INDEX. 



PAGE 



MILL, JOHN STUART, how he ultimately shook himself clear of his father, . 89 

 On the ungodliness, unnatural treatment, and cruelty in his education, . 90 

 He begins at fifteen to be a " reformer of the world," . . . 90, 92 

 His life previous to his engagement with the East India Company, . 91 

 Attacked by a nervous disorder A " crisis in his mental history," . 92 

 How he emerged from it, with the results it had on him, . 93 



The apparent cause of the disorder, . . . . . 94 



His estimate of the break-down in his father's system of instruction, . 95 

 His crude ideas regarding the " basis of his philosophy of life," . . 95 

 His ideas of the cultivation of the feelings, music, poetry, and human 



affections, 96 



The treatment he should have had during the "crisis in his mental 



history," . . 94, 96 



The extravagant language inscribed on his wife's tomb, . . . lor 

 His deficiency in looking at two sides, not to say all sides, of a question, 101 



Egotism as part of his character, 83,102,108,110 



The firm of Mill, Son & Co. Its establishment, principles, and sign or 



coat-of-arms, . . . . . . . . . . .102 



The loss he sustained intellectually by the death of his father, . .102 



His " apostleship " that of rank atheism, 105 



His principles destructive of the opinions and institutions of his country, 105 

 The mischief-making tendencies of his nature and teaching, . . 105, no 

 A fanatic as judged by the standard of his father, . . . .106 



A made or manufactured man, as described by himself, . .. .106 



Educated and trained like a stalled ox, 106 



Much of a demagogue in his principles and practices, . . . .106 



His crude and raw-lad-like peculiarities, 1 06, 107 



His deficiency in common sense, and delicacy or manliness of feeling, 94, 107 

 His ideas regarding Carlyle, ........ 108 



His various changes, no 



An estimate of some aspects of his character, no 



MILL, MRS., her memory made a religion of by her husband, .... 77 



Was she also an atheist, like himself? 78, 99 



His regard for her the main reason for writing his Autobiography, . 97 



How Mill made her acquaintance, 97 



Her talents, and the great influence she exercised over him, . . 97 

 Leaves her husband, Mr. Taylor, for the society of Mill, 97 



Repudiation of criminality in the relation, ...... 98 



Her intimacy with Mill a source of bitterness to her husband, . . 99 

 And the cause of a separation between Mill and his friends, ... 99 

 The peculiar ideas of Mill and Mrs. Taylor on the subject of liberty, . 99 

 The uncertainty of Mrs. Taylor's support while separated from her 



husband, 100 



The death of Mr. Taylor, and the marriage of the widow to Mill, . 100 

 Her death at Avignon, and the epitaph placed on her tomb, . . . 101 



Her many exalted qualities, as described by Mill, 102 



The great service she was to him in his literary enterprises, . . 99, 103 



The part she had in his various works, 103-105 



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