INDEX 



227 



worth's Journal and Bartram's 

 Travels, 111; on Hearn's indebted- 

 ness to Bartram, 194. 



Robinson Crusoe, 78, 79. 



Rogers, Samuel, possible indebtedness 

 of his Voyage of Columbus to Bar- 

 tram, 189. 



Rousseau, Jean Jacques, 42, 56, 57. 



Rush, Benjamin, visits Bartram's gar- 

 den, 6; his Essay, 20; visits Wil- 

 liam Bartram, 25. 



"Ruth," 130, 132, 150, 151-9, 160, 

 161, 163, 168, 172, 174, 190. 



Sabin, Joseph, 5 n. 



St. Johns (San Juan) River, 8, 9, 53, 

 59, 71, 72, 74, 75, 84, 86, 87, 88, 

 95, 131, 196. 



St. Pierre, Bernardin de, 42. 



Samuel Taylor Coleridge and the Eng- 

 lish Romantic School, 188. 



Saturday Review of Literature, The, 

 22, 101, 115, 148. 



Savanna crane, description of, 97, 105 ; 

 use of by Coleridge in " This Lime- 

 Tree Bower My Prison," 129-30; 

 used by Wordsworth in " Ruth," 

 151; use of by Wordsworth in 

 " Hoffer," 160; use of by Words- 

 worth in Guide to the Lakes and 

 The Recluse, 169-71; used by 

 Chateaubriand, 197. 



Schwartz, William Leonard, 182 n. 



Scientific Monthly, 2 n, 4, 5, 14, 23, 

 64. 



Seasons, The, " Winter," 50; " Spring," 

 50, 51 n. 



Sentiment de la nature, the movement 

 of, 13. 



Shaftesbury, Anthony A. C, 40, 106. 



Shakespeare, 139. 



" She Was a Phantom of Delight," 

 167. 



Shelley, Percy Bysshe, indebtedness of 

 The Revolt of Islam to Bartram, 

 188; indebtedness of " Indian Seren- 

 ade" to Coleridge, 188; influence 

 on Chivers, 193. 



Shelvocke, Captain George, 156 n. 



Short, Dr. Thomas, Medicina Britan- 

 nica, 5. 



" Sketch of John and William Bar- 

 tram," 7, 23, 45, 49. 



Sloane, Sir Hans, 6; Natural History 

 of Jamaica, 19. 



Smellie, William, Philosophy of Na- 

 tural History, 20. 



Smith, Captain John, 39. 



Smithsonian Institution, 58, 59, 61. 



Snake bird, 21, 97, 107, 109, 128. 



Snakes, 49; water-snakes, 92, 94-5, 

 137; rattlesnakes, 138, 191; coach- 

 whip snake's battle with a hawk, 

 140, 144, 189; their power to 

 charm prey, l4l, 190-1 ; Southey's 

 use of, 179; Chateaubriand's use 

 of, 196; black snake, 197. . 



" Song of the American Indian," 182. 



" Song of the Araucans," 180. 



" Song of the Chikkasah Widow," 

 181. 



Songs of the American Indians, 180, 

 181. 



Sotheby & Company, 178. 



Sounds, notation of, 103; of storms, 

 131-2, 135-6; of owls, 103, 133, 

 137; of alligators, 104, 139. 



Southey, Robert, on his readings, 130 «; 

 catalogue of his library, 178; Life 

 and Correspondence of, 178, 180; 

 indebtedness of Modoc to Bartram, 

 179, 180; Poetical Works of, 179; 

 sources of his American lore, 180; 

 sources of American lore in his 

 Common Place Books, 180; indebted- 

 ness of Songs of the American In- 

 dians to Bartram, 180-1. 



Southey, Thomas, 180 n. 



Souvenirs d'Amerique, 187. 



Sparks, Jared, 11 «. 



Spectator papers, 19. 



Squier, E. G., 60, 61, 101. 



" Stanzas Suggested . . . OflF St. Bees' 

 Heads," 174. 



" Stanzas written in my Pocket-Copy 

 of Thomson's " Castle of Indolence,' " 

 168. 



Stone, Witmer, 97 n. 



Storms, Bartram's description of, 99, 

 110, 131-2; Coleridge's use of Bar- 

 tram's, 132, 135, 136, 137, 144 », 

 145; Wordsworth's use of Bartram's, 

 174; Chateaubriand's use of Bar- 

 tram's, 197. 



" Stranger in Louisiana, The," 187. 



Studies in Philology, 57. 



Style, Bartram's subjective element of, 

 62, 85, 104; Bartram's notation of 

 sense impressions, 87, 89, 105; com- 

 ments on Bartram's style quoted, 

 101; rhapsodic, 102-3, 106; pic- 

 torial, 107-9; Bartram's " raccourci " 

 method, 110; diction, 110-16; in- 

 fluence of Bartram's diction on 



