Read Guilty Thing Online

Authors: Frances Wilson

Guilty Thing (71 page)

in expecting too much. . .
Recollections
, p. 146.

trace, in brief outline
. . .
Recollections
, p. 148.

The case of a man who. . .
availing. . . Recollections
, p. 148.

a lover. . .
in any passionate sense. . . Recollections
, p. 185.

how very indelicate it would look
. . .
Recollections
, p. 197.

Whilst foolish people supposed him
. . .
Recollections
, p. 292.

He admits of nothing below
. . .
Hazlitt, p. 125.

He condemns all French writers. . .
Hazlitt, p. 127.

If a greater number of sources
. . .
Hazlitt, p. 128.

truth and life of these Lake Sketches
. . .
H. A. Page, I, p. 302.

pang of wrath. . .
Recollections
, p. 369.

This to me! – O ye gods – to me. . .
Recollections
, p. 320.

with a blind loyalty of homage
. . .
Recollections
, p. 145.

to us who. . .
were Wordsworth's friends
. . .
Recollections
, p. 185.

all of us loved her. . .
Recollections
, p. 146.

Farewell, impassioned
Dorothy!
. . .
Recollections
, p. 206.

My acquaintance with him. . .
Jordan, p. 347.

extracting money ad libitum. . .
Eaton, p. 386.

I wish to stay a month longer
. . .
Eaton, p. 385.

I spend months after months. . .
my shoulders
. . . Eaton, pp. 386–7.

a more absolute wreck of decent prosperity
. . .
Eaton, p. 391.

If I give him nothing . . .
portability
. . . Eaton, p. 392.

Beginning with the small sum . . .
his executor
. . . Eaton, p. 368n.

Caught and chained. . .
H. A. Page, I, p. 30.

The last body who went into that room. . .
Eaton, p. 394.

if once a man indulges himself in murder
. . .
‘Second Paper', p. 84.

Even dogs are not what they were, sir. . .
‘Second Paper', p. 85.

great exterminating chef-d'oeuvre
. . .
‘Second Paper', p. 86.

utter overthrow of happiness. . .
Recollections
, p. 323.

by her own fireside. . .
Recollections
, p. 327.

studious and meditative young boy
. . .
Recollections
, p. 272.

my sole companion. . .
Recollections
, p. 371.

Men of extraordinary genius. . .
appear to listen. . . Recollections
, pp. 375–6.

denounce them for what they were. . .
Recollections
, p. 378.

not even read Walter Scott. . .
Recollections
, p. 383.

Chapter 14: Postscript

Address under cover, if you please. . .
Eaton, p. 404.

It is often shocking. . .
Eaton, p. 405.

half torpid condition under opium. . .
George Gilfillan,
Sketches Literary and Theological, Being selections from an unpublished MS of the late Rev George Gilfillan
, edited by Frank Henderson, Edinburgh: David Douglas, 1881, p. 33.

violent but hopeless attachment. . .
Morrison, p. 323.

This is the End. . .
Eaton, p. 405.

the most absolute harmony. . .
H. A. Page, I, p. 331.

begging about the village for food. . .
MacFarlane,
Reminiscences of a Literary Life
, p. 83.

the misery of her situation
. . .
Eaton, p. 408.

Then I partly understood him, now perfectly. . .
Eaton, p. 416.

vast avenues of gloom
. . .
‘Suspiria', p. 92.

symbolic mirror. . .
‘Suspiria', p. 164.

flying it pursues. . .
Eaton, p. 419.

at the root of all this unimaginable hell. . .
H. A. Page, I, p. 325.

restless legs syndrome. . .
see M. Miranda, A. M. Williams, D. Garcia-Borreguero, ‘Thomas De Quincey and his restless legs symptoms as depicted in
Confessions of an English Opium-Eater
', in
Movement Disorders
, 2010; 25 (13); 2006–9.

as in days of infancy
. . .
Eaton, p. 415.

as one risen from the dead. . .
Eaton, p. 416.

Note the power of murderers as fine-art professors. . .
‘New Paper', p. 162.

throws a power about a man
. . .
‘New Paper', p. 163.

living at this moment. . .
own acts and bodies. . .
‘New Paper', p. 163.

Lifting up his head from the waves
. . .
‘New Paper', p. 163.

deader than a door-nail . . .
the shadowy and the dark. . .
Masson, V, pp. 179–211.

Put not your trust. . .
homage of the sycophantic. . .
‘On Wordsworth's Poetry', in Jordan (ed.),
De Quincey as Critic
, p. 400.

forms more complex and oblique . . .
sad into the joyous. . .
‘On Wordsworth's Poetry', in Jordan (ed.),
De Quincey as Critic
, pp. 404–6.

He has entered upon his seventy-sixth year
. . .
‘On Wordsworth's Poetry', in Jordan (ed.),
De Quincey as Critic
, p. 421.

deluge the room. . .
Hogg, pp. 146–7.

Of all the tasks I ever had in my life
. . .
Morrison, p. 341.

more splendidly than others
. . .
‘Suspiria', p. 91.

J. M. Barrie's Neverland. . .
In a letter to J. M. Barrie on 2 April 1893, written shortly before his death, Robert Louis Stevenson described himself as looking ‘Exceedingly lean, dark, rather ruddy-black eyes, crow's-footed, beginning to be grizzled, general appearance of a blasted boy or blighted youth or to borrow Carlyle on De Quincey, “a child that has been in hell”.'

intolerable grief
. . .
‘Suspiria', p. 95.

I was shut out for ever. . .
‘Suspiria', p. 111.

Again I was in the chamber. . .
‘Suspiria', p. 143.

An adult sympathises with himself . . .
of his sympathy. . .
‘Suspiria', p. 30.

My heart trembled through from end to end. . .
Frederic G. Kenyon (ed.),
The Letters of Elizabeth Barrett Browning
, London: Macmillan, 1899, p. 161.

What else than a natural and mighty palimpsest
. . .
‘Suspiria', p. 150.

the traces of each successive handwriting
. . .
‘Suspiria', p. 149.

a dilated version of himself. . .
‘Suspiria', pp. 160–1.

I had never seen your face. . .
‘Suspiria', pp. 169–70.

epilepsy of planet-struck fury. . .
Japp, I, p. 8.

Chinese-like reverence. . .
Japp, I, p. 318.

I stared, almost agape . . .
Hogg, p. 119.

garments blackened with writing-ink. . .
David Masson,
De Quincey
, New York: Cambridge University Press, 2011, p. 104.

rapidly becoming tomorrow. . .
Masson,
De Quincey
, p. 106.

reconcile him to leaving. . .
Lindop, p. 378.

No Englishman cares a pin. . .
Japp, II, p. 146.

the originator claimed any part of it. . .
Lindop, p. 367.

Mr. Neocles Jaspis Mousabines
. . .
Jordan, p. 333.

the ‘Prelude' stands as an opening to nothing. . .
Hogg, p. 153.

terror and terrific beauty. . .
‘Mail-Coach', p. 192.

the horrid inoculation. . .
sanctuary of himself. . .
‘Mail-Coach', pp. 209–11.

But the lady!. . .
roar of his voice. . .
‘Mail-Coach', p. 235.

desert spaces of the sea. . .
persecution of fugues. . .
‘Mail-Coach', pp. 233–6.

with a grave upward glance
. . .
Hogg, p. 177.

‘Ah!' said the Professor. . .
on the table. . .
Japp, II, p. 32.

links in the chain of evidence
. . .
Japp, II, p. 21.

Crowbars, masks and dark lanterns. . .
damned spot. . .
John Paget, ‘The Philosophy of Murder',
Tait's Edinburgh Magazine
, 22, 1851, pp. 171–6.

scattered in prodigal profusion. . .
George Gilfillan,
Second Gallery of Literary Portraits
, Edinburgh: James Hogg, 1852, p. 302.

absolutely, insuperably, and for ever impossible. . .
Gilfillan,
Second Gallery
, p. 302.

It is astonishing. . .
how much more Boston knows. . .
Masson, VII, pp. 231–2.

chez moi? Or chez la presse?. . .
Japp, II, p. 42.

working through most parts of the night
. . .
Japp, II, p. 54.

piled over each other's heads
. . .
Gilfillan,
Sketches Literary and Theological
, p. 34.

saying the thing that is not. . .
Masson, I, p. 6.

My unfortunate chattels
. . .
Hogg, p. 136.

who ministered to his vanity. . .
Hogg, p. 151.

I often. . .
feel an almost irresistible
. . . Hogg, p. 139.

some account of Williams. . .
an accomplice?. . .
De Quincey,
Selections Grave and Gay, from Writings Published and Unpublished by Thomas De Quincey
, Edinburgh: James Hogg, 1854, p. vi.

to pursue the successive steps
. . .
Marr's shop
. . . ‘Postscript', p. 107.

stout, fresh-faced young man. . .
‘Postscript', p. 102.

Let us leave the murderer alone
. . .
in her absence. . .
‘Postscript', p. 108.

in an area of London where ferocious tumults
. . .
‘Postscript', p. 110.

What was it?. . .
different sides. . .
‘Postscript', p. 111.

by way of locking up all
. . .
‘Postscript', p. 114.

I was myself at the time nearly three hundred miles . . .
for ever on the Thames. . .
‘Postscript', p. 99.

the house-door was suddenly shut . . .
pull murderer. . .
‘Postscript', pp. 120–6.

murderous malice of the man below. . .
‘Postscript', p. 126.

pass through a prism. . .
Masson, X, p. 226.

the hard fact. . .
Woolf, ‘Impassioned Prose',
TLS
, 16 Sep 1926.

we think that the circumstances of that mutiny. . .
James and Critchley,
The Maul and the Peartree
, p. xxi.

one novelty, viz, an account
. . .
Japp, II, p. 87.

What would the Baker say?. . .
Hogg, p. 184.

on Tuesday last I saw the death announced
. . .
Japp, II, p. 98.

My adversaries are in full chase
. . .
Gilfillan,
Sketches Literary and Theological
, p. 34.

a door opened . . .
no Emily entered at the door. . .
Japp, II, pp. 92–3.

much like other people. . .
Japp, II, p. 192.

Never for one moment have I doubted
. . .
Japp, II, p. 119.

I long for the rest of De Quincey
. . .
Lindop, p. 377.

Miss Smith has been cruelly treated. . .
Japp, II, p. 132.

at the tail of 666 wagons. . .
Japp, II, p. 142.

a vision of children. . .
Japp, II, p. 132.

like a boy of fourteen. . .
Japp, II, p. 305.

Select Bibliography

Books and articles

Abrams, M. H.,
The Milk of Paradise: The Effects of Opium Visions on the Works of De Quincey, Crabbe, Francis Thompson, and Coleridge
, New York: Harper & Row, 1962

Ackroyd, Peter,
Dan Leno and the Limehouse Golem
, London: Minerva, 1995

Appleman, Philip, ‘D. H. Lawrence and the Intrusive Knock',
Modern Fiction Studies
3 (1958)

Bachelard, Gaston,
The Poetics of Space
, translated from the French by Maria Jolas, Beacon Press: Boston, 1994

Other books

The Rules Regarding Gray by Elizabeth Finn
Lost Years by Christopher Isherwood
The Last Promise by Richard Paul Evans
Born That Way by Susan Ketchen
Girls Don't Fly by Chandler, Kristen
Learn to Fly by Heidi Hutchinson
The Council of Mirrors by Michael Buckley
Apocalypse for Beginners by Nicolas Dickner
Falling For Her Boss by Smith, Karen Rose