THE WORDSWORTH CIRCLE INDEX —— VOLUME XL —— 2009 Bromwich, David The “Ode to Duty” and the Idea of Human Solidarity Burwick, Frederick The Revolt of Islam: Vegetarian Shelley and the Narrative of Mental Pathology Byrne, Joseph WordswJooserph tJohhn,son , and the Salisbury Plain Poems Class, Monika Coleridge and the Radical Roots of Critical Philosophy Douglass, Paul Twisty Little Passages: The Editions of Lady Caroline Lamb’s Glenarvon Duggett, Tom “Some Unknown Man, Unheard of”: Wordsworth and the English Regicide Esterhammer, Angela Translating the Elgin Marbles: Byron, Hemans, Keats Gaull, Marilyn Joseph Johnson: Webmaster Gravil, Richard Helen Maria Williams: Wordsworth’s Revolutionary Anima Grasmere, 1970-2010 Harding, Anthony John Harriet Martineau’s Anti-Romanticism Johnston, Kenneth R. The Unromantic Lives of Others: The Lost Generation of the 1790's Jung, Sandro William Newton: Anna Seward’s “Peak Minstrel” Oliver, Susan Silencing Joseph Johnson and the Analytical Review Paley, Morton Coleridge’s Captain Derkheim Robinson, Eric John Clare, the Popular Wood-Cut, and the Bible: A Venture into the History of Popular Culture Stabler, Jane “True Impossibility”: Editing Byron Thompson, Judith Why Kendal? John Thelwall, Laker Poet? Wright, Julia M. Atlantic Exile and the Stateless Citizen in Irish Romanticism Yorimich Kasahara Byron’s Dying Gladiator in Context From Susan Wolfson, President of the Association of Literary Scholars, Critics, anc. \\riters (ALoCW), a special invitation to members of the Wordsworth-Coleridge Association to join at the permanent rate of $37.00 a year. Devoted to the reading, writing and discussion of literature, criticism, and scholarship, since 14, ALSCW has annually convened scholars, critics, translators, poets, novelists, dramatists, essayists, editors, teachers, and audiences for literature many languages, ancient and modern, a conversation continued in the tri-quarterly Literary Imagination (founded in 1999. published by OUP, which offers a discount to members on all its publications)and in the quarterly newsletter, Literary Matters. The annual conference will take place on November 4 to 7, 2010, at Princeton, N.J., a gathering of academic schotars and critics, Pulitzer Prize poets, novelists, biographers, journalists, librarians, bibliographers, booksellers, editors of major journals and publishing houses, educators, graduate students, and professors—a whirl of energy and expertise interacting for three days of seminars, special sessions, lectures, electric readings, and conversation. For information, membership, and publications, see http://www.bu.edu/literary zor [email protected] or ALSCW, 650 Beacon Street, Suite 510, Boston, Ma. 02215, Phone: 617 358 1990.