INDEX 



Addison, Joseph, 53, 69, 7L 



Alcott, A. BroDson, 76. 



American literature, ait in, 16. 

 See also Literature. 



Amiel, Henri FrSdgric, on 

 Benan, 65; on Cherbuliez, 

 188 ; his Journal, 229 ; quota- 

 tion from, 1S6. 



Analogy, a frequent term of 

 argument, 27 ; between man 

 and nature, 27, 28, 48-50 ; met 

 apliors, 28-31 ; legitimate uses 

 of, 31, 32 ; accidental and es- 

 sential, 32; immortality in, 

 32-39 ; in theology, 39 ; false 

 and true, 39-41; between 

 mind and body, 44, 4S ; in the 

 physical world, 45-47 ; be- 

 tween art and nature, 50, 54; 

 rhetorical and scientific, 51. 



-Arnold, Matthew, 34, 50, 53, 59, 

 70, 78, 79; as a critic, 90-92, 

 228 ; 93, 96 ; greatest as a lit- 

 erary critic, 97 ; his Thyrsis, 

 103; Ms aristocratic Ideals, 

 112-114, 118 ; 123, 124, 133, 184, 

 189, 206, 210 ; his Literature 

 and Dogma, 228, 229 ; quota- 

 tions from, 63, 93. 



Art, disinterestedness of, 134, 

 135; universality of, 135-142; 

 disinterestedness not indif- 

 ferentism in, 142-148; treat- 

 ment of vice and sin in, 14&- 

 150. 



Bacon, Francis, 205, 218. 

 Bagehot, Walter, 26 ; quotation 



from, 26. 

 Barante, Baron de, 104. 

 Baudelahe, Charles, 20. 

 Birds, dusting and bathing, 174. 

 Eool£s, the enduring, 3; the 



re-reading of, 216-23L See 



also Literature. 



BosweU, James, bis Life of 

 Samuel Johnson, 225. 



Bronte, Charlotte, 103. 



Browne, Sir Thomas, his Be- 

 ligio Medici, 229 ; on the past, 

 241; quotation from, 241. 



Browning, Bobert, 2 ; his Hotc 

 fhey brought the Good Xevs 

 from Ghent to Air, 70, 166: 

 114,184. 



Brunetiere, Ferdinand. 71. 85; 

 Ids criticism, 87 : 90, 96. 104, 

 107, 109 ; a critic of Ote aristo- 

 cratic type, 112, 118- 



Bunting, snow (P<K*erin :: 

 nivalis), 174. 



Bumey, Fanny, 6-2. 



BuUer, Joseph, 33, 34. 



Byron, Lord, 131, ill ; eloquent 

 but not truly poetical 1^; 

 an example of his eloquence, 

 166 ; quotation from, 166. 



Campbell, Thomas, 166 : bis To 

 the Sainbow, 166 ; 1S2. 



Carlyle, Thomas, 2; Ms defini- 

 tion of poetry, 10; Us criti- 

 cism, 89, 90 ; 119 ; his vehe- 

 mence and enthusiasm, 123, 

 124 ; his French Berolution, 

 164; 196; his service to most 

 readers more moral than in- 

 teUectnal, 223 ; his Past and 

 Present, 224 ; his Latter-Day 

 Pamphlets. 22i; lua Life of 

 Sterling, -224 ; his essavs on 

 Scott, Bums, and Jolmson, 

 224; his FrederiOc, 221; his 

 Bemimscences, 224 ; his Sar- 

 tor Besartus, 224; handi- 

 capped by his style, 224, 225; 

 to Emerson on the los^^ of Ug 

 mother, 237: Ws attitude 

 toward the past, 238 : quota- 

 tions from, 164, le, 237 



