INDEX 



263 



ody, 184, 185 ; quotation from, 

 11. 



Poetry, relation of eloquence 

 to, 161-167 ; the elusive in, 

 204 1 more suggestive than 

 prose, 213. See also Litera- 

 ture. 



Pope, Alexander, 80, 203; on 

 friends, 240 ; quotation from, 

 240. 



Protestantism, 125, 126, 



Quintllian, 43. 



Babelais, Francois, 132. 



Kaleigh, Prof. Walter, on the 

 busniess of letters, 62; his 

 style, 63, 64; 65; quotations 

 from, 62-65. 



Eat, water, 177. 



Beading, understanding and 

 appreciation in, 132-185 : the 

 re-reading of boolcs, 216-231. 



Benan, Ernest, 32, 60 ; his ob- 

 ject as a writer, 65 ; 119 ; his 

 Future of Science, 161; on 

 eloquence and poetry, 161; 

 190 ; quotations from, 60, 161, 

 190. 



Eobertson, John M., his Essays 

 toward a Oritioal Method, 

 109. 



Eousseau, Jean Jacques, B6, 

 56. 



Euslcin, John, 6, 79, 90, 119, 123, 



144, 145, 14T, 163 ; quotations 

 from, 144, 147. 



Sainte-Beuve, Charles Angus- 

 tin, 6 ; on Montaigne's meta- 

 phors, 16 ; on Eousseau's Con- 

 fessions, 55 ; T3, 92-96 ; as a 

 critic, 97, 112, 115, 118, 132, 



145, 146 ; 102, 104, 128, 132 ; on 

 moral censure in criticism, 

 145, 146 ; quotations from, 16, 

 56, 145, 146. 



Saturday Review, The, 4. 



Sch6rer, Edmond Henri 

 Adolphe, 80, 94, 96, 105, 132. 



Schiller, his Bobbers, 138. 



Schopenhauer, Arthur, his use 

 of analogy, 42, 43; his defi- 

 nition of style, 60; 73, 234, 

 243 ; quotations from, 60, 73 

 234. 



Science, democracy of, no ; dis- 



interestedness of, 134, 135; 

 rarely suggestive, 211. 



Scott, Sir Walter, the literary 

 value of his novels, 6, 6, 60, 

 61 ; the eloquence of his po- 

 etry, 166 ; his laclc of under- 

 standing of Wordsworth, 

 182, 183. 



Sears, Lorenzo, his Methods 

 and Principles of Literary 

 Criticism, 109. 



Shairp, Principal John Camp- 

 bell, 91. 



Shakespeare, William, 74; Vol- 

 taire's verdict upon, 103 ; de- 

 mocracy of his art. 111 ; 136 ; 

 the highest type of the disin- 

 terested artist, 144 ; 189 ; his 

 Sonnets, 208, 209, 211 ; quota- 

 tions from, 136, 212. 



Shakespeareana, 24. 



Shelley, Percy Bysshe, 114, 124. 



Smith, Sydney, 26. 



Sparrow, house (Passer do- 

 mestieus), 175. 



Sparrow, song (Melosplza me- 

 lodia), 174. 



Sparrow, vesper (Pooecetes 

 gramineus), 174. 



Spencer, Herbert, 32, 69; on 

 the philosophy of style, 71 ; 

 his style, 206; quotations 

 from, 32, 71. 



StaSl, Madame de, 104. 



Steam engine in recent poetry, 

 the, 158, 169. 



Stevenson, Eohert Louis, 3; 

 his Inland Foya^e, 111 ; his 

 Travels with a Donkey, 'mi. 



Style, value of, 6-8 ; a quality 

 of mind, 14 ; nature of , 52, 53 ; 

 personality an element of, 

 54-60 ; of the stylist, 61-67 ; 

 unconsciousness of good, 68, 

 69; simplicity of good, 69- 

 74; in conversation, 75-77; 

 aristocracy and democracy 

 in, 77 ; variety of, 78, 79. 



Stylist, the, 62-67. 



Suggestiveness in literature, 



205-215. 

 Swallow, barn (mrundo ery. 



throgastra), 173, 174. 

 Swallow, cUfl (Petrochelidon 



lunifrons), 173, 174. 

 Swallow, white-bellied, or tree 



(.Tachycineta bicolor), 174. 



