262 



INDEX 



his Elements of Literary 

 Criticism^ 109. 



Jolinson, Samuel, 76 : his Batii- 

 bler, 76 ; his criticism, 90 ; on 

 Dryden, 92 ; 96, 103, 112, 172, 

 205 J Boswell's Life of, 226. 



Jensen, Ben, a bit ef his prese, 

 26. 



Keats, John, 11 ; his Ode to a 

 Nightingale, 75. 



Kidd, Benjamin, his Social Ev- 

 olution, 9. 



Lander, Walter Savage, 93; 



lacking in moral stress and 



fervor, 124 1 132, 184. 

 Leniaitre, Jules, 87. 

 Life, the earlier years of one's, 



231-243. 



Lincoln, Abraham, his Gettys- 

 burg speech, 5 ; an elemental 

 man, 6 ; his greatness ef the 

 democratic type, 113, 114 j 

 his commonness, 115, 116. 



Literature, the enduring in, 1- 

 3,216-231; values in, 4-9 ; de- 

 finitions of, 9-13 ; style in, 14, 

 52-79 ; truth in, 14, 15 ; moral- 

 ity and art in, 16; art in, 17- 

 20 ; the teaching of, 20-26 ; 

 good and bad taste in, 26, 

 116-118; democracy in, 109- 

 115 ; the doctrinaire in, 118- 

 126; art vs. didacticism in, 

 136-142, 144-150; an end in 

 and of Itself, 140 ; immorality 

 In, 148-150; effect of demo- 

 cracy upon, 152-156 ; human- 

 itarianism in, 166 ; the me- 

 chanical and industrial age 

 in, 157-160 ; lucidity in, 180- 

 182 ; appreciation in the 

 reading of, 182-185 ; neces- 

 sity of something more than 

 style in, 186-190 ; Nature in, 

 202-204 ; suggestiveness in, 

 205-215. 



Longfellow, Henry Wads- 

 worth, 137, 185, 230 ; his sen- 

 net on Sumner, 230. 



Lowell, James Eussell, 105, 108, 

 122, 124 ; on scholarship, 186 ; 

 qiietation from, 186. 



Lucidity, 180-182. 



Macaulay, Thomas Babington, 



Lord, en Miss Burney, 62 ; 65, 

 79, 96, 131, 166 ; quotation 

 from, 62. 



Maeterlinck, Maurice, his Ufe 

 of tlie Bee, in. 



Martineau, Harriet, 103. 



Meredith, George, 69 ; his ob- 

 scurity of expression, 180- 

 182; quotations from, 180, 

 181. 



Metaphors, 28-31. 



Mill, Jolm Stuart, a suggestive 

 sentence of, 210. 



Milton, John, 13, 74; his Zyci- 

 das, 103 ; his Paradise Lost, 

 106 ; begotten of the classical 

 tradition. 111 ; 116 ; makes no 

 personal appeal, 183, 184. ■ 



Montaigne, Michel Eyquem de, 

 16, 68, 59, 217, 218 ; quotation 

 from, 59. 



Moody, William Vaughn, 166 ; 

 his poem on the steam en- 

 gine, 168, 169 ; quotation 

 from, 168, 159. 



Morley, John, his definition of 

 literature, 10. 



Nature, Thoreau's interest in, 

 201, 202; in literature, 203, 

 204. 



Newman, John Henry, 119. 



Nisard, Jean Marie Napol6en 

 D6sir6, 104. 



Obscurity of expression, 180- 

 182. 



Occupation, essential to hap- 

 piness, 249-256. 



Oriole, 174. 



Owl, white, 175. 



Parkman, Francis, his Oregon 

 Trail, 226. 



Parnell, Thomas, 220. 



Past, the, our feehng for, 232- 

 243, 246. 



Pater, Walter, 69, 70 ; a mere 

 stylist, 189. 



Peacock, 176. 



Poe, Edgar Allan, 7, 11 ; his art, 

 17-19; his Raven, 17, 19, 138; 

 his BelM, 19, 138 ; the univer- 

 saUty of his art, 138 ; his An- 

 nabel Lee, 138; his appeal 

 only to the sense of artis- 

 tic forms and verbal mel- 



