INDEX 



229 



Wilderness plot, 134, 142, 145, 146, 

 192, 193. 



William Wordsworth, his Life, Works, 

 and Influences, 150 «. 



Williams, Roger, 180. 



Wilson, Alexander, acquaintance with 

 William Bartram, 6; invites Wil- 

 liam Bartram on ornithological ex- 

 pedition, 11; letter to Thomas Jef- 

 ferson, 11; recommended by Bar- 

 tram for Louisiana exploration, 12 ; 

 assisted by William Bartram, 13; 

 sends Bartram imitations of birds 

 for correction, 28; his list of birds, 

 29, 96; acknowledge's Bartram's 

 influence, 102; referred to by 

 Thoreau, 192. 



Winchelsea, Lady, 40. 



Windsor Forest, 40. 



Wolves, description of, 89-90; Cole- 

 ridge's use of, 137, l4l; Words- 

 worth's use of, 172. 



Wonderful Magazine, The, 93. 



Wood, William, The New England 

 Prospect, 39. 



Woodberry, George Edward, 188. 



WooUey, Mary E., 199. 



Woolman, John, Journal, 20, 180. 



ITordsworth, 166, 175. 



Wordsworth, Dorothy, 166 «; proba- 

 bility of her reading Bartram's 

 Travels, 176; Journals of, 111 

 description of wild flowers, 177 

 indebtedness of " Floating Island ' 

 to Bartram, 177-8. 



Wordsworth, William, Bartram's in- 

 fluence on, 56, 59, 115; Aldous 

 Huxley on, 72 ; indebtedness of his 

 "Ruth" to Bartram, 130, 132, 150, 

 151-9, 160, 163, 168, 172, 174, 190; 

 auroras in, 135 «; Coleridge's com- 

 ment on in terms of Bartram, 148; 

 Lane Cooper and Lienemann on his 

 reading, 149; Lyrical Ballads, 149; 

 Letters of the Wordsworth Family 

 quoted on his interest in travel 

 books, 149; date of his reading 

 Bartram, 150, 176; indebtedness of 



The Borderers to Bartram, 150, 164; 

 indebtedness of The Prelude to Bar- 

 tram, 159, 161, 163-4, 168, 171, 

 173; indebtedness of T^e £xr«fi/o« 

 to Bartram, 160, 162, 164, 165, 166, 



168, 173; indebtedness of Guide to 

 the Lakes, 166, 167, 169-70, 171, 

 186; indebtedness of ""She Was a 

 Phantom of Delight " to Bartram, 

 167; indebtedness of " Stanzas writ- 

 ten in my Pocket-Copy of Thom- 

 son's 'Castle of Indolence,'" 168; 

 indebtedness of "' Presentiments," 

 168 «; indebtedness of The Recluse, 



169, 173; indebtedness of Eccle- 

 siastical Sonnets, 172; indebtedness 

 of "A Morning Exercise," 172; in- 

 debtedness of " The Blind Highland 

 Boy," 173; indebtedness of '"Ad- 

 dress to My Infant Daughter Dora," 

 173-4; indebtedness of "" The Kitten 

 and the Falling Leaves," 174; in- 

 debtedness of " Stanzas Suggested 

 ... Off St. Bees' Heads," 174; in- 

 debtedness of "" Expostulation and 

 Reply," 175; indebtedness of "The 

 Tables Turned," 176; "I Wan- 

 dered Lonely as a Cloud," similarity 

 of to Dorothy Wordsworth's entry 

 in Journal, 111. 



" Wordsworth in the Tropics," 72. 

 "Wordsworth's Sources," 136. 

 Works of Charles and Mary Lamb, 



188. 

 \Y^orks of Mrs. Hemans, 184, 185. 

 Writings of Henry David Thoreau, 



The, 192. 



Youmans, W. J., on John Bartram's 

 scientific accomplishments, 4. 



Zapolya, 140, 14 1. 



Zimmerman, E. A. W., on Linnaeus, 

 37-8; translates Travels, 38; com- 

 ments on term " tyger," 90; corrects 

 Bartram's style, 101, 111, 112-3; 

 disseminates knowledge of Bartram, 

 198. 



