224 



INDEX 



in Louisiana, 12 ; his Notes on Vir- 

 ginia, 20; reports seasonal phe- 

 nomena, 40; his list of American 

 birds, 97; his description of the 

 Natural Bridge, 123; Logan's speech 

 cited, 183. 



" John Bartram, Botanist," see Middle- 

 ton, William S. 



Johnson's Universal Cyclopedia, 28. 



Jones, Henry L., 33. 



Josselyn, John, New England's Rari- 

 ties, 39. 



Journal of a Voyage to North America, 

 183. 



Journal of Morphology, The, 93. 



Journals of Dorothy Wordsworth, 111. 



Journey from Prince of Wales's Port in 

 Hudson Bay, to the Northern Ocean, 

 A, 135. 



Kalm, Peter, 5 «, 6 ; Travels into 



North America, 39. 

 Kaufman, Paul, 130 «. 

 Keats, John, 193. 

 Kellog, Remington, 94. 

 '" King of the Crocodiles, The," 181. 

 "' Kitten and the Falling Leaves, The," 



174. 

 Knight, William, 154 and n, 155 and 



n, 156, 162, 177 «. 

 '■ Kubla Khan," 145-8. 



La Clef du Cabinet des Souverains, 198. 



Lamb, Charles, Coleridge's '" This 

 Lime-Tree Bower My Prison " ad- 

 dressed to, 129; evidence of his 

 reading Bartram, 188. 



Landscape, Indian, 54-5 ; of Bartram, 

 71; camping places as, 77-8; result 

 of Bartram's scientific, aesthetic, and 

 philosophical observations, 80; trees, 

 shrubs, and flowers as, 81-5, 106; 

 plains as, 85, 89; mountains and 

 promontories as, 85-6, 89, 105, 106; 

 cliffs as, 86; Indian mounds as, 86; 

 bodies of water as, 86, 106; ani- 

 mals and insects as, 89-95 ; fishes as, 

 95-6; birds as, 96-8; movement and 

 change of, 98, 105 ; summary of ele- 

 ments of, 99-100; the sublime as 

 element of, 106, 107; as painting, 

 107, 108; as background for narra- 

 tive, 117; Coleridge's use of Bar- 

 tram's, 142, 144 «, 145; Words- 

 worth's use of Bartram's, 150, 155, 

 157, 160, 165; Bowles's use of Bar- 



tram's, 182; Felicia Hemans's use 

 of Bartram's, 186-7; possible use of 

 Bartram's landscape by Samuel 

 Rogers, Thomas Moore, Byron, De 

 Quincey, Hazlitt, and " Christopher 

 North," 189; Hearn's use of Bar- 

 tram's, 194; Chateaubriand's use of 

 Bartram's, 195-8. 



Laurens, Henry, writes on William 

 Bartram's condition as indigo- 

 planter, 9. 



Lawson, John, 66, 61, 93, 97, 122. 



Lays of Many Lands, 184. 



Leaves from the Diary of an Impres- 

 sionist, 194. 



Les Encyclopedistes, 38. 



Les Natchez, 197. 



Letters from an American Parmer, see 

 Crevecoeur, Hector St. John de. 



Letters of the Wordsworth Pamily, 149 

 and n. 



Lettres d'un Cultivateur Americain, see 

 Crevecoeur, Hector St. John de. 



Lewis, M. G., l4l n. 



Lewis & Clarke, expedition, 12 ; travels 

 of, 183. 



"' Lewti," 129, 142. 



L'Exotisme Americain dans la Littera- 

 ture Prangaise au XVP Siecle, see 

 Chinard, Gilbert. 



Library of Congress, The, Manuscript 

 Division, 12. 



Library of Southern Literature, 193. 



Lienemann, K., 149 and n. 



Life, Journals, and Correspondence of 

 Rev. Manas s eh Cutler, 25. 



Life and Correspondence of the late 

 Robert Southey, The, 178, 180. 



Life and Letters, 72. 



Life of Alexander Wilson, 11, 13. 



Linnaeus, on John Bartram, 2 ; corre- 

 sponds with John Bartram, 6; Sys- 

 tetna Naturae and Characteres Planta- 

 rum, 19; his influence on William 

 Bartram, 20, 37 ; his contribution to 

 science, 38; William Bartram's di- 

 gest of his "" three grand divisions 

 of Nature," 45. 



Literary History of Philadelphia, 

 The, 6. 



Literature, Bartram's influence on, 

 127-98. 



Logan, James, 5, 6. 



Logan's speech, 183. 



Longinus, 106. 



Lovejoy, Arthur O., on the term " na- 



