INDEX 



261 



Freeman, Edward Augustus, 5. 

 French art, M6. 

 French criticism, 97. 

 French poetry, more eloquent 



than poetic, 166. 

 French writers, modem, 7, 63. 

 Froude, James Anthony, 5 ; his 



style, 68. 



George, Henry, as a writer, 9. 

 German writers, 7. 

 Gibbon, Edward, 78, 163. 

 Gladden, Kev. Washington, bis 



Art and Moraiity^ 143, 144; 



quotation from, 143. 

 God, the old and the new ideas 



oJ, 152. 

 Goethe^ Conversatdons with, 



22B. 



Goethe, Johann Wolfgangvon, 

 93, 123, 127; his Sorrows of 

 Young Werther, 138 ; 141 ; on 

 poetical and unpoetical ob- 

 jects, 167 ; on Byron, 166 ; 184 ; 

 quotations from, 141, 167. 



Gosse, Edmund, his Questions 

 at Issue, 153, 164 ; quotation 

 from, 164. 



Grant, Gen. TTIysses Simpson, 

 his MeTnoirs, 6, 227 ; an ele- 

 mental man, 6; bis greatness 

 of the democratic type, U3, 

 114; his commonness, 116; 

 his lacli of Tanity, 227. 



Gray, Thomas, 63, 103; his 

 Megy in a Country Church- 

 yard, 137. 



Greeks, the, their view of Na- 

 ture, 203. 



Grimm, Hermann, 93. 



Grouse, ruffed {£ormsa urn,- 

 beUus), 174. 



Guizot, Francois Pierre Guil- 

 laume, 119. 



Halleck, Fitz- Greene, his 

 Marco Bozzaris, 166. 



Happiness, negative happiness 

 the most one ought to expect, 

 244 ; one's capacity for hap- 

 pmess not affected perma. 

 nently by adventitious cir- 

 cumstances, 244-248; conge- 

 nial work essential to, 248- 

 266. 



Harrison, Frederic, 28, 61. 



Hawthorne, Nathaniel, 7; the 



most suggestive of our ro- 

 mancers, 206. 



Heine, Heinrich, 80. 



Hennequin, his S<^enl\/ic Crit- 

 icism, 109. 



Heronry, 177. 



Hewlett, Maurice, 25, 26; quo- 

 tation from, 26. 



Hlgginson, Thomas Went- 

 worth, 72. 



Holmes, Oliver Wendell, 47, 

 79; his Old Ironsides, 166; 

 his Autocrat of the Break- 

 fastrTable, 219 ; his real ideas 

 and sham ideas, 219 ; his lack 

 of deep seriousness, 220. 



Honey dew, 178. 



Howells, William Dean, 6, 7, 

 72, 81 ; his Criticism and Fic- 

 tion, 82, 83, 109; 206; qaota- 

 tion from, 83. 



Hugo, Victor, 103, 119 ; his 

 moial earnestness, 189. 



Hume, David, elegance of his 

 style, 77 ; on the eloquencie of 

 Demosthenes, 162; on Ck)w. 

 ley and Pamell, 220 ; qnota- 

 tions from, 77, 162. 



Hunt, Leigh, 131. 



Huxley, Thomas Henry, 51, 78, 

 119. 



Ibsen, Henrik, 149. 



Immorality in art and litera- 

 ture, 148-160. 



Immoitality, false analogies 

 of, 32-39. 



Indian, the, Thoreau on, 198, 

 199. 



Indifferentism, 142, 143, 146- 



Individnalism, 125, 126. 



Individuality in literature 53- 

 60. 



InsHtutionalism, 125, 126. 



Irvine, J. P., quotation from 

 his poem The lightning Ex- 

 press, 159. 



James, Henry, on Whitman's 

 letters, 4; 6,69, 121; style of 

 his la,ter works, 206. 



Jeffrey, Francis, Lord, 131. 



Jesse's Gleanings in Natural 

 SiMory, 179. 



Joan of Aic, 73. 



Johnson, Charles Frederick, 



