjamin, 56, 57, 63, 71, 127. 



" Blackbirds, The, an Elegy," 50. 



Blake, Thomas, 193. 



'■ Blind Highland Boy, The," 173. 



Borderers, The, 150, 164. 



Botanists of Philadelphia and their 

 Work, The, see Harshberger, J. W. 



Bowles, William Lisle, indebtedness of 

 "' Banwell Hill" to Bartram, 181-2; 

 indebtedness of " Song of the Ameri- 

 can Indian " and " The Missionary " 

 to Bartram, 182. 



Brandl, Alois L., " Coleridges Notiz- 

 buch," \2Sn, 134; Samuel Taylor 

 Coleridge and the English Romantic 

 School, 188. 



Breintnall, Joseph, 5, 6. 



British Museum, 128 «. 



Brown, Charles Brockden, 24; visits 

 William Bartram, 25-6. 



"Browsing through Bartram," 114-15. 



Bruce, James, 144 n. 



Bruce, William Cabell, on friendship 

 between Franklin and John Bartram, 

 14. 



Buffon, Georges L. de, Natural His- 

 tory, 20, 21, 38, 45. 



Bunting, Morgan, Genealogical Chart 

 of the Bartram Family, 2 n. 



Burke, Edmund, on the sublime, 106, 

 107. 



Byrd, William, corresponds with John 

 Bartram, 6; on effect of rum on In- 

 dians, 57; compared with William 

 Bartram as describer of landscape, 

 122. 



Byron, Lord, 135 «, 189. 



Cambridge History of American Litera- 

 ture, on William Bartram's enthu- 

 siasm, 10; on Carver's Travels, 59 n, 

 67; on Bartram's power of observa- 

 tion, 80. 



Campbell, Thomas, indebtedness of 

 Gertrude of Wyoming to Bartram, 

 182-4; influence on Felicia Hemans, 

 187. 



Camping places, importance of, 77. 



