The complete works of Ralph Waldo Emerson: Natural history of intellect, and other papers [Vol. 12]
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- The complete works of Ralph Waldo Emerson: Natural history of intellect, and other papers [Vol. 12]
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- Emerson, Ralph Waldo, 1803-1882.
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- Boston ; New York :: Houghton, Mifflin,
- [1903-1904].
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"The complete works of Ralph Waldo Emerson: Natural history of intellect, and other papers [Vol. 12]." In the digital collection The Complete Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/4957107.0012.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 12, 2025.
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THE following list gives the titles of the volumes to which the Roman numerals in this Index refer:—
- I. NATURE, ADDRESSES AND LECTURES,
- II. ESSAYS, FIRST SERIES.
- III. ESSAYS, SECOND SERIES.
- IV. REPRESENTATIVE MEN.
- V. ENGLISH TRAITS.
- VI. CONDUCT OF LIFE.
- VII. SOCIETY AND SOLITUDE.
- VIII. LETTERS AND SOCIAL AIMS.
- IX. POEMS.
- X. LECTURES AND BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES.
- XI. MISCELLANIES.
- XII. NATURAL HISTORY OF INTELLECT.
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GENERAL INDEX
[Titles of Essays and Poems are printed in SMALL CAPITALS.]
- Abandonment, no greatness without, VII. 49, 181; the way of life, II. 321.
- Abdel Kader, and Daumas, VII. 271; on nobility, VI. 176.
- Able men, have respect for justice, I. 165; ask only for ability, IV. 268.
- Abolition, bigot in, II. 51; the church appears in, III. 251; church hostile to, X. 114; shadow of Clarkson, II. 61; conventions, II. 135; effect of, XI. 100; transcendentalists and, I. 348, 349.
- Abolitionist, every man an, XI. 250, 354; farmer the true, VII. 141; love the arch-, XI. 281; made by slavery, XI. 281.
- Aboriginal man, not engaging, VIII. 270.
- Aboriginal power, II. 358; VI. 72.
- Aboriginal races, incapable of improvement, XII. 26.
- Aboriginal, the State not, III. 199.
- Absolute and relative, IV. 149.
- Absolve you to yourself, II. 50.
- Abstemious, of criticism, VII. 180; spirit's teachings are, IV. 139.
- Abstemiousness, quiddling, VI. 154.
- Abstinence, I. 215, 251.
- Abstract truth, II. 326, 331.
- Abstraction, of scholars, VI. 156; VIII. 288.
- Abstractionists, Nature furnishes, III. 237; IV. 154, 155.
- Absurdity, difference from me, the measure of, IV. 24.
- Abu Ali Seena, IV. 95.
- Abu Taleb, VI. 273; IX. 302.
- Abul Khain, IV. 95.
- Abury, temple at, V. 278, 281.
- Abuses, block ways to employments, I. 234.
- Abyss, replies to abyss, VII. 171; of being, II. 121; IV. 86.
- Accidents, not to be feared, VI. 232; insurance office increases, II. 85; there are no, VII. 132; lovely, of Nature, III. 231; resisting, VI. 24.
- Accomplishments, VI. 143; of the scholar, X. 278.
- Accuracy, essential to beauty, X. 147.
- Achievement, power of, X. 277; not computed by time, II. 317.
- Achilles, in every nation, VII. 255; vulnerable, II. 107.
- Achromatic lens, needful to see reality, X. 166.
- Acorn, thousand forests in one, II. 4.
- Acquaintances, high, the great happiness of life, VII. 306.
- Acquainted, be not too much, III. 137.
- Acre, cleave to thine, VI. 244; my, IX. 143.
- Acres, black, of the night, IX. 342; mystic fruit, IX. 145; sitfast, IX. 36.
- Acrostic, a character like, II. 58, 148.
- Action, Actions, honest and natural agree, II. 58; preëxist in the actor, III. 97; not over-doing and busy-ness, X. 267; not cowed by the name of, II. 163; dispose to greater conclusions, III. 194; tends to diversity, IV. 51; of infinite elasticity, II. 164; not rashly explained, III. 108; in life, few, XII. 412; future not to be decided beforehand, XI. 169; what are called good, II. 53; great do not let us go behind them, II. 250; heroic, are beautiful, I. 19; not indifferent, II. 120, 317; independent, rare, X. 229; their influence not measured by
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- miles, III. 74; inscribe themselves, IV. 261; integrate themselves, II. 102; intellectual quality, VI. 158; we put our life in, II. 101; magnetism of, II. 63; leave no mark in the world, I. 278; measured by depth of sentiment, II. 155; IV. 268; mechanical, II. 135; men of, IV. 267; men wanted more than, I. 278; and misaction, X. 268; original, necessary, X. 267; natural, I. 19; every necessary action pleases, VI. 291; Nelson on, VIII. 308; are pearls to discourse, I. 95; need perspective, II. 5; picture-book of creed, VIII. 23; a great pleasure, VII. 38; is prayer, II. 77; reaction, II. 96; resounding, III. 41; a resource, I. 98; satellites to Nature, I. 39; essential to scholar, I. 94; self-rewarding, II. 102; we shrink from actions of our own, XI. 521; is in silent moments, II. 161; right speech not distinguished from, VIII. 95; spontaneous, strong, II. 138, 328; III. 47, 68; steps in ladder, II. 305; subject for sculpture, VII. 130; should rest on substance, III. 101; partiality, the tax on, IV. 266; timely, II. 228; and thought, I. 272; IV. 266; VII. 38; transfigured as thoughts, I. 96; a trick of the senses, II. 163; not better than verses or pictures, XII. 343; unconscious, VII. 38; give vocabulary, I. 97; give a return of wisdom, I. 98; II. 227.
- Activity, amiable, X. 47; children and thoughtless people like, X. 174; contagious, IV. 13; frivolous, X. 267; too great, VII. 312; miscellaneous, to be stopped off, VI. 73; makes room for itself, V. 31.
- Actors, worst provincial excels amateur, VI. 77.
- Actual, dwarfish, I. 285; Goethe, poet of, XII. 329, 331; ideal truer than, XII. 330; the imposing, XI. 163; modern regard for, XII. 249; necessary use of, I. 305.
- Adam, age, IX. 339; hide ourselves as, III. 135; Milton's, XII. 274, 275; every man a new, I. 76; X. 137; perfect, IX. 223, 283.
- Adamant, of Nature, I. 169; passes into smoke, VII. 145; X. 70; England moves on a splinter of, V. 63; wax to artist, II. 360; IX. 69.
- Adamantine, bandages, VI. 17; government, III. 267; limitations, IV. 137; necessity, VII. 55; syllable, III. 247.
- Adamhood, IX. 26, 166.
- Adamitic capacity, Webster in his, XI. 221.
- Adams, John, courage, XII. 203; elevation, VI. 161; fame, XII. 210; old age, VII. 323; patriotism, X. 248; no backward-creeping crab, XI. 537; visit to, VII. 332.
- Adams, John Q., VI. 175; company for kings, X. 392; courage, XI. 134; eloquence, II. 60; VII. 83; audacious independence, XI. 521; on literature, VIII. 123; reading, VIII. 122.
- Adams, Samuel, VII. 116.
- Adaptation, none in man, III. 57; the peculiarity of human nature, IV. 161; VIII. 306; of Nature, VI. 39; we are victims of, VI. 139.
- Addition, the world not to be analyzed by, II. 339.
- ADIRONDACS, IX. 182-194.
- Adjustments, Nature's, VI. 37.
- Admetus, II. 31; VII. 176.
- Admiration, strain to express, VIII. 86; X. 306; not forgiven, XII. 30.
- Adrastia, law of, III. 84.
- Adsched of Meru, VIII. 244.
- Adultery, VI. 11.
- Advance, the history of Nature, VI. 35; XI. 525; XII. 60.
- Advantage, has its tax, II. 120; XI. 125, 186.
- Advantages, each envies those he has
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- not, VI. 144; cannot afford to miss, X. 69.
- Adventure, love of, VI. 68; XII. 200.
- Adventurer, well received, VI. 211.
- Adversity, the prosperity of the great, VI. 233; VIII. 231.
- Advertisement, most of life mere, III. 73; VII. 290.
- AEolian Harp, IX. 237-241; 256; dumb, VIII. 273; in Nature, III. 172, 175; VIII. 287; IX. 230, 322; X. 129; melancholy, XII. 406.
- AEolus, steam his bag, I. 13.
- AEons, VI. 83; VII. 180; IX. 115, 285.
- Aerolites, Shakspeare's, IV. 208.
- AEschylus, we are civil to, VIII. 67; in earnest, VII. 53; Eumenides, III. 82; grandest of Greek tragedians, VII. 198; counterpart in Scott's Bride of Lammermoor, XI. 465; quoted, II. 106; XI. 239.
- AEsop, Lincoln an, XI. 333; his price, X. 49; knew the realities of life, VI. 261; VIII. 3; a man of the world, V. 147.
- AEsop's Fables, III. 31; IV. 201; associate us, I. 123; VII. 14, 15.
- Affections, beauty, I. 99; benefits, VII. 11; exhilaration, II. 191; geometric, VIII. 107; Heraclitus said were colored mists, II. 326; increases intellect, II. 192; VIII. 228; XII. 44, 61; jets, II. 193; and memory, XII. 99, 104; metamorphosis, II. 193; tent of a night, II. 188; pathetic region of, VI. 316; sweetness of life, II. 191; make web of life, VII. 300; essential to will, VI. 28; woman's crown, XI. 412.
- Affinities, in conversation, II. 207; essential to man of the world, III. 125; to great men, IV. 41; between man and works, XII. 63; neglect of, II. 151; perception of, makes the poet, I. 54; of persons, II. 52; VI. 46; range, VI. 137; reciprocity, VII. 14; of thoughts, XII. 23; of virtue with itself in different persons, II. 195; women's, III. 151; world enlarged by, VII. 302.
- Affirmative, being is, II. 121; class, VI. 72; forces, VI. 57; good mind chooses, VII. 307; XII. 61; incessant, VII. 309; love is, VII. 309; XII. 61; we love the, IV. 170; in manners, etc., VII. 308; philosophy, X. 244; power, X. 234, 235; principle, III. 45; sacred, X. 219.
- Afraid, do what you are afraid to do, II. 260; X. 406.
- Afrasiyab, VIII. 242.
- Africa, civilization, XI. 141, 145. See Negro, Slavery.
- Africanization of U. S., XI. 298.
- Afternoon men, II. 229; saunterings, I. 163.
- Agamemnon, II. 24.
- Agaric, self-planting, III. 23.
- Agassiz, Louis, VIII. 213; IX. 193; museum, VIII. 151; theories, VIII. 7; XI. 391.
- Age, old. See Old Age.
- Age, the characteristics of different ages, I. 109, 281, 287; of the present, the interest in familiar things, I. 110, 271; VI. 3; VIII. 208; of fops, IX. 207; of gold, III. 87; IX. 273; of omnibus, XI. 538; walks about in persons, I. 264; VI. 39; of reason in a patty-pan, X. 364; retrospective, I. 3; riddle of, VI. 4; of analysis, X. 326; each, new, X. 254; XII. 387.
- Ages, of belief, great, VI. 216; X. 206; equivalence of, VIII. 213; instruct the hours, II. 4; ideas work in, XI. 160; not idle, I. 311.
- Agiochook, I. 170; IX. 77.
- Agitation, blessed, XI. 533.
- Agitators, I. 285.
- Agricultural Report, XII. 360.
- Agriculture, praise of, I. 366; attacks on, I. 252; aids civilization, VII. 22, 151 f; XI. 34; English, V. 95, 189; check on nomadism, II. 21 f;
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- oldest profession, I. 240; respect for, I. 235, 381; VII. 137; steam in, V. 95; thrift in, II. 234. See Farming.
- AGRICULTURE OF MASSACHUSETTS, XII. 358-364.
- Aids, casting off, III. 260; XI. 235, 236.
- Aim, high, I. 216; III. 185, 268; VI. 232; VIII. 301; X. 65; aggrandizes the means, VII. 273; men of, X. 39; mind own, IX. 30; want of, VI. 208.
- Air, artful, IX. 179; influence on body and brain, XII. 140, 160; exhalation, XII. 183; fame, IX. 222; food of life, XII. 183; gifts, X. 70; inspiration, III. 29; intellectual, VII. 171; effect on manners, XII. 183; is matter subdued by heat, VII. 144; full of men, VI. 17; moral sentiment in, I. 42; music, III. 8; an ocean, I. 12; receptacle, VII. 144; of mountains, a good republican, XII. 183; like a river, I. 44; is Rock of Ages dissolved, XII. 141; salubrity, VI. 243; IX. 219; coined into song, II. 176; sounds, XII. 32; useful and hurtful, II. 339; forged into words, I. 40; works for man, VII. 144; worth, X. 276.
- Air-ball, thought, VI. 288.
- Air-bells, of fortune, IX. 231.
- Air-lord, poet, III. 42.
- Air-pictures, III. 221.
- Air-sown words, IX. 222.
- Airs, logs sing, II. 227.
- Airs, putting on, XII. 202.
- Aisles, forest, IX. 45; monastic, IX. 6; of Rome, IX. 7.
- Akhlak-y-Jalaly, IV. 40.
- Aladdin's lamp, oil, VIII. 142.
- Alarmists, VI. 61.
- Alchemy, is in the right direction, VI. 282.
- Alcibiades, III. 274.
- Alcott, A. B., X. 376.
- Alcuin, IX. 293.
- Alderman, dreariest, VI. 312.
- Alembert, Jean d', quoted, VI. 313; X. 110.
- Alembic of man, I. 24; VIII. 16.
- Alexander, and Aristotle, X. 307; a gentleman, III. 125; X. 318; XI. 285; estimate of life, III. 274; and Napoleon, XII. 339; not representative, VIII. 302; victories, XI. 153.
- Alexander of soil, XII. 358.
- Alfieri, quoted, V. 62.
- Alfred, V. 117, 141, 175, 290; VII. 295.
- Ali, Caliph, quoted, I. 222; II. 88; success, X. 58; vigor, I. 317.
- All, the encroaching, XII. 405; life of, must stream through us, XII. 21; whom he knew, met, VIII. 92.
- All-confounding pleasure, II. 209.
- Allies, best, VIII. 231.
- Allingham, William, quoted, VIII. 280.
- Allston, Washington, Coleridge on, V. 10, 14; design, VII. 47; habits, VIII. 291; house, VI. 113; quoted, III. 241.
- Almanac, of birds, IX. 176; man an, VI. 131; of mental moods, XII. 11; Thomas's, XII. 361. See, also, Calendars.
- Alms-giving, I. 123; VII. 115.
- Almshouse, world an, II. 365.
- Alone, flight of, to the alone, IV. 97; must go, II. 71; none, VI. 226.
- Alphabet, boy and, VIII. 168.
- ALPHONSO OF CASTILE, IX. 25-28; advice, III. 238.
- Alpine air, IX. 181; cataracts, IX. 141; district, VI. 216.
- Alps, IX. 341; Dante etched on, IX. 221; fires under, IX. 335; globe-girdling, IX. 63; landscape, XII. 347; love eats through, IX. 295; pedestals of, IX. 192; shadow, II. 148; snowy shower, IX. 355.
- Alternation, law of Nature, II. 197; VI. 322; VII. 225, 249; VIII. 149, 150; IX. 23.
- Amasis, IV. 112.
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- Amateurs, and practitioners, VI. 79.
- Ambassadors, objects like, XII. 5.
- Amber of memory, II. 175.
- Ambient cloud, X. 55.
- Ambition, adjusted to powers, II. 141; errors from, VI. 218; makes insane, XII. 118; pure, III. 275; VII. 122; of scholar, I. 173; thieving, VI. 278; IX. 276.
- Amelioration, principle of, I. 372; IV. 35, 81. See Melioration.
- Amen, obsolete, I. 249.
- America, advantages, VIII. 104, 207; XI. 386, 537; architecture, VIII. 212; aristocracy, I. 261; arts, II. 82; VII. 56; bill of rights, XI. 517; Carlyle on, V. 16; Chanticleer, XI. 389; is charity of God to man, XI. 540; civilization, VIII. 104; XI. 123, 385, 537; clubs, XI. 527; colossal, XI. 385; Congress, VII. 90; Constitution, I. 274; III. 211; courts, VI. 62; crisis, XI. 516; democracy, XI. 526; destiny, XI. 383; despondency, XII. 406; discovery, VII. 175; XI. 165, 515; domestic service, VI. 275; economists, V. 150; education, VII. 119; VIII. 233; XI. 527; and England, V. 53, 119, 121, 150; and Europe, II. 22; VII. 161; expensiveness, VI. 210; extent dazzles the imagination, III. 38; VI. 256; flag, IX. 199, 206; XI. 530; fortune, XI. 530; represents future of mankind, XI. 515; genius, III. 230; V. 36; XI. 209, 385, 537; geography sublime, men not, VI. 256; VIII. 141; government, theory of, XI. 258, 529; growth, XII. 200; an immense Halifax, XI. 533; history short, I. 392; home of man, I. 391; to be home of peace, XI. 175; hopes and fears for, XI. 329; idea, V. 286; imitative, I. 157; II. 82; VII. 180; XI. 385; immigration, X. 242; XI. 516; a nation of individuals, XI. 529; influence, I. 371; institutions, III. 207; landscape, V. 288; law, ethical, X. 112; life, VIII. 141; literature optative, I. 342; XII. 404; materialism, I. 191; X. 62, 242; XI. 384, 531; mendicant, VII. 180; money-getting, XI. 523; names, V. 179; Nature's charge to, X. 249; newness, VIII. 212; means opportunity, VIII. 100, 141; XI. 299, 541; a poem, III. 37, 38; political economy, XI. 519; politics, VIII. 242; X. 86; XI. 387, 388, 518, 522; country of poor men, XI. 526; provincial, XI. 533; progress, VII. 31, 283; XI. 530; radicalism, III. 210; reform, I. 268; XI. 529; religion, X. 212; resources, VIII. 104, 141, 154; XI. 522; scholarship, I. 157; sentiment, I. 364; want of sincerity in leading men, VI. 212; XI. 288; slavery, see Slavery; love of talent, XII. 57; of thought, III. 72; talking, III. 82; vanity, I. 392; XI. 530; wealth, shame for, V. 153; women, III. 150; Wordsworth on, V. 19; country of young men, VII. 331. See, also, American, Americans, United States.
- American Civil War. See under United States.
- AMERICAN CIVILIZATION, XI. 295-311.
- American, model, VIII. 103; X. 459.
- American Revolution, I. 219; IX. 214 f; XI. 67-80, 262, 352, 440; XII. 210.
- AMERICAN SCHOLAR, THE, I. 79-117.
- AMERICAN, THE YOUNG, I. 365-395.
- Americanism, VII. 290; Americanisms, XII. 291.
- Americans, activity, character, XI. 387; conservatism, III. 210; conversation, V. 114; crime no shock to, XI. 229; deeds, VII. 292; depression, I. 284; VII. 292; XI. 532; destiny, XI. 383, 537; value dexterity, XI. 224; Dickens on, VI. 174;
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- X. 246; rely on dollar, I. 249; dress with good sense, VIII. 87; energy, VIII. 142; contrasted with English, V. 128, 138, 261, 275, 307; XI. 529; deference to English, I. 167, 392; VI. 62; XI. 123, 533, 534; ethics in money-paying, X. 62; passion for Europe, I. 114, 363; II. 22, 214; VI. 145, 266; VII. 180, 292; XI. 533 ff; lack faith, I. 249; choked by forms, XI. 258; fury, XI. 388; gentlemen, XI. 537; lack idealism, XI. 536; idlers, XI. 533, 535; impulsiveness, XI. 532; independence, XII. 201; intellect, X. 277, 369; levity, X. 255; XI. 532; life, XI. 536; manners, VI. 174; VIII. 79; melioration, VIII. 141; and New Zealanders, II. 84; perception, II. 228; poetic genius, III. 37; practicality, X. 266; deaf to principle, XI. 239; a puny and fickle folk, I. 191; no purists, X. 62; lack repose, I. 284; VI. 145; VII. 286; XI. 531; lack reverence, X. 206; self-assertion, I. 363; XI. 521, 528; sensualism, XI. 531; no sentiment, I. 249; shop-keepers, XI. 123; society, VII. 32; VIII. 101, 112; X. 40; sovereignty, XI. 384; speech-making propensities, VI. 152; students, V. 206; success, VII. 288; XI. 532; superficialness, VI. 5; VII. 290; respect for talent, IV. 280; X. 277; love of travel, II. 80; V. 273 f; VII. 180; XI. 383, 533; workman, versus foreign, VI. 225; youth, VI. 150; VIII. 85.
- Ames, Fisher, quoted, III. 211.
- Amici, Prof., V. 8.
- Amphibious, men are, III. 229.
- Amphion, III. 197; IX. 271.
- Amphitheatre, Roman, origin of the shape, VII. 54; XII. 325.
- AMULET, THE, IX. 98.
- Amulets, IX. 32; X. 16.
- Amurath, Sultan, IV. 263.
- Amusements, aim of society, VI. 247; education of, VI. 142; forbidden, VI. 144; need of, VIII. 150; X. 109; safeguard of rulers, III. 268; VI. 33.
- Analogy, I. 27, 85; V. 239, 254; VII. 54; VIII. 13, 195; X. 11, 183.
- Analysis, III. 62; VI. 311; X. 220; XII. 14.
- Anarchy, value of, I. 323; III. 211, 240; in the church, VI. 203; XI. 262.
- Anatomy, in art, I. 43; XII. 219; morbid, VII. 276, 308; of national tendencies, V. 138; Swedenborg on, IV. 112; sympathetic, VI. 229.
- Ancestors, escape from, VI. 9; face represents, V. 50; VI. 181; reverence for, VII. 177; a man represents each of several ancestors, VI. 10; independence of, I. 173.
- Anchors, easy to twist, VI. 276.
- Ancients, why venerable, XII. 387.
- Andes, II. 58; VI. 272; VIII. 132.
- ANGELO, MICHAEL, XII. 213-244; on beauty, I. 58; cardinal in picture, IV. 137; cartoons, V. 202; conscience of Italy, VIII. 216; creative, VIII. 39; on death, VIII. 329; on eye of artist, VI. 178; frescoes, II. 356; Landor on, V. 7; influence on Milton, XII. 259; sonnet translated, IX. 298; XII. 213; sonnets, XII. 240; memory, XII. 105; on test of sculpture, II. 155; self-confidence, VII. 291; Sistine Chapel, VI. 72; XII. 228, 230; solitude, VII. 7; VIII. 216; XII. 237; beauty the purgation of superfluities, VI. 294.
- Angels, past actions are, I. 96; asp or, I. 341; of the body, II. 187; VII. 170; of children, IV. 30; for cook, VI. 275; shown in crises, I. 149; disguised, I. 291; our ancestors' familiarity with, X. 106; favoritism, X. 16; flutes, IX. 178; food, I. 338; gossip keeps them in the proprieties, VI. 222; guardian, X. 22, 78;
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- hope, III. 249; IX. 264; language, II. 347; let go, II. 125; take liberties with letters, III. 227; memory, XII. 92; poems, VIII. 74, 277; power, X. 21; praise, I. 148; preachers, I. 147; IV. 142; pride, IX. 23; lead men out of prison, III. 285; punishers, XII. 92; shoon, IX. 293; skirts, IX. 277; Swedenborg on, IV. 125, 142; VII. 6; VIII. 233; talk, XII. 198; thrones, II. 307; blind to trespass, X. 215; walking among, IV. 142; wandering, X. 397; whispering, III. 67; words, I. 40; IX. 318; of youth, VII. 117; X. 251.
- Angles, veracity of, IV. 10; at which we look at things, XII. 10.
- Anglomania, II. 22.
- Anglo-Saxons, VI. 152; XI. 239. See, also, Saxons.
- Angularity of facts, II. 9.
- Animal, every efficient man a fine, V. 71; novice, III. 181.
- Animal consciousness in dreams, X. 6.
- Animal courage, VII. 256.
- Animal magnetism, I. 73; II. 10; X. 21, 25. See Mesmerism.
- Animal spirits, VII. 12, 13.
- Animalcules, our bodies built up of, VI. 111.
- Animals, dreams of Nature, X. 6; features and sense in men, X. 7; XII. 22; good sense, VIII. 158; growth, IV. 107; VIII. 9; memory in, XII. 90; moral sentiment in, X. 184; pantomime, I. 42; Plutarch on, X. 14; not progressive, X. 126; pugnacity, VII. 256; sacred, X. 14; scavengers, VII. 276; truthfulness, V. 117.
- Anne, of Russia, snow palace, VIII. 336.
- Annoyances, VIII. 289.
- Answers, VII. 235, 239.
- ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS, XII. 392 ff.
- Antagonisms, I. 295; II. 199, 208, 210; VI. 22, 254; VII. 15; XII. 53.
- Antenor, VII. 72.
- Anthropometer, X. 49.
- Anthropomorphism, we baptize the daylight by the name of John or Joshua, VIII. 23; X. 11, 202; XII. 222.
- Anti-masonry, I. 270.
- Antinomianism, I. 336; II. 74; III. 253.
- Antiochus, VI. 239.
- Antiphon, quoted, VII. 63.
- Antiquity, I. 159, 304; II. 11, 28; V. 60, 110, 212; VII. 174; what is meant by, XII. 304.
- Anti-Slavery, I. 214; XI. 115, 136, 144, 244, 416. See, also, Slavery.
- Antoninus, Marcus Aurelius, VI. 163, 240, 260; VIII. 312, 329; X. 92, 115, 122.
- Apathy, II. 199; X. 404.
- Apollo, III. 82; VII. 184; sun causes ignorance of, X. 307.
- Apologies, II. 60, 67, 160, 163, 222; do not apologize, III. 102, 217; VI. 236; VIII. 86.
- APOLOGY, THE, IX. 119.
- Apoplexy, VIII. 167.
- Apparatus, VI. 98; XI. 164.
- Appearances, and realities, I. 47; II. 59, 64, 254; III. 36; IV. 185; VI. 323; VIII. 171; XI. 163; the attempt to make a favorable appearance vitiates the effect, I. 123.
- Appetite, II. 231; IV. 184; VI. 154.
- Apple-tree, VI. 104.
- Apples, our national fruit, XII. 145-147.
- Applicability, XI. 513.
- Apprenticeships, III. 41; XI. 112.
- Approbation, we love but we do not forgive, II. 307; X. 61.
- Approximations, we live in, III. 190; VIII. 336.
- Appulses, III. 6.
- APRIL, IX. 255; IX. 25, 94, 142, 169.
- Aptitudes, VII. 291; X. 44; XII. 31.
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- Arabian Nights, VII. 70, 106.
- Arabs, civilization, V. 48; X. 177; enthusiasm, I. 251; barb not a good roadster, VI. 77; love of poetry, VIII. 239; poet quoted, I. 255; do not count days spent in the chase, V. 70; VIII. 280, 281; sheiks, II. 278; VII. 288; victories, I. 251.
- Arboretum, XI. 433; XII. 174.
- Arch, Gothic, II. 20; never sleeps, XII. 101.
- Archimedes, VII. 6, 183, 270, 322; VIII. 219; XII. 113.
- Architect, I. 43; IV. 194; XII. 219.
- Architecture, American, VIII. 212; bond of arts, XII. 223; Carlyle on, V. 274; compression in, XII. 291; fitness in, VI. 45, 302; French, VII. 242; Greek, II. 14; Greenough on, V. 6; length of line in, V. 285, 286; compared to music, I. 43; VIII. 185; and Nature, II. 21; origin, I. 67; II. 20; VII. 54; VIII. 187; rhyme in, VIII. 45, 52; of snow, IX. 42.
- Arctic expeditions, II. 86.
- Argenson, d', quoted, VIII. 183, 184.
- Argument, forbear, II. 239; VII. 226; VIII. 99; IX. 4.
- ARISTOCRACY, X. 31-66; American, I. 261; beauties, I. 393; English, V. 172 ff; X. 498; European, III. 147; democracy gone to seed, IV. 256; follies, XI. 517; inevitable, III. 129; justified where its foundation is merit, X. 38; literature of, VII. 199; manners, VI. 170; Puritans without, XII. 201; of trade, I. 378; traits, X. 31.
- Aristophanes, VII. 201; XI. 417.
- Aristotle, his definitions, I. 55; II. 146; III. 30; V. 136; VII. 39, 157; VIII. 157, 279; X. 147, 477; XII. 62, 278; his method, IV. 104.
- Arithmetic, II. 253, 316; III. 206; IV. 238; VI. 100; VII. 179; X. 147, 327, 348.
- Ark of God, III. 247.
- Arminianism, X. 330.
- Arming, of man, II. 249.
- Armor, VI. 224; truth our, VI. 230; X. 274.
- Army, in Civil War, XI. 356; discipline, VI. 139; English, V. 63; Napoleon's, II. 87; IV. 238; generate heat, XI. 355.
- Arnim, Bettine von, III. 55; VI. 163.
- Arrangement, VIII. 286; XII. 20.
- Arsenal of forces, X. 70.
- ART, II. 349-369; VII. 35-57; IX. 277; baubles, III. 174; beauty, I. 23; II. 353; VI. 294; at its best, II. 363; the best in work of, I. 210; Carlyle on, V. 274; lives in contrasts, VI. 255; courage in, VII. 268; creation, III. 38; best critic of, II. 358; deification of, III. 234; defined, I. 5; VII. 38, 39; XII. 218; devotion to, II. 232; collections in England, V. 188; epitome of world, I. 23; source of excellence in, IV. 69; fine and useful, VII. 39; galleries, VI. 98; VII. 130; human form in, XII. 221; immobility in, III. 56; industrial, is but initial, II. 362; jealous, VI. 114; Landor on, V. 7; love of, VII. 294; masterpiece of, XII. 253; attuned to moral nature, VII. 51; is Nature working through man, I. 24; a complement to Nature, III. 174; VII. 40, 48, 51, 297; IX. 8, 226; is free necessity, VII. 47, 52; in rude people, X. 81; property in, VII. 131; proportion, III. 234; refining influence, VI. 98; success in, VI. 73; sweet, IX. 238; universal, XII. 218; is conscious utterance of thought, VII. 38; woman in, XI. 408; works of, should be public property, VII. 131.
- ART AND CRITICISM, XII. 281-305.
- Arthur, King, legends, V. 55; VII. 123, 317; VIII. 60, 291; IX. 238.
- ARTIST, IX. 291; influenced by the age, II. 352; must have apprehension, II. 21; and his art, VII. 45;
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- difference from artisan, VI. 231; as companion for a walk, XII. 176; disjoined from his object, XII. 45; English, V. 254; exemptions, X. 271; idealize by detaching, II. 354; inspiration, II. 360; inspirers, VII. 46; intoxication, III. 28; life, II. 360; materials, II. 360; models, II. 82; morality, II. 232; motive, X. 255; power not spontaneous, II. 336; Socrates on, VI. 267; part of universal soul, VII. 48, 50; stimulants, VI. 223; surroundings, VIII. 290; synthesis, IV. 55.
- Arts, costume of period, II. 86; creation their aim, II. 353; second childhood, I. 367; disease, III. 66; distinction, II. 367; VII. 43; XII. 223; draperies, VII. 213; expensiveness, X. 245; initial, II. 362; knowledge, III. 3; law, VII. 42 f; lost, VIII. 179; materials, IV. 9; morality, VII. 166; and Nature, I. 13; new, destroy old, II. 302; oriental, X. 177; origin, VII. 55; X. 128; of savage nations, VIII. 215; not satisfactory but suggestive, III. 190.
- Aryan legends, VIII. 187.
- Ascension, the poets', III. 24; IV. 32-69; VI. 35, 125; IX. 349, 356.
- Asceticism, I. 176, 187; II. 261; III. 64; X. 177.
- Ashley, Lord, VIII. 129.
- Asia, kept out of Europe, VII. 272; immigrations, IV. 47; in the mind, II. 9; IV. 62; nomadism, II. 22; rancor, IX. 71; country of fate, IV. 52.
- Asinine expression, II. 55; resistance, I. 299.
- Asmodeus, VI. 173; VIII. 149; IX. 334.
- Aspasia, VI. 187.
- Aspiration, VII. 126; XI. 424; XII. 318, 396; and not effort also, II. 285.
- Assacombuit, XI. 159.
- Assessors, divine, VI. 226.
- Assimilating power, I. 364; V. 137; VIII. 178, 190, 201; XII. 33.
- Association of ideas, XII. 96.
- Associations, I. 382; III. 130; X. 327, 358; compromise, II. 199, 262; III. 264. See Communities.
- Assyria, I. 17.
- Aster, IX. 117.
- Astley, John, anecdote, VIII. 169.
- ASTRAEA, IX. 80 f.
- Astrology, VI. 282; X. 12.
- Astronomy, I. 201; becomes astrology, III. 179; belittled, VIII. 4; a cold science, XII. 166; must come up into life, IV. 110; concords, IX. 144; and creeds, VIII. 211; discoveries, VI. 218; espionage, VII. 181; fortune-telling, IX. 140; is harmony in matter, I. 219; in mind, III. 183; VIII. 24; X. 131; miracles, X. 12; natural forces, VII. 29; no foreign system, XII. 5; and sectarianism, VIII. 211; spiritual, II. 215; teachings, VI. 160; X. 336.
- Atheism, III. 278; IV. 138; VI. 201; X. 483; XI. 228.
- Athenians, X. 261.
- Athens, genius, IV. 52; XI. 211 f; Mercury's statues, X. 105; thousand-eyed, III. 105.
- Atlantean shoulders, IV. 15.
- Atlantic, cable, IX. 191 ff, 200; a ferry of the free, IX. 200; roll, V. 250; pumped through the ship, X. 172; strength and cheer, XII. 359.
- Atmosphere, of men, II. 216; III. 229; VII. 217; X. 55; of the planet, VI. 232; VIII. 284; resistance to, III. 211; VI. 24; must be two to make, X. 55; westerly current, VI. 27; of women, XI. 412.
- Atoms, not isolated, VII. 143; VIII. 222; Divinity in, VI. 231; genetical, XII. 348; journeying, IX. 21; man and universe made of same,
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- VI. 240; march in tune, IX. 69; predetermined to moral issues, VI. 219; all Nature carried in one, II. 97; VI. 319; VIII. 224; self-kindled, III. 167; theory of, VIII. 7; yawns from atom, IX. 339.
- Atomies, XI. 154.
- Attention, II. 144; III. 82; is acceptable prayer, XII. 130.
- Attractions proportioned to destinies, VIII. 41; IV. 183.
- Auburn dell, IX. 169.
- Audibilities of a room, V. 133.
- Audience, a meter, VII. 63, 67, 82, 84, 94; VIII. 30, 293; XI. 316.
- Augur and bird, X. 14.
- Augustine, St., II. 106, 301; VII. 208; VIII. 51, 347; IX. 8; X. 306; XI. 486; XII. 194, 327, 356.
- Aunts, VIII. 81, 148; X. 19; XII. 97.
- Auricular air, VI. 37.
- Aurora, IX. 211; Guido's, II. 16.
- Authority, II. 295; VIII. 202; X. 329.
- Authors, the company of, V. 4; mutual flattery, II. 291; interruptions, VIII. 291; spirit of, XII. 315; we want only a new word from, III. 240; written out, I. 97; write better under a mask, VIII. 196. See, also, Writers.
- Autobiography, VII. 208.
- Autumn, VII. 298.
- Auvergne, Pierre d', VIII. 60.
- Auxiliaries, man's, VI. 247.
- Avarice, IX. 37; slavery not founded on, XI. 118.
- Avenger, the, XI. 238.
- Avenues, of thought which we never left open, II. 286; X. 133.
- Averages, we are, IV. 161.
- Aversation, II. 56; X. 459.
- Awkwardness, comes from want of thought, VI. 160; VIII. 82; healed by women, VI. 298; unforgiven, VII. 5.
- Axis of vision and of things, I. 73.
- Azure, come out of the, VI. 196.
- Babe, descriptions, VI. 247; VII. 103, 257; IX. 21; VIII. 81; power, II. 48; thousand years old, VII. 317.
- Baboon, descent from, V. 50; VI. 206.
- BACCHUS, IX. 125 ff; VIII. 70; XI. 512.
- Bachelors, III. 182.
- Backbone, imprisoned in, XI. 537.
- Bacon, Delia, VIII. 197.
- Bacon, Francis, analogist, V. 239; delight in, III. 55; eloquence, VII. 83; English language from, V. 100; fame, I. 267; generalizations, V. 241; idealist, IV. 40; V. 239; imagination, V. 239; XII. 274; on immortality, VIII. 340; Jonson on, V. 243; on manners, VII. 13; and Milton, XII. 255; and Newton, V. 248; on paradoxes, V. 94; doctrine of poetry, V. 241; VIII. 20; XII. 277; worth reading, VII. 207; and Shakspeare, IV. 202; VIII. 197; style, XII. 389; symbolism in, IV. 177; on time as reformer, V. 111; universality, V. 240, 244; quoted, VIII. 185, 192; X. 22.
- Bacon, Roger, discoveries and predictions, V. 157; VIII. 214.
- Bad, bark against, VII. 309; sometimes a better doctor than good, VI. 253.
- Bad news, X. 164.
- Bad times, X. 247.
- Bad world, the way to mend, VI. 224.
- Badges, II. 51, 204; III. 16; English have no taste for, V. 87.
- Badness is death, I. 124.
- Bag of bones, V. 305.
- Balances, II. 96; VI. 37, 255; VIII. 41; IX. 14, 123.
- Ball, Alexander, VII. 262.
- Ballads, II. 349; VIII. 67; XI. 464.
- Balloons, V. 161; VII. 161.
- Balls, VI. 144.
- Balzac, Honoré de, quoted, VI. 182; VIII. 81.
- Bancroft, George, V. 292.
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- Banishment to the rocks and echoes, VII. 10.
- Bank, of England, V. 161; days, VI. 247.
- Bankers, I. 380; VI. 100.
- Bank-notes, II. 235; VI. 103; XI. 301.
- Banquets, IV. 127; VII. 118, 248.
- Banshees, X. 22.
- Banyan, II. 127; XII. 209.
- Baptism, X. 109.
- Baptizing daylight, X. 202; VIII. 23.
- Barbarism, VII. 19, 34.
- Barcena, VIII. 313.
- Bards, I. 132, 146; III. 32; IX. 389.
- BARDS AND TROUVEURS, VIII. 57-63.
- Bar-rooms, III. 61; XI. 518.
- Barrows, III. 4; IX. 277.
- Bashfulness, II. 200.
- Basle, monk, VI. 194.
- Battery of Nature, VIII. 72.
- Battle, eye in, II. 237; of fate, II. 75; courage in, VII. 261, 262; Napoleon on, IV. 248; verdict, VIII. 111; X. 49.
- Baubles, VI. 318.
- Be, to be is the wonder, XII. 16; privilege to, I. 39.
- Be, not seem, II. 160; X. 281.
- Beads, life a string of, III. 50; VIII. 70, 329, 344; XII. 90; mountains are, IX. 68.
- Beatitudes, II. 354; III. 113; IV. 97; X. 263; XII. 10.
- Beaumarchais, Pierre de, VII. 240.
- Beaumont and Fletcher, II. 245; quoted, II. 43, 177, 240, 256; VI. 157; VIII. 55, 328.
- Beautiful, the highest, escaping the dowdiness of the good and the heartlessness of the true, I. 355; common offices made, III. 246; who are, X. 55; within, XII. 351.
- Beautiful, the, must carry it with us, II. 358; III. 163; defined, VI. 289; exalts, XII. 217; God the, II. 194; good the cause of, IV. 57; never plentiful, XI. 538; takes us out of surfaces, VI. 288; useful, II. 366.
- BEAUTY, I. 15-24; VI. 279-306; IX. 275.
- BEAUTY, ODE TO, IX. 87-90.
- Beauty, accuracy essential to, X. 147; of affection, I. 99; never alone, I. 23; IX. 4; escapes analysis, VI. 303; Michael Angelo on, XII. 199, 216; art the creation of, I. 23; II. 354, 366; VI. 294; VII. 39; theory of ancients, II. 179; beryl beam, VI. 279; IX. 276; bow of, IX. 54; comes not at call, II. 368; we find what we carry, II. 358; VI. 146; of character, I. 343; X. 34; childhood's cheat, IX. 5; corpse has, I. 16; creator, III. 7; culture opens the sense of, VI. 159; definition of, VI. 289; XII. 217; desert, I. 169; details, III. 234; die for, VI. 279; IX. 276; and disgust, VI. 255; divine in, VI. 305; of each individual, VII. 126; end in itself, I. 24; elusive, III. 193; makes endure, VI. 295; excuse for, IX. 38; XII. 277; is in expression, II. 358; VI. 302; without expression, VI. 301; eye makes, VI. 48; face moulded to, XII. 245; IX. 330; mark of fitness, VI. 290, 294; VII. 53; XI. 410; of form better than of face, III. 149; and genius, VI. 302; golden mean, I. 355; unity with goodness, IV. 57; VII. 310; XII. 218, 234; grace, VIII. 79; Greeks delighted in, VIII. 325; is health, VII. 306; X. 43; immersed in, II. 131, 354; III. 173; inexplicable, III. 16; inspiration, X. 262; object of intellect, I. 23; VI. 287; XI. 122; intoxicates, X. 52; of landscape, I. 169; III. 176; rides lion, VI. 294, 301; leads love, VI. 289; love of, III. 7, 122; VI. 296; VII. 113, 302; in manners, VI. 195; X. 34, 55; and meanness, X. 54; love of measure, III. 139; has a moral element, VI. 216, 306; of nature, a mirage, I. 19; a necessity of nature, II. 366; III. 13, 176, 236;
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- IV. 6; VI. 294; Nature's crown of approbation, I. 299; of noble things, I. 133; occasional, VII. 126; organic, VI. 290; pilot of young soul, VI. 289; perception of natural forms, I. 16; Plato on, IV. 69; personal, II. 178; power, III. 147; VII. 172; suggests relation to whole world, VI. 303; rose of, VI. 48; IX. 250; noble sentiment the highest form of, X. 55; spiritual element, I. 19; spirit of joy and hilarity, IV. 215; standard, XII. 217; stone grew to, IX. 7; sufficient to itself, II. 178; law of table, VIII. 98; temperance, II. 14; snaps ties, IX. 109; is in the moment of transition, VI. 292; bought by tragedy, XII. 404; trinity with truth and goodness, I. 24; XII. 219; truth in, VI. 294; XII. 219; universality, I. 23; II. 231; IV. 41; VI. 48, 298, 303; in use, II. 367; III. 159, 163; VI. 290; mark set on virtue, I. 19; II. 179; weed, I. 58; is wholeness, I. 15; III. 18; XII. 118; wasting of, VI. 229; in woman, VI. 296; world, XII. 216; love of, keeps us young, II. 271.
- Becket, Thomas à, V. 220; VIII. 218.
- Beckford, William, V. 165; VI. 95.
- Bede, Venerable, V. 76; VII. 206.
- Bedford, Duke of, V. 176.
- Beech, X. 483.
- Bees, bell of, IX. 56; cell, VI. 294; disturbing, II. 228; familiarity with, X. 472; nothing good for the bee that is bad for the hive, X. 189; honey-making, VIII. 16; hunters, III. 63; men compared to, V. 83; XI. 262; orchards resonant with, IX. 143; Plato's, IV. 54; leave life in sting, VIII. 275; tawny hummers, IX. 93.
- Beggar, the soul a, VII. 307.
- Beginnings, heap of, VII. 328.
- BEHAVIOR, VI. 167-197; finest of fine arts, III. 149; laws cannot reach, VI. 172; dress mends, VIII. 87; a garment, VIII. 80; laws of, III. 131; novels teach, VII. 215; self-reliance basis of, VI. 190; substitutes for, VIII. 80; women's instinct of, III. 150. See, also, Conduct, Manners.
- Behmen, Jacob, IV. 117; egotism, III. 34, 187; healthily wise, IV. 143; on inspiration, VIII. 277.
- Behooted and behowled, I. 142.
- Being, affirmative, II. 121; excluding negation, III. 73; preferred to doing, VI. 215; realm of, IX. 392; and seeming, II. 160; sense of, II. 64; IX. 384.
- Belief, ages of belief are the great ages, VI. 216; X. 206; is affirmation, IV. 180; appears, II. 157; as deep as life, VI. 283; drunk with, VII. 92; impulse to, III. 74; man bears, VI. 203; makes men, X. 252; natural, IV. 170; a greater makes unbelief, I. 285.
- BELL, THE, IX. 379.
- Bell, church, VII. 226, 299; God comes without, II. 271.
- Belle-Isle, days at, VII. 181.
- Belzoni, II. 11; III. 119; X. 10.
- Benedict, VI. 234.
- Benefactors, do not flatter your, I. 337; III. 164; misfortunes are, II. 117, 118, 126; are many, VIII. 199, 226; become malefactors, IV. 28; wish to be, III. 277; VI. 248; VII. 114, 129.
- Benefit, aim of Nature, X. 188; under mask of calamities, XI. 544; to others, contingent, XII. 30; end of Nature, II. 113; XI. 486; law, III. 162; not to be set down in list, III. 104; low and high, I. 133; indirect, III. 164; shower of, I. 346; true and false, VII. 115.
- Benevolence, foundation of manners, III. 142; does not consist in giving, III. 104; is life, I. 124; unhappy, II. 135; not measured by works, III. 103. See, also, Charity.
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- Bentley, Richard, II. 154; VII. 331.
- Benumb, power to, VI. 269.
- Béranger, quoted, VI. 153; VII. 321.
- Beridden people, VI. 288; VI. 179.
- Berkeley, Bishop, X. 307; anecdote of, III. 273.
- Bernard, St., I. 314; II. 123; VIII. 122.
- BERRYING, IX. 41.
- Beryl beam, VI. 279; IX. 276.
- Best, index of what should be the average, III. 244; love of, IX. 22; we are near, III. 235; is the true, III. 283; XI. 162; doing one's, IX. 356.
- Best moments, men to be valued by, VI. 287; XII. 208.
- Best thing easiest, IV. 6.
- Best way, always a, VI. 169.
- Bethlehem, heart, IX. 71; star, IX. 333; X. 90.
- Bettine. See Arnim, B. von.
- Between lines, we read, VIII. 197.
- Bhagvat Geeta, V. 259; VII. 218.
- Bias, need of, III. 66, 236; V. 141; VI. 12, 132, 267; VIII. 71, 138, 307, 308, 310; XII. 31; power in obedience to, XII. 82.
- Bible, not closed, I. 144; IV. 20; English language from, IV. 199; V. 100; in law libraries, XI. 190; literature of Europe, VII. 194; millenniums to make, VII. 218; VIII. 182; rolled from heart of Nature, IX. 7; best reading, III. 63; reverence for, an element of civilization, IV. 44; V. 216; and science, X. 335; quoted to justify slavery, XI. 234; immortal sentences, I. 151; like an old violin, VIII. 182. See Scriptures.
- Bible, of England, V. 256; for heroes, X. 318; of the learned, IV. 39; of opinions, VI. 53; for soldiers, XI. 361.
- Bibles, of world, VII. 218, 219; VIII. 38; we must write, IV. 290.
- Bibliomania, VII. 209.
- Bibulous of sea of light, II. 290.
- Bigotry, a spice of, needed, III. 185; XII. 54.
- Biography, is autobiography, XI. 285; clumsy, IV. 206; to be generalized, II. 21; in a gift, III. 161; is history, II. 10, 61, 334; moral of, IV. 14; VIII. 296; of soul, VI. 282; value, I. 160.
- Bipolarity, III. 97.
- BIRDS, IX. 343; almanac, IX. 176; augur and, X. 14; baggage, IX. 334; named without gun, IX. 83; tell history, IX. 119; language, IX. 126, 368; pairing, an idyl, III. 25; plumage has a reason, III. 181; VII. 53; punctual, IX. 144; sacred, I. 253; what they say, VI. 284.
- Birmingham, V. 42, 97, 256.
- Birth, elegance comes of, III. 148; IV. 66; VI. 164, 175.
- Birthplace, X. 201.
- Bishops, English, V. 227, 230.
- Biters, small, XI. 154.
- Blackberries, IX. 41.
- Blackbirds, IX. 3, 169.
- Black coats, company of, VII. 246.
- Black drop in veins, VI. 9.
- Black events, triumph over, II. 321.
- Blackstone, quoted, XI. 190.
- Blair, Hugh, VIII. 117.
- Blake, William, VIII. 27; quoted, VIII. 290, 317.
- Blame, safer than praise, II. 118.
- Blasphemer, village, I. 140.
- Bleaching souls, X. 215.
- Bleed for me, III. 161.
- Blessed be nothing, II. 315.
- Blessing poor land, XI. 520.
- BLIGHT, IX. 139 ff.
- Blind, children of, see, V. 62.
- Blinders, horse goes better with, V. 88; XII. 51.
- Blind-man's-buff, conformity a, II. 55; X. 19.
- Bliss, Rev. Daniel, XI. 66.
- Bloated nothingness, II. 160; vanity, XI. 170.
- ...
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- Blockade, reform a paper blockade, I. 284.
- Blockheads, VI. 269.
- Blonde race, V. 67.
- Blood, all of one, II. 71; prejudice in favor of, VI. 176; royal blood does not pay, X. 45; surcharge, VI. 68; VII. 160.
- Bloomer costume, VI. 293.
- Blossoming in stone, II. 21.
- Blot on world, X. 195.
- Blows, refreshed by, VI. 199; IX. 279.
- Bluebird, IX. 42, 169; X. 483; XII. 104.
- Blue-eyed pet, gentian, IX. 94.
- Blue glory of years, VII. 173.
- Blumenbach, on races, V. 44.
- Boa constrictor, IV. 77.
- Boasters, I. 219; VI. 5.
- Boat, shape, how determined, VII. 42; sky-cleaving, IX. 70; steering, XII. 29.
- Boccaccio, the Valdarfer, VII. 210.
- Bodleian Library, V. 199, 203.
- Body, human, artist's study of, XII. 221; borrowed, VIII. 188; caricatures us, VI. 298; custody, III. 28; expressiveness, VI. 177; pass hand through, VIII. 21; type of house, IV. 160; magazine of inventions, VII. 157; true Lethe, XII. 107; masks, VII. 108; mechanical aids to, VII. 159; a meter, VII. 157; microcosm, VI. 125; Plotinus on, X. 461; property like, VI. 126; and mind, VII. 108; VIII. 281; and soul, II. 104, 181; III. 14, 28; IV. 84; VI. 169; VIII. 338; sound, at the root of all excellence, X. 43; chest of tools, VIII. 141; world and, I. 64; X. 127.
- Boehmen. See Behmen.
- BOECE, ETIENNE DE LA, IX. 82.
- BOHEMIAN HYMN, IX. 359.
- Bohn's Library, VII. 203.
- Boil, we boil at different degrees, VII. 61.
- Bold, be, IV. 58.
- Bolingbroke, Lord, IV. 154.
- Bonaparte, Napoleon. See Napoleon.
- Bone-house, called man, VII. 225.
- Boniface, burly, VI. 66.
- Boniform, soul, IV. 83.
- Book, of fashion, III. 153; of nature, VI. 15.
- BOOKS, VII. 187-221; I. 87-94; each age writes its own, I. 88; not same to all, II. 149; who reads all may read any, VIII. 315; angels of entertainment, XI. 506; of antiquity reprinted, I. 275; influence on authors, XII. 310; bad, easily found, VII. 189; bank estimate of, VII. 189; benefits, VII. 190; VIII. 194; best, notes of, VIII. 193; forbidden to boys, II. 257; VII. 120; burning, II. 120; character in, X. 198; choice in, VII. 194; for closet, VII. 219; many, but commentators, VII. 194; commonest, III. 63; company in, II. 149; confidences, VII. 296; conscience, VII. 219; convict us, VIII. 312; criticism, VII. 269; culture, VI. 141; VII. 194; X. 142; debt to, VII. 190; XII. 310; deep, help us most, VIII. 296; delight in, I. 92; VII. 196, 209; dull, I. 185; education of, VII. 191; English, V. 36, 93; essential ground of, X. 233; in experience, VII. 190; belong to eyes that see them, III. 50; of facts, VIII. 295; fancies, IX. 250; favorites, III. 106; VII. 208; are few, II. 338; VII. 193; for the few, VIII. 219; fragmentary, IV. 103; five Greek, VII. 197; growth, XII. 26; are for scholar's idle times, I. 91; imaginative, III. 30, 32; VII. 212, 213, 217; immortality in, VII. 190; influence of, XII. 342; inspiration, VIII. 295; knowledge from, VI. 281; commentary on life, II. 8; consulted instead of life, X. 198;
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- the man behind, IV. 281; and maker, I. 242; mean, IV. 196; method of reading, VII. 193; miraculous, XII. 309; modernness, III. 232; all written by one man, III. 232; moral power, VII. 190; read old, VII. 195; a man can write but one, VI. 132; outgrown, VIII. 68; used only in pauses, XI. 507; permanent, II. 154; smell of pines, II. 58; professor of, needed, VII. 191; read by proxy, VII. 220; quotation, IV. 42; reader makes, VII. 296; VIII. 194; good when we are ready for them, VI. 142; read proudly, III. 232; resources, VIII. 177; revolution dogging, X. 253; sacredness, I. 88; semi-canonical, VII. 218; tire, III. 55; theory of, I. 89; all thought not in, I. 167; are a tie between men, XI. 503, 507; abstraction of time in, I. 92; time for, VII. 170; time, judge of, VII. 195; tractable, XI. 506; the transcendental in, III. 32; for travellers, V. 31; VIII. 295; use, I. 89; II. 164; VIII. 293; value, I. 89; III. 32; VIII. 237; XI. 496-508; value to scholar, XI. 503-506; vocabularies, VII. 211; prized by wise, VIII. 178; put us in working mood, VIII. 296; IX. 331; world, IV. 201; for youth, X. 143; XII. 327. See, also, Authors, Literature, Reading.
- Boots, become fairies, VI. 304; do not live to wear out, VIII. 338.
- Boreal fleece, IX. 202.
- Bores, we find our account in, III. 61; VI. 173.
- Borgia, Caesar, II. 5.
- Born again, VI. 25.
- Born red, dies grey, II. 252.
- Born too soon, VIII. 215.
- Boroughs, rotten, V. 97, 182, 276, 306.
- Borrow, George, V. 229; VIII. 84.
- Borrowing, II. 112; IX. 294; literary, IV. 197; VII. 178, 292; VIII. 180, 188, 191.
- Boscage, I. 311.
- Boscovich, quoted, III. 48.
- Boss, VIII. 140.
- BOSTON, XII. 181-211.
- BOSTON HYMN, IX. 201-204.
- BOSTON (poem), IX. 212-217.
- Boston, a gate of America, I. 371; copies and is copied, XI. 122; leads civilization, XII. 188; cows laid out, VI. 122; genius of, XII. 208; not a fair share of originality of thought, XII. 204; never wanted a good principle of rebellion, XII. 203, 207; slave hunters in, XI. 180 ff, 212; Parker and, XI. 288; Unitarianism, X. 204.
- BOTANIST, IX. 292; finds flowers in pavements, VIII. 319.
- Botany, abortions in, VIII. 158; Goethe on, IV. 275; X. 338; leaf unit in, IV. 275; metamorphosis in, VIII. 8; X. 338; is all names, VI. 281; IX. 140.
- Botany Bay children, III. 211.
- Bottle, man in, VI. 284.
- Boufflers, Chevalier de, quoted, VI. 253.
- Bounties on production, VI. 105.
- Bow and arrow times, XI. 513.
- Bow of beauty, IX. 54; strings to, X. 37; toy with, VI. 243; IX. 324.
- Boxes, universe a nest of, VIII. 333.
- Box-turtle, talk with, V. 232.
- Boy and Mantle, story, II. 35.
- Boyishness of men, VII. 124.
- Boys, bad, VI. 259; and cats, XI. 155; characterized, X. 138; cleverness, X. 139; country, VII. 119; debt to imaginative books, VI. 312; X. 140; delights, X. 145; education, VI. 139, 142; VII. 105; VIII. 128; like flies, X. 138; happiness in humble life, VII. 120; holidays, VII. 168; love, II. 172; manners, VI. 149, 170; masters of playground, X. 138; nature of, X. 143; and newcomer, II. 158; their nonchalance the healthy attitude of
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- human nature, II. 48; early old, VII. 121; in parlor, II. 48; perceptions, X. 139; poetry, VIII. 67; reading, III. 66; in woods, IX. 362.
- Bradshaw, John, III. 109; X. 441.
- Brag, V. 148-150; X. 174.
- BRAHMA, IX. 195.
- Brains, differences of, X. 44; male and female, IV. 108.
- Bramante, XII. 235, 239.
- Brandy, revenue from, VII. 31.
- Brant, Joseph, II. 164.
- Brasidas, II. 248; VII. 79.
- Bravery, XI. 174. See, also, Courage.
- Bread, not the aim, I. 290; II. 223; XI. 390; heavenly, V. 256; VIII. 63; history of, III. 58; transubstantiation of, VI. 126; VIII. 35.
- Bride, blow from, IV. 174; danger, as a, I. 149; of Michael Angelo, XII. 243; solitude as a, I. 173; universe, III. 77.
- Bridges, aerial, XII. 13, 42.
- Brisbane, Albert, X. 348.
- Bristed, C. A., quoted, V. 204, 209.
- Britain. See England.
- British Constitution, I. 309.
- Brook Farm, sketch, X. 359-369; allusions, III. 58, 240, 264; VI. 66, 114; XII. 48, 198.
- Brook, III. 178.
- Brooke, Lord, epitaph, V. 284.
- Brotherhood, with men, II. 261; XI. 166.
- Brougham, Lord, quoted, V. 227; VII. 289; story of, VIII. 184.
- Brow, language of the, VI. 9; VII. 127.
- Brown, John, XI. 265-273; 275-281; on courage, VII. 270; integrity, XI. 359, 360; eloquence, VIII. 125; XI. 334; memory, XII. 105; philanthropy, VIII. 105; Thoreau's defence of, X. 460; and Virginians, VII. 271; and Gov. Wise, VII. 271; XI. 269.
- Browne, Sir Thomas, quoted, VII. 23; VIII. 51.
- Browning, Robert, quoted, XI. 216.
- Bruin dance of Shakers, VI. 237.
- Brummel, Beau, V. 113; X. 466.
- Brunel, I. K., VI. 121.
- Brutes. See Animals.
- Brutus, II. 255; XI. 226.
- Buccaneers' bargain, XI. 158.
- Bud, extends the old leaf, X. 187.
- Buddhism, VIII. 14.
- Buddhist, thanks no man, I. 337; III. 163; nature no Buddhist, III. 236; quoted, VI. 231; VIII. 42; XII. 395.
- Bude-light, VII. 33.
- Bugle. See Horn.
- Build your own world, I. 76.
- Builded better than he knew, IX. 7.
- Building, taste in, VI. 291.
- Bulkeley, Rev. Edward, XI. 61, 63, 77.
- Bulkeley, Rev. Peter, XI. 31, 41, 56, 61, 63, 498; XII. 192.
- Bull, John, XII. 200, 337.
- Bull-dog bite, XII. 98.
- Bull Run, battle, XI. 357, 365.
- Bulwer, V. 246; XII. 368, 373.
- Buncombe, X. 491.
- Bundles, souls not saved in, VI. 214.
- Bunker Hill, Webster's speech at, XI. 221.
- Bunyan, John, VIII. 28; X. 54.
- Buonarotti. See Angelo, Michael.
- Burglars, VI. 24; XII. 22.
- Burial rites, VIII. 325, 326.
- Burke, Edmund, V. 244, 249; quoted, II. 110; V. 197; VII. 89, 140; VIII. 14, 178; X. 276; XI. 228.
- Burleigh. See Cecil.
- Burnet, Bishop, quoted, XI. 251.
- Burning, all things burn, VII. 145.
- BURNS, ROBERT, XI. 437-443; common things inspired, I. 112; VI. 295; X. 54; apostrophe to the devil, IV. 138; X. 299; influence, VIII. 67; a Platonist, V. 239; quoted, XI. 409.
- Burton, Anatomy of Melancholy, V. 131, 238; VII. 211.
- Business, I. 230; II. 233; VI. 75.
- ...
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- Busy-bodies, VII. 312; X. 23.
- Busyrane, inscription, IV. 58.
- Butler, Samuel, Hudibras, V. 234.
- Buttons, your friend's, II. 209.
- Buying, VII. 109, 110.
- Buzz, I. 227; III. 47.
- Byron, XII. 368; clarion of disdain, IX. 240; XII. 377; Platonist, V. 239; XII. 319, 367; quoted, II. 164; V. 233; VIII. 156; rhetoric, II. 355; and Scott, VIII. 318; XI. 464; subjectiveness, XII. 319.
- Cabalism, IV. 26; V. 223; VII. 26; XI. 524.
- Cabanis, quoted, IV. 153.
- Cabman, a phrenologist, VI. 9.
- Caenobite, I. 243.
- Caesar, Julius, admired, IV. 23; endurance, XII. 227; a gentleman, III. 125; intellectual, VI. 158; in irons, III. 94; estimate of life, III. 274; called his house Rome, I. 76; poet is Caesar of woods, IX. 43; personal power, VII. 77; well-read, VI. 141; verses of, V. 8.
- Cain, X. 221.
- Calamity, our friend, II. 124, 263, 321; VI. 36, 162; XI. 544; XII. 411. See, also, Accidents, Disasters, Misfortune.
- Calculators, Nature hates, III. 68.
- Calendar, of flowers and birds, IX. 176; Thoreau's, X. 470.
- California, gold discovery, VI. 255; government, XI. 262; what money will buy in, VI. 102.
- Call, preachers, I. 135; talent a, II. 140.
- Calls, limit to, VIII. 91.
- Calomel of culture, X. 154.
- Calvinism, age of, X. 203; and Arminianism, X. 330; culture, XII. 195; doomed, X. 117; drill, VII. 96; fatalism, VI. 5; fruits, X. 399; from diseased liver, III. 51; mordant, X. 111; in Plato, IV. 40; revivals, II. 282; safeguard, III. 211; same everywhere, X. 106; its shadow, VIII. 328; vindictive, X. 104;
- Cambridge University, V. 199.
- Camden, quoted, V. 73.
- Camper, Pieter, VIII. 167.
- Campbell, Thomas, quoted, V. 194; VI. 74.
- Camping out, IX. 184.
- Candle, the scholar a, VII. 11.
- Canning, George, quoted, V. 111.
- Cannon, in a parlor, VIII. 120.
- Cannonade, Walden's, IX. 166.
- Cant, English, V. 228, 230; American, XI. 259; provokes common sense, XI. 516.
- Capdeuil, Pons, quoted, VII. 306; VIII. 37, 60.
- Cape Cod farm, XI. 520.
- Capital punishment, III. 209; XII. 203.
- Capitalists, I. 331; we must be, VI. 126.
- Capuchins of the 19th century, II. 28.
- Carey, Henry, quoted, VII. 151.
- CARITAS, IX. 284.
- Carlini, anecdote of, VIII. 174.
- Carlisle, Countess of, X. 398.
- CARLYLE, THOMAS, X. 487-498; PAST AND PRESENT, XII. 379-391; brag, V. 150; conversation, X. 45-89; champion of modern England, XII. 390; preacher of fate, V. 249; his Frederick the Great, XII. 298; a sick giant, XII. 385; love of heroic, II. 247; historian, I. 170; realism, I. 112; style, XII. 388; quotation, V. 194; rhetoric, II. 355; XII. 297-299, 390; at Stonehenge, V. 273; visit to, V. 4, 14; Wordsworth on, V. 21; celebrates the law of decay, V. 250; his laughter, XII. 391.
- Carnival, America a, III. 37; world a, VI. 318; VII. 4, 170; IX. 364.
- Carpets, I. 244.
- Carrion, converts itself into flowers, IV. 138.
- Carts, II. 235.
- ...
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- Caryatides, of the temple of conventions, XII. 398.
- CASELLA, IX. 296.
- Cassandra, X. 432.
- Castalian water, kills, V. 207; XI. 242.
- Caste, III. 130; IV. 66; VII. 117; X. 32.
- Castles, in air, better than dungeons, VI. 265; XII. 46; English, V. 191.
- Casual, nothing is, VI. 18, 81, 220, 295; success is, III. 68.
- Catacombs, VIII. 325.
- Catechisms, II. 313; IV. 122, 180; X. 26.
- Cathedrals, II. 11, 17, 20; V. 215; VI. 231; VII. 54, 56; IX. 164.
- Catholicity, VI. 134; VII. 27, 30; VIII. 312; X. 39.
- Caucus, XI. 249, 421, 531.
- Causationists, all successful men are, IV. 54.
- Cause, of causes, VIII. 138; and effect, the chancellors of God, II. 89; give the true connection that cannot be severed, II. 103, 228, 284, 303, 314; IV. 170; V. 245; VI. 54; X. 8; XI. 488; XII. 96; a little tedious, VII. 288; eternal, XII. 43; final, I. 47; first, II. 70; III. 72; IV. 48, 186; VII. 179; VIII. 349; XII. 64; search for, I. 200; skepticism is unbelief in cause and effect, VI. 220.
- Causes, made up into little cakes to suit purchasers, I. 349.
- Cavendish, Thomas, quoted, XI. 158.
- Cecil, Lord Burleigh, quoted, IV. 14; V. 156; VIII. 311.
- Cells. See Vesicles.
- Celts, V. 47, 55.
- Cemetery. See Sleepy Hollow Cemetery.
- Censors, need of, VI. 222.
- Census, no criterion of the population, VI. 249.
- Cent, representative, III. 206; X. 25.
- Centigraded man, X. 33.
- Centrality, II. 60 f, 318; III. 99; IV. 9, 106; VII. 232, 295; VIII. 42, 71, 188, 221, 222, 303.
- Centrifugal versus centripetal forces, I. 297; III. 28; IV. 27; VII. 146; VIII. 222; X. 207.
- Centuries, what they say, IV. 186; days as, VI. 81, 247; VIII. 335; IX. 285.
- Cerberus, cakes to, VI. 201.
- Ceremony, I. 393; III. 124; XI. 409.
- Cervantes, X. 54; XI. 441.
- Chagrins, III. 76.
- Chair, should hold a king, III. 136.
- Chaldean oracles, VIII. 19.
- Chalices, golden, X. 229.
- Chance, II. 89; III. 70; IV. 170; VI. 146; none in the universe, VI. 325.
- Change, I. 50; II. 124; III. 55; V. 110; VIII. 4, 200.
- Channels, men are, III. 242, 281.
- Channing, Dr. William Ellery, X. 166, 231, 330, 339-341; quoted, IV. 186; XI. 428.
- CHANNING, WILLIAM HENRY, ODE TO, IX. 76; allusions to, X. 341, 363.
- Chaos, II. 122; urged to be a brain, IX. 192; Goethe went into, IV. 273; every new man, on brink of, VII. 164; Shakspeare's inroad on, IV. 218; strife of chaos and order, IX. 367; needed to flavor fruit, X. 70; talk with me, IX. 126.
- Chapman, George, VII. 197; VIII. 50; quoted, III. 31.
- CHARACTER, III. 87-115; X. 89-122; lines, IX. 273; like acrostic, II. 58; no two alike, III. 102; all interested in, X. 34; analysis, XII. 345; body expresses, II. 159; III. 13, 283; VI. 9; in books, X. 198; a matter of climate, X. 176; concealment impossible, II. 159; men of, are society's conscience, III. 96; conversation the vent of, VII. 236; cumulative, II. 59; in dark, III. 113; defined, III. 95, 105; VI. 183;
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- X. 119, 198; XII. 208; development of, XII. 376; developed by evil, VI. 255; emitted in events, II. 156; VI. 42, 226; English, V. 127-143; let expense proceed from, VI. 42; VII. 109; gauges of, I. 358; growth, III. 102; habit of dealing directly, III. 92; house shows, VII. 110, 127; we exaggerate, III. 227; identified with the soul, III. 227; influence, II. 285; III. 110, 217; higher than intellect, I. 99; VIII. 317; inventory of, III. 53; known, I. 123; magnetism, III. 90; VII. 305; VIII. 320; music box, III. 52; natural power, III. 95; is Nature in highest form, III. 105; novels of, XII. 376; hedged by odium, VI. 162; not organic, III. 270; opinions are confession of, VI. 224; perception converted into, I. 222; VI. 29 f; preferred to performance, VI. 216; power, I. 161; II. 321; in prayers, XII. 350; relations from, VII. 127; religion is knowing, III. 115; X. 211; a reserved force, III. 39; revelation of, VI. 226, 228; X. 10; romance of, III. 148; sifting of, III. 133; simplicity the basis of, VI. 322; X. 176; XII. 63; self-sufficingness, III. 98; X. 121; splendor to youth, VI. 306; and talent, II. 320; VI. 217, 257; VII. 184; X. 279; must be trusted, VIII. 84; a mechanical tune, III. 52; victories, VI. 192; teaches above our wills, II. 58; is a will built on the reason of things, X. 102; habit of action from the permanent vision of truth, X. 120, 198.
- CHARDON STREET CONVENTION, X. 371-377.
- Charity, divine, I. 14; human, II. 261; III. 154; IV. 181; VI. 249; VII. 141, 247; wicked dollar given to miscellaneous charities, II. 52.
- Charivari, VI. 314; VIII. 80.
- Charlatanism, comes from living by memory, XII. 79.
- Charlemagne, anecdote, V. 55.
- Charles I. of England, V. 139, 211.
- Charles II. of England, II. 291; V. 38, 173.
- Charles V., Emperor, I. 163; X. 277.
- Charles XII., of Sweden, VII. 267.
- Charles River, XII. 186.
- Charon, IV. 133.
- Chartism, V. 150, 184, 264; X. 63, 497.
- CHARTIST'S COMPLAINT, IX. 232.
- Chastity, VII. 270; VIII. 32.
- Chat Moss, V. 95; VII. 150.
- Chateaubriand, quoted, X. 104.
- Chatham, Lord, I. 207; II. 59; quoted, III. 18, 89; V. 111, 146.
- Chaucer, Geoffrey, V. 256; a borrower, IV. 197; and Coke, VI. 132; genius, IV. 197; gladness, I. 91; IV. 216; grasp, V. 234; humanity, II. 288; imagination, III. 31; IV. 216; influence, IV. 197; inspiration, VIII. 295; Nature in, I. 168; Plutarch, X. 297; richness, III. 40; self-naming, VIII. 252; and Wordsworth, XII. 366; quoted, III. 31; VI. 5 f, 46, 207; XII. 136.
- Chauncy, Dr. Charles, eloquence, VIII. 127.
- Cheapness, of men, IV. 31; VII. 177.
- Cheating, II. 114, 118; fear of being cheated and fear of cheating, VI. 215.
- Cheerfulness, III. 285; IV. 215; V. 128; VI. 159, 264-267; VII. 295, 306; X. 262.
- Chemic lump, IV. 11.
- Chemist, makes sugar of shirts, VI. 262; meeting, VII. 238; time a, IX. 138.
- Chemistry, agricultural, I. 381; VII. 143, 148; charm, VIII. 5; democracy of, XI. 430; of eloquence, VIII. 130; takes to pieces, VI. 282; on higher plane, VI. 219; VII. 14; secondary, VIII. 16; of spring, IX.
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- 181; apes vegetation, VI. 310 world's, IV. 124.
- Cherubim, II. 345; III. 56; of destiny, VI. 24.
- Chesterfield, Lord, X. 62; XII. 255; quoted, V. 118; VIII. 87, 124; X. 168.
- Childhood, the age of gold, II. 39.
- Children, VII. 103-107; guardian angels, IV. 29; attitudes, VIII. 82; charm, VII. 103; not deceived, VI. 229; delight in, VI. 316; love of dirt, X. 367; discipline, III. 215; X. 144; education, I. 121; II. 279; III. 57, 185; VI. 60; VII. 104; VIII. 213, 226; love of exaggeration, X. 174; faces, VI. 286; fairy-tales, XII. 374; fears, II. 148; VII. 257; of gods, III. 109; good die young, VI. 259; home, VII. 107; horizon, VI. 267; hospitality suffers from, VII. 112; illusions, VI. 312; imaginative, VII. 212; X. 142; XII. 373; softening influence, II. 99; inspiration, X. 148; language, I. 26; VIII. 140, 199; fear of life without end, VIII. 330; curly, dimpled lunatics, III. 186; love masks, XII. 58; memory, XII. 99; prattle mysticism, XII. 318; conconformists, III. 105; IV. 29; X. 143; oracles, II. 48; picture-books, VII. 106; providence for, VII. 103; repression, II. 28; X. 325; respect for, X. 143; their reverence, X. 205; love of rhyme, VIII. 46; beginnings of revolution, X. 156; self-reliance, II. 49; toys, III. 29, 186; VII. 104; vehemence, IV. 45; voices, VII. 304; believe in external world, I. 59. See, also, Babe, Boys, Girls.
- Chimborazo, poet, a, III. 9.
- China, conservatism and wisdom, XI. 471 ff; emperor's annual sowing, VIII. 311; politics, XI. 473; woman in, XI. 414.
- Chinese, in California, VIII. 143; quotations, III. 110; XI. 318.
- CHINESE EMBASSY, SPEECH IN HONOR OF, XI. 469-474.
- Chivalry lies in courtesy, II. 18; III. 122, 131, 152; VII. 26; liberty the modern, XI. 244; other people's, X. 57.
- Choice, of occupation, I. 235; wilful and constitutional, II. 140; in conduct, IV. 191; X. 92, 196.
- Cholera, safeguard against, VI. 232.
- Chores, VII. 28, 119.
- Christ. See Jesus Christ.
- Christianity, advantages, I. 150; alloyed, X. 106; not in the catechism, II. 313; in one child, X. 98; signified culture, VI. 206; old as creation, XI. 486; defect, I. 130; and death, VIII. 328; the doctrine as distinguished from supernatural claims, XI. 488; ethics, X. 114; XI. 21, 289; XII. 266; excellence, X. 228; not a finality, II. 313; heathenism in, VI. 208; historical, destroys power to preach, I. 141; lost, I. 144; VI. 209; miraculous claims, X. 105, 114; XI. 20, 488; an Eastern monarchy, I. 130; no monopoly, I. 131; a mythus, I. 129; opinions in, X. 202; paganism in, X. 109; a protest, X. 105; and Plato, IV. 40; preaching, I. 139; and other religions, VIII. 182; XI. 490; vigor lost by, II. 85.
- Chronology, a kitchen clock, VIII. 212.
- Church, errors in administration, I. 128; as amusements, III. 268; authority, III. 251, 279; beneficent, X. 117, 227, 237, 379; none but believing, XI. 236; Calvinistic and liberal, III. 279; X. 117; Roman Catholic, V. 216; clergy falling from, X. 249; cramps, XI. 478; early customs, XI. 12; doctrines, II. 51; differences lie in, XI. 488; externality, VI. 210; English, V. 217, 230; false sentiment, III. 262;
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- famine, I. 136; history, XI. 479; leaving, III. 262; of one member, XI. 488; clings to miraculous, X. 114; not necessary, VI. 204; new, VI. 241; opinions on, IV. 158; outgrown, XI. 478; its place, X. 373; now in reform movements, III. 251; religion and, III. 279; VI. 238; saints persecuted by, V. 212; the scholar is, X. 249; scientific, VI. 240; sepulchre, VIII. 328; services, I. 140; the silent church before service, II. 71; and slavery, X. 114; for self-examination, X. 231; and soul, I. 144; stinginess, XI. 490; tottering, I. 135; value, X. 200, 203; the wise need none, III. 216; withered, IV. 122; yoke, II. 136.
- Church, bells, VII. 299; building , II. 52; going to, I. 138, 142.
- Cicero, de Senectute, VII. 315.
- Cid, VII. 197, 217; VIII. 25, 311; X. 42; XI. 281.
- Cineas, question of, XI. 384.
- Circe, III. 144, 238.
- CIRCLES, II. 299-322; I. 44; IV. 110; VI. 293; VII. 143; VIII. 280; IX. 14, 282.
- Circumstances, depend on the man, I. 278, 334; II. 61; III. 96; VI. 311; VII. 118; XI. 166; a costume, I. 163; II. 120, 125; X. 9; power and, VI. 14; robber-troops of, VIII. 245; trust not in, XI. 163, 410; tyranny of, VII. 125.
- Circumstantial evidence, X. 482.
- Cities, make us artificial, VII. 154; XI. 526; attractions, VI. 56, 148; IX. 371; not the certificate of civilization, VII. 31; effects and causes of civilization, XI. 355; reinforced from the country, I. 18; III. 129; VI. 150; VII. 140; IX. 193, 249; cramp, III. 171; dangers, VI. 222; degrade, VI. 153; estimates, III. 170; hiding in, VI. 222; influence, VII. 154; X. 264; XII. 187; take the nonsense out of a man, VI. 149; are phalansteries, X. 357; clubs only in, VII. 244; solitude in, I. 7, 174; stars in, I. 7; embodiment of thought, VI. 43; permanent tone, XII. 208; trade sows, IX. 18; walking, VI. 43.
- City of God, I. 7; III. 178; VI. 157.
- City state, Massachusetts, XII. 207.
- CIVILIZATION, VII. 17-34; armies carry, XI. 355; barbarities, XI. 122; cities its first effects, XI. 355; definition, VII. 19; dress the mark of, VIII. 87; ours English, X. 173; XI. 122; train of felonies, IV. 185; lacks grandeur, X. 421; heroic, XI. 122, 299; history, III. 120; X. 126; XI. 526; in its infancy, III. 216; VI. 311; man the test of, VII. 31; VIII. 140; XI. 537; meters of, X. 178; a mistake, X. 356; none without a deep morality, VII. 27; mounts, VII. 162; no isolated perfection, XI. 145; problem of, VI. 97; of one race impossible while another race is degraded, XI. 145; railroads plant, VII. 161; a reagent, V. 48; sleepy, XI. 513; styles, XI. 122; triumphs, II. 85; VII. 166; XI. 299; in the United States, VIII. 74; XI. 298; woman the index of, VII. 24; XI. 409.
- CIVILIZATION, AMERICAN, XI. 295-311.
- Clarendon, Lord, VII. 84; quoted, IV. 14; V. 68; VII. 121.
- Clarke, Dr., his gifts to Oxford, V. 203.
- Clarkson, Thomas, XI. 108, 109, 141, 142.
- Class, Classes, distinctions in, inevitable, III. 129; great men from middle, VI. 259; jealousy of, V. 187; loyalty to one's, V. 172, 186; X. 57, 251, 264, 274; new order after conflict, VIII. 210; separation of, V. 306; best in society, VIII. 101; in society, III. 124, 128.
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- Classic, what is, XII. 303-305.
- Classics, III. 258.
- Classification, I. 86; II. 12; VII. 329; VIII. 168.
- Claude Lorraine glasses, VI. 315.
- Claverhouse, VI. 175.
- Clergy, character of, I. 94; X. 115; XI. 421; their bronchitis, VI. 284; X. 229; changed, X. 108, 249; in cities, X. 345; their fitting companions, VI. 263, 285; emancipation of, X. 116; embarrassments, X. 234; English, V. 223, 226; New England, XI. 72; opportunity, X. 230; in politics, XI. 421; position, I. 94, 141; X. 373; their duty self-possession, X. 230; similarity, X. 229; subserviency, X. 229; teachers, X. 230 f; visits, I. 146; VII. 227; voice, VI. 285; Wordsworth on, V. 217.
- Climate, coal a portable, VI. 86; XII. 139; English, V. 38, 94; influence, VII. 25, 68, 148, 149; VIII. 239; X. 176; XII. 183, 196; in Massachusetts, XII. 139 f; sword of, VI. 7.
- CLIMACTERIC, IX. 295.
- Clio's shell, VIII. 287; IX. 334.
- Cloaks, of character, II. 35; VII. 123; value of, in bad preaching or company, I. 137; XII. 309.
- Clocks, century, VII. 318; vegetable, I. 18; geological, VIII. 212.
- Clod, truth makes man out of, X. 194.
- Clothes. See Dress.
- Cloud, bars of, I. 17; II. 210; cannot be cut down, X. 482; eating, I. 347; dappled, IX. 361; flocks, I. 42; forms, II. 18, 131; parting, III. 71; purple awning, XI. 29; purple-piled, IX. 175; rack of, III. 236; VI. 311; we regard, II. 226; sable pageantry, IX. 251; summer, III. 192; sunset, III. 176; tent of, I. 12.
- CLUBS, VII. 223-250; must be exclusive, VIII. 90; manners make, VI. 172, 274; scholars', VII. 220; scientific, XII. 8; transcendental, II. 135.
- Coal, and civilization, X. 178; portable climate, VI. 86; XII. 139; idealizes, XI. 543; and inspiration, VIII. 276; stored up sunshine, X. 71; work, VII. 159; VIII. 275.
- Coat, of climate, I. 12; of Have, VI. 117; of philosophy, IV. 160.
- Cobbett, William, quoted, V. 109.
- Cobden, Richard, VI. 78, 211.
- Cobweb, cloth of manners, VIII. 80; clues, IX. 255.
- COCKAYNE, V. 144-152; VI. 120.
- Cockering, III. 159; V. 196; VI. 261.
- Cognitio, matutina, vespertina, I. 73; XII. 94.
- Cohesion, social, VI. 203.
- Coincidences, VIII. 48; X. 9, 23.
- Coke, Lord, V. 178; VI. 132; XI. 191.
- Cold, inconsiderate of persons, VI. 6, 32; VIII. 144, 289; IX. 168, 233.
- Coleridge, Samuel T., American appreciation of, XII. 197; characterized, V. 248; VIII. 190; his definitions, XII. 346; and Edinburgh Review, V. 295; on fear in battle, VII. 262; on French, V. 146; on infancy, VII. 103; and Landor, XII. 346; on poetry, XII. 366; and Shakspeare, VII. 47; subjectiveness, XII. 319; table talks, VII. 208, 237; visit to, V. 4, 10; on woman, VIII. 93; XI. 405; quoted, I. 43; X. 249.
- Coliseum, VII. 55.
- Colleges, advantages, III. 259; VI. 144; X. 150; aim, XII. 123, 126 f; one benefit of, to show their little avail, VI. 144; festivals, VII. 124, 169; and genius, XII. 124 ff; libraries, VII. 191; natural, III. 260; X. 149; office of, I. 93; X. 150; a public agency, XII. 115; reading, VII. 191; rules, II. 330; in civil war, X. 257; wit better than wealth in, I. 94.
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- Collingwood, Lord, V. 68, 86, 122.
- Collignon, Auguste, IV. 162.
- Collins, William, VIII. 55; IX. 239.
- Colonists, IX. 201, 212; XI. 30-67; XII. 198; stuff for, VI. 258.
- Colonna, Vittoria, VIII. 216; XII. 240.
- Color, VII. 300.
- Columbia of thought, XI. 387; XII. 200.
- Columbus, Christopher, I. 20; adaptation to his work, VI. 39; has given a chart to every ship, IV. 12; discoveries, II. 86; III. 80; XI. 387; eloquence, VII. 82; fury to complete his map, VI. 93; lonely, VII. 7; one in a thousand years, IV. 80; perception, XI. 165; needs planet, II. 37; reason of his voyage, I. 365; time fit for, VI. 38; tobacco, VI. 318; at Veragua, VII. 285; sails wisdom, VII. 52.
- Columns, the poetry of, VI. 294.
- Come-outers, I. 275; X. 374.
- Comedy, VIII. 157; and tragedy, XI. 448, 451.
- Comfort, VI. 154; VII. 111; unbuttoned, XI. 526.
- COMIC, THE, VIII. 155-174; the sense of, is sanity, VIII. 161 f.
- Comma, alive, IV. 282.
- Command, III. 94; VIII. 308; X. 84, 121; comes through obedience, XII. 77.
- Commander, because he is commanded, I. 266; VII. 80; VIII. 88; X. 45, 157; XII. 380.
- Commandments, keeping the, III. 64; V. 103; begin where we will we are soon mumbling our ten commandments, II. 241. See Ten Commandments.
- Commerce, beneficent tendency, I. 192, 370, 375; of trivial import, II. 316; III. 64; VI. 62, 65, 88, 100, 109; poetry of, X. 177; selfish, I. 230.
- Commines, Philip de, quoted, V. 82; VIII. 122.
- Commodities, I. 12-14, 41, 237; II. 205; VI. 289.
- Common sense, I. 182; II. 223, 233; III. 183; VI. 100; VII. 88; astonishes, VII. 292; restraining grace of, VIII. 19; X. 280; XI. 540; as rare as genius, III. 67; is instinct in lower forms, XII. 36; of law, VII. 88; Napoleon's, IV. 248; perception of matter, VIII. 3; republican forms closer to, XI. 517; training of, I. 37.
- Common things, poetry of, I. 50, 110; IV. 55; VII. 176; VIII. 22, 36; XII. 43, 128 ff.
- Commons, House of, V. 90, 128, 154, 182, 307; VI. 153, 253; VII. 90; X. 62; XI. 109, 127, 137. See Parliament.
- Communism, Communities, I. 380 ff; III. 264; VI. 66; X. 190, 345; XII. 394; the members will be fractions of men, III. 264. See, also, Associations, Brook Farm.
- Compact, highest, VI. 192.
- Companions, III. 61; VI. 270, 274; VII. 228, 230, 242, 244; VIII. 89.
- Company, adaptedness, VII. 242; bad, I. 347; defects, III. 61; desire for, III. 61; VIII. 90; evening, VI. 184; good, VII. 234; VIII. 90; X. 140; high, of soul, X. 291; limitations, II. 207; low, liking for, VII. 246; self-distribution in, VII. 14; need not show cause for seeking or shunning, II. 52; forced smile in, II. 55; sufferers in, VII. 233; paralysis of unfit, XII. 26.
- Compass, IX. 394; origin of, V. 282.
- COMPENSATION, II. 91-127; IX. 83, 270; I. 313; of actions, II. 301; belief in, IV. 23; VI. 54; pay debts, X. 129; for errors, IV. 161; fatal, VII. 325; of friendship, III. 276; for evils of government, VI. 62; illustrations, VI. 253 f; of infirmities, III. 281; memory, XII. 102; Nature a, VI. 48; VII. 297; old age,
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- VII. 328; pain has its compensations, XII. 415; in trade, VI. 106; of universe, I. 242.
- Competitions, IV. 22.
- Complainers, I. 246; VI. 154, 201; VII. 260.
- Complaisance, I. 159, 220.
- Complexion, VI. 290; in old age, VII. 328; XI. 418.
- Compliance, II. 208; III. 82.
- Compliments, the highest, I. 291; II. 292; IV. 16.
- Composure, III. 132; VIII. 85; IX. 317.
- Compression, value of, XII. 290.
- Compromises, II. 199; VI. 212; XI. 303, 521.
- Compunctions, time wasted in, IV. 138.
- Concealment, II. 156; of what does not concern us, III. 243; no, VI. 222 f.
- Conceit, the distemper of, II. 118; VI. 132, 137; VII. 295; VIII. 95, 107.
- Concentration, I. 234; IV. 236; V. 86; VI. 73, 74, 112, 131; VIII. 310; X. 274; XII. 51, 58.
- Concert in action, III. 266; VII. 8; X. 349.
- Concini's wife, III. 94.
- CONCORD, HISTORICAL DISCOURSE, XI. 27-86.
- CONCORD HYMN, IX. 158.
- CONCORD, ADDRESS AT OPENING OF PUBLIC LIBRARY, XI. 493-508.
- CONCORD ODE, IX. 199.
- CONCORD, SLEEPY HOLLOW ADDRESS, XI. 427-436.
- CONCORD, SOLDIERS' MONUMENT, ADDRESS, XI. 347-379.
- CONCORD WALKS, XII. 169-179.
- CONCORD, IX. 35, 141, 145, 166, 229, 248, 345, 363, 370, 385, 396; XI. 397; drainage at, VII. 149 f; fairy tales true at, II. 35; fight at, XI. 72-76; in Indian Wars, XI. 57-62; Kossuth at, XI. 397; name, XI. 38; Plain, IX. 248; religion and education in, XI. 498; Revolution not begun in, I. 219; in and after Revolution, XI. 67-79; River, III. 172; IX. 146; settling of, XI. 31-50; social Committee of Safety, XI. 72; her troops in Civil War, XI. 357-379.
- Condé, Prince of, VII. 267.
- Condillac, quoted, I. 331.
- Condition, I. 4; equalizes itself, II. 98; favorable, VIII. 270, 276; every man's condition an answer to the inquiry he would put, I. 4.
- Conduct, VI. 3; VII. 253; X. 207.
- Confessionals, two, II. 74.
- Confidence, VI. 192. See, also, Courage, Self-Confidence, Trust.
- Conformity, scatters your force, I. 146, 244; II. 50, 54, 55, 59, 60; III. 100, 257; V. 24, 227, IX. 323; XI. 521. See, also, Consistency, Custom, Fashion.
- Confucius, and Christianity, VIII. 182, 214; genius, VII. 194; inspiration, VIII. 275; XII. 316; philosophy, XI. 472 f; quoted, II. 159; V. 275; VIII. 85, 100; X. 117, 120; XII. 195.
- Congress, of nations, XI. 175; U. S., V. 307; VII. 75; XI. 133, 219, 423.
- Conquer, they can who believe they can, VII. 263; VIII. 146; way to conquer foreign workman, VI. 225.
- Conquest, true, II. 321.
- Conscience, I. 234, 302; X. 262; essentially absolute, historically limitary, I. 302; disconsolate, III. 64; IX. 84; XI. 103; agreement of, III. 212, 213; VII. 219; XI. 391; license breeds, VI. 64; not good for hands, VI. 66.
- Conscientiousness, hair-splitting, I. 264; X. 366.
- Consciousness, the double, VI. 47; seat of Universe, I. 334; a sliding scale, III. 72; a taper in the night, XII. 65.
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- Consecutiveness, the need of, VIII. 273; XII. 52, 249.
- Consequences, disdain of, XI. 173.
- Conservatism, its basis fate, I. 260, 268, 301 ff; III. 210, 246, 272; based on Inevitable, I. 302; for expediency, I. 318; assumes sickness as a necessity, I. 319; IV. 171, 223, 256; VI. 13, 64; XI. 230, 231; preventive, I. 320; wild crab, I. 326. See, also, Democracy, Radicalism.
- CONSERVATIVE, THE, I. 293-326.
- Conservative, no one exclusively, I. 314; is half of Nature, I. 301; all men are, I. 305; versus Radical, I. 297-299.
- CONSIDERATIONS BY THE WAY, VI. 243-278.
- Consistency, foolish, II. 54, 55, 57. See, also, Conformity.
- Consolation, doctrine of, X. 85; XII. 416.
- Constantinople, natural capital of the globe, X. 351.
- Constellations, of facts, II. 9; of men, IV. 203; of cities, VII. 32; heavenly, IX. 51, 317.
- Constituencies, hearken to the man who stands for a fact, III. 91; XI. 220.
- Constitution. See U. S. Constitution.
- Consuelo, Sand's, IV. 278; VI. 170; VII. 214.
- Consuetudes, II. 212.
- Contagion, of energy, IV. 13, 24; XII. 23.
- Contemplation, IV. 266; X. 235; English nobility not addicted to, V. 169.
- Contention, II. 239; VIII. 98.
- Contentment, II. 163; III. 61; VIII. 244.
- Continuity, want of, VIII. 273; XII. 52.
- Contradictions, of life, III. 233; VI. 173.
- Contradictory, VII. 245, 267.
- Contrasts, VI. 255.
- Contrite wood-life, II. 58.
- Contritions, II. 317; VIII. 98.
- Controversy, degrades, II. 238; X. 485.
- Conveniencies of life, I. 244; VII. 111.
- CONVENTION, CHARDON STREET, X. 371-377.
- Conventionalism, I. 388; III. 100, 139; VI. 260; VII. 7; VIII. 248; reaction against, IV. 279, 289; X. 268.
- Conversation, VI. 269-272; VII. 225-242; VIII. 89-99, 292-294; ability in, VI. 78, 271; affinity in, II. 207; VII. 14; American and English, V. 114; best of arts, XI. 408; best between two, II. 206; VII. 241, 250; benefits, III. 27; VI. 149; VII. 230; of blacksmiths, IV. 168; Carlyle's, X. 489; celestial, XII. 198; chalk eggs, VIII. 96; a game of circles, II. 310; of common life, XII. 284; competition in, VII. 235; conviction, VIII. 312; in the country, VI. 149; egotism spoils, VII. 289; equality, III. 280; evanescent relation, II. 208; exaggeration, III. 139; X. 163; fatigue of conventional, XI. 217; flower of civilization, XI. 408; game of, VIII. 292; XII. 9; best of all goods, VI. 272; happiness, III. 141; adapted to shape of heads, III. 53; needs heat, VII. 12; Hobbes on, VI. 148; horses of, VIII. 293; incentives, II. 192; inspiration, VIII. 292, 309; universal joy, IV. 262; laboratory of student, VII. 227; law of, II. 206; X. 141; best of life, VI. 192, 269; a magnetic experiment, VII. 14; Milton's, XII. 258; a mixture of regrets and apprehensions, XII. 405; should keep on natural ground, VII. 232; is Olympic games, VII. 241; third party in, II. 277; a Pentecost, II. 310; personal, II. 171;
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- III. 100; VI. 135; VII. 230; VIII. 92, 320; needs practice, VI. 271; price, III. 190; reading inferred from, VIII. 304; Dr. Ripley's, X. 391; rules, VIII. 95-98; do not daub with sables and glooms, VII. 309; seasonable, VII. 63, 231; the true school of philosophy, VIII. 292; servile, II. 291; spoilt, II. 193, 204; spontaneity, III. 68; success, III. 32; supper as basis, VII. 247; surfaces, VI. 271; Swedenborg, IV. 128; topics, VI. 135, 196, 271; VII. 225, 226; VIII. 90, 95; XI. 156; travel, VI. 269; tricks, III. 239; VII. 124; tropes, VIII. 11; shows unity, III. 280; universe, VI. 272; war spoils, XI. 156; wit, VIII. 197; woman's, VI. 298; VII. 226; VIII. 92; XI. 408, 409. See Discourse.
- Conversion, VI. 208; by miracles, I. 132; of evil spirits, IV. 138; Norse mode of, VI. 205.
- Convertibility, VI. 304; VIII. 23; X. 183.
- Conviction, VII. 92; VIII. 309; X. 236; XII. 25.
- Coolness, III. 137; VIII. 85; X. 37; So hot, little Sir, II. 135. See, also, Courage, Presence of Mind, Self-Control.
- Co-operation, VII. 8; X. 358.
- Copernican system, VI. 283; VII. 142, 286; VIII. 139, 346; X. 336; XII. 53.
- Copyright, III. 64; Plato's, IV. 77; Persian, VIII. 252.
- Corn, shall serve man, XI. 535; honest, XII. 204.
- Corn-laws, VI. 210; XI. 315.
- Corporal punishment, X. 153, 154.
- Corpse, adds beauty, I. 16; II. 131; of memory, II. 57; outcast, IX. 59.
- Correlations, VI. 45; VIII. 211, 222
- Correspondences, IV. 62, 105, 114, 120; VII. 300; VIII. 9, 48, 271; XII. 22, 101.
- COSMOS, IX. 366.
- Costume, of circumstances, I. 163; X. 9; novels of, IV. 277; XII. 375.
- Cotton, not to rule, I. 192; X. 211; XI. 392; what is, XI. 512.
- Counsel, from the breast, VII. 292; VIII. 310; X. 61.
- Countenance, VIII. 84. See, also, Face.
- COUNTRY LIFE, XII. 133-167; I. 18, 31, 366; V. 177, 180; VI. 148; VII. 298; VIII. 151.
- Country people, II. 76; III. 128, 131, 173; VI. 107, 118, 153, 222; VII. 137, 140; IX. 64, 65; X. 169.
- COURAGE, VII. 251-280; beams of Almighty, VII. 30, 273; depends on circulation, VI. 55; defined, VII. 264; differs, VII. 267; of duty, VI. 233; new face on things, VIII. 146; fate teaches, VI. 24; X. 92; of girls, III. 124; result of knowledge, IV. 63; VI. 139; VII. 262; VIII. 342; universal need of, VIII. 115, 304; X. 38; of orator, VIII. 115; of principle, XI. 302; to ask questions, VIII. 95; scholar's, VIII. 311; X. 274, 311; silent, VII. 270; teaches, I. 135; Thor, symbol of, II. 72; two o'clock in the morning, IV. 237.
- Courtesy, III. 132, 136, 138; VIII. 85; XI. 230. See Behavior, Manners.
- Courts of justice, VII. 85, 86; wait for precedents, VII. 292; XI. 271, 272.
- Courtship, English, V. 108.
- Cousin, Victor, I. 171.
- Cousins, I. 334; IV. 43; things our, VII. 94.
- Coventry, going to, III. 131; VI. 162; cathedral, V. 285.
- Cowardice, I. 94; II. 47, 75, 294; III. 273; V. 102; VI. 29; VII. 257, 258, 270; IX. 235; XI. 358, 171, 174. See, also, Courage, Fear.
- Cowley, Abraham, quoted, II. 186; VIII. 252.
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- Cowry, V. 111; VI. 18.
- Cows, make paths, VI. 120; signal, VI. 177; hold up milk, VII. 234; no interest in landscape, VIII. 26.
- Crab, backward-creeping, V. 67; XI. 537.
- Crack in everything, II. 107.
- Creation, the, I. 4; law of, II. 365; III. 180; VIII. 4, 38, 229.
- Creative, aims, II. 352; VII. 212; XI. 410; manners, I. 90, 93, 335; power, III. 54; IV. 109.
- Creator, the, in man, I. 64, 90, 286; III. 28; VII. 40; VIII. 39; keeps his word, VIII. 336. See, also, God.
- Credit, I. 310; VIII. 84. See, also, Belief, Faith, Trust.
- Creeds, change, X. 201, 236; classification of some one's mind, II. 79; decay, X. 113, 245; depend on temperament, III. 51; not final, II. 80; multiplicity, XI. 488; outgrown, XI. 478; reverence, X. 201; shrivel, VIII. 211; out of unbeliefs, III. 75. See, also, Belief, Church, Religion.
- Crillon, Count de, quoted, VIII. 190.
- Crime, no shock to Americans, XI. 229; not so black in us as in the felon, III. 79; depends on price of bread, VI. 105; not to be concealed, II. 116; must disappear, X. 232; English, V. 63; defeats end of existence, XI. 237; of intellect, experiments, III. 79; VIII. 315; factitious, V. 97; of fraud in place of those of force, X. 328; ink of, VIII. 315; earth is glass to, II. 116; a legal, XI. 197; love remedy for, VI. 218; Nature rids itself of, X. 191; XII. 92; does not pay, XI. 309, 541; earth a picture of, X. 193; punishment, the fruit of, II. 103, 121; cause of, III. 235; not excused, XI. 237; snow reveals, II. 116; more lightly thought of than spoken of, III. 78; proof of superiority, V. 63; temple built of, II. 317; ugliness, XI. 147; may be virtue, I. 336; blunder worse than, III. 79.
- Criminals, on even terms with each other, II. 211.
- Cripples, the spirit does not love, VI. 238; X. 195.
- Crises, the angel shown in, I. 40; II. 4, 262; VII. 92; rising to, I. 149;
- CRITICISM, ART AND, XII. 281-305.
- Criticism, age of, I. 109; III. 58, 254; VI. 286; X. 163, 328; insufficiency its own, III. 284; law of, I. 35; III. 241; poverty of, VII. 296; VIII. 198; IX. 30; should look at mind, not words, XII. 305.
- Critic, the over-soul, II. 268; VII. 307; a failed poet, VIII. 56.
- Crockery gods, XI. 242.
- Cromwell, Oliver, VI. 254; VII. 30; IX. 197; quoted, II. 322; XI. 235.
- Crossing of stocks, Nature likes, VII. 162; VIII. 289; X. 178.
- Crump and his native devils, II. 134.
- Crusades, X. 244.
- Cuba, I. 232; XI. 230.
- Cudworth, Ralph, I. 160; VI. 201.
- CULTURE, VI. 128-166.
- CULTURE, POEM, IX. 273.
- CULTURE, PROGRESS OF, VIII. 205-234.
- Culture, is the suggestion of wider affinities, VI. 137; aims, II. 223; the arming of the man, II. 249; birth its basis, IV. 65; of business, VI. 150; and beauty, VI. 159; calamity and odium means of, VI. 161 f; calomel of, X. 154; ours cheap, XI. 122; drawbacks to, IV. 158; must begin early, VI. 164; kills egotism, VI. 139; effects, I. 49, 50; IV. 46; identification of the Ego with the universe, XII. 62; the end to which a house is built, VII. 117; English, V. 207; enormity of, VIII. 215; Goethe, the type of, IV. 284; without grandeur, I. 157; ends in headache, III. 59; ours European, XII. 402; highest is in regard for ignorant,
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- VI. 260; independence, VIII. 217; based on idea, II. 302; and individualism, VI. 134; instinct, XII. 37; life is for, IV. 285; XI. 236; manual labor as, I. 235; measure of, X. 56; its measure the number of things taken for granted, VII. 11; X. 56; moral sentiment its foundation, VIII. 228; its office to correct narrowness, VI. 131; Plato's word, IV. 64; politics, VIII. 217; power, VIII. 217; proof, VI. 294; religion its flower, VI. 206; XII. 198; results, I. 107; scale of, VI. 306; scientific, VI. 218; scope, VIII. 217; its secret to interest men more in their public than in their private character, VI. 157, 158; effect of society, I. 313; VII. 11; X. 32; can spare nothing, VI. 166; superficial, VI. 190; travel, VI. 146, 269; truckling, X. 134; inverts vulgar views, I. 59; war forwards, XI. 152; war and peace the mercury of, XI. 166.
- Cup, of life, X. 43; of the earth, VII. 172, 319; of thought, III. 181.
- Cupid, II. 366; VI. 289; IX. 10, 104, 256.
- CUPIDO, IX. 257.
- Curfew stock, VI. 157.
- Curiosity, lies in wait, VIII. 226; English absence of, V. 104.
- Curls, witchcraft of, VII. 104, 303.
- Currents, of mind, II. 328; VIII. 6; X. 196.
- Custom, English deference to, V. 109; nullified, I. 314; II. 76, 140; III. 170; IV. 172; opium of, X. 128; ruts of, I. 243, 244, 250; IX. 354; works for us, VI. 120 f. See, also, Conformity, Fashion.
- Customers, VIII. 143; XI. 123.
- Cynics, IV. 154; VII. 309, 321.
- Cypresses, IV. 144; V. 279.
- Daedalus, IX. 20, 170, 243.
- DAEMONIC LOVE, IX. 109-113.
- Daemons, III. 25, 39; IV. 66, 109; VI. 45; IX. 18, 110; X. 97.
- Daguesseau, XII. 96.
- Dalton, John, VII. 238.
- Dana, Charles, X. 359.
- Dance, in men's lives, VIII. 70; X. 39.
- Dancing, VI. 142, 292.
- Dandamis, quoted, III. 280.
- Dandelion, duped by a, VI. 115.
- Danger, VI. 24, 49; VII. 263.
- Daniel, Samuel, quoted, VII. 30.
- Dante, bad company, VII. 7; we are civil to, VIII. 67; like Euclid, VIII. 72; imagination and insight, III. 4; IV. 216; V. 233; VIII. 27, 72; lonely, VIII. 217; XII. 49, 365; muse of Italy, IX. 221; nationality, VI. 39; can be parsed, VIII. 21; purpose, X. 227; realism, III. 37; his noble low style, XII. 290; vindictive, IV. 137; Vita Nuova, VII. 205; contempt of the vulgar, XII. 237; writes proudly, XII. 329.
- Dark Ages, VIII. 214.
- Dartmouth College, Address at, I. 153-187.
- Daughter, birth of, in China, XI. 414.
- David, King, II. 255.
- Davy, Sir Humphry, quoted, VIII. 306.
- DAY, Days, IX. 228; Ancient of Days in morning dew, XII. 71; apprehension of, the measure of a man, VII. 179; bask in, VII. 298; be a, VII. 180; beams from eternity, X. 236; best, XII. 102; fill with bravery, III. 37; carnival of year, VII. 170; celestial, IV. 12; each a Creator, IX. 395; as centuries, VI. 247; of Charles V., I. 163; creeping, X. 132; cups of pearl, IX. 321; dancing, IX. 385; darkened, X. 51; day of, VI. 25; deformed and low, IX. 174; divine, VII. 168; every day is doomsday, VII. 175; dress, VII. 170; escort us to grave, IX. 348; fabric of, VI. 82; two faces, IX. 232;
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- of facts, X. 132; farmer's, X. 75; fresco of, X. 34; name of God, VII. 167; give me health and a, I. 17; good are sponsors, VII. 326; great, II. 215; VI. 25, 304; VII. 170, 307; VIII. 15, 239, 347; halcyon, III. 169; happy, XII. 102; haughty, IX. 199; all holy, II. 12; hypocritic, III. 46; VII. 168; IX. 228; X. 132; intercalated, III. 46; X. 236; long time to find out, VIII. 23; lord of, I. 163; of lot, VIII. 239; lucky, X. 16; melancholy, III. 196; memorable, VI. 304; VII. 169, 170; VIII. 347; X. 101; one midsummer day repays us for winter, IX. 173; XI. 319; fitted to mind, VII. 168; won from moon, III. 46; muffled, VII. 168; new with new works, I. 379; quality, not number, important, I. 350; October, III. 169; opal-colored, IX. 179; in panorama of year, IX. 137; good, in which most perceptions, VIII. 296; purple with bloom of youth, VIII. 225; he only rich who owns the day, I. 105; VII. 168; adorn with sacrifices, VIII. 106; sleeps on hills, III. 169; solid good, III. 61; sped, IV. 21; cut into strips, III. 99; VIII. 288; elastic tent, IX. 339; sold for thoughts, IX. 328; X. 259; treat respectfully, VII. 180; the two in man's history, IX. 302; X. 177; unalterable, IX. 265; undermining, II. 129; IX. 275; unprofitable, III. 46; value, VI. 247; VII. 170, 175, 228; VIII. 282, 337; warp and woof, VII. 170; yellow and white, XII. 139; of youth, VII. 229, 298; the wise man is he who can unfold the theory of this particular Wednesday, VII. 179. See, also, Time, To-day, Years.
- DAY'S RATION, IX. 138, 139.
- Deacons, in Dr. Ripley's church, X. 383.
- Death, VIII. 324-330; badness, I. 124; a concealment, III. 243; envied, II. 263; desire for, X. 428; XII. 241; fear of, VI. 238; VII. 324; VIII. 328; of friends, II. 126; adds owner to land, IX. 36; love makes impossible, II. 264; not sought as relief from duty, VI. 239; reality, III. 49; a security, II. 263; of a son, III. 48; IX. 148-158; ways of, VIII. 345.
- Debate, extempore, I. 166; III. 226; VIII. 101.
- Debt, collecting, VIII. 85; to evil, XII. 55; put God in debt, II. 119; memory of, XII. 105; other than money, II. 316; VII. 115; paying, II. 112, 316; III. 159; V. 155; VI. 312, 321; VIII. 189; IX. 302, 357; a preceptor, I. 37; slavery, VI. 90; voracity, VI. 115.
- Decision, must be made, VI. 76.
- Declaration of Independence, VI. 23; X. 92; XI. 235, 268; XII. 201.
- Decorum, English, V. 112; X. 495; unprincipled, VI. 247. See, also, Etiquette.
- Deeds, III. 8, 89. See Actions.
- Defeat, gainful, VI. 234; VIII. 96.
- Defects, useful, II. 117; III. 18; V. 148; VI. 35, 229.
- Deference, III. 132, 136; X. 55; XII. 31.
- Definitions, defining is philosophy, IV. 47; he that can define is the bestman, VII. 235; X. 164; XII. 346.
- DeFoe, Daniel, V. 234; quoted, V. 51, 126.
- Deformity, VI. 300; from infraction of spiritual laws, II. 131, 249; from fixity, VI. 292.
- Degeneracy, VIII. 188; IX. 26; X. 245. See Depravity.
- Degrees, man, a being of, VI. 124; X. 100. See Gradations.
- Deity, personality of, II. 57; makes many, one, II. 194; IV. 53; VIII. 309; anthropomorphism, XII. 222. See, also, Divinity, God.
- ...
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- Deliverly, VII. 228.
- Delphi, oracle of, not uncommanded, VII. 266; XII. 50; every mind has its Delphi and Dodona XII. 69.
- Democracy, III. 201; better relatively to us, not absolutely, III. 207, 210, 240; IV. 223, 256; VI. 64; X. 34; XI. 230, 260, 526.
- Democrat, ripens into a conservative, III. 246; IV. 256.
- Demon. See Daemon.
- DEMONOLOGY, X. 3-28.
- Demophoon, X. 165.
- Demosthenes, VII. 69, 73, 99; had real genius, XII. 120.
- Denderah, zodiac, I. 139.
- Depth of living, II. 258; VII. 183.
- Depravity, III. 228; VIII. 332. See Degeneracy.
- DERVISHES, SONG OF, IX. 304.
- Dervishes, IX. 133, 228, 322.
- De Quincey, Thomas, V. 294; VIII. 192, 294; quoted, XII. 142 f.
- Desatir, quoted, III. 59; XII. 398.
- Descartes, René, IV. 104.
- Desire, flame of, insatiable, IV. 184; predicts satisfaction, VIII. 337; XI. 163. See, also, Hope, Wishes.
- Despair, no muse, VI. 265; system of, I. 319; III. 267; VI. 207 f; X. 136.
- Despondency, comes readily, VII. 310; XII. 406; unworthy, VI. 264; X. 247; XI. 532.
- DESTINY, IX. 31 f; IX. 18, 52; beneficent, I. 371; deaf, IV. 177, 184; VI. 5; teaches courage, VI. 24 ff; VIII. 238, 239; an immense whim, XII. 408. See, also, Fate.
- Destroy, it is cheap and easy to, VII. 310.
- Detaching, power of, II. 354; XI. 235; XII. 38.
- Details, melancholy, II. 171; III. 231, 237; X. 64.
- Determination, needful, VI. 134. See, also, Purpose, Will.
- Development, VIII. 7, 270; X. 186; XI. 525; XII. 21. See, also, Evolution.
- Devil, Burns on, IV. 138; X. 299; child, II. 50; confessions, VI. 179; dear old, III. 62; must have fee, XI. 186; Goethe on, IV. 276; in literature and speech, XII. 289; nestles into all things, XI. 234; party, XI. 520; respect for, VIII. 313; respects virtue, II. 158; Shakers send to market, VI. 66; not to have best tunes, XI. 442. See, also, Satan.
- Devil's attorney, IV. 173; VI. 201.
- Devizes, Richard of, Rules of, V. 216; VI. 206.
- Devotion, is thought, I. 74.
- Dew, varnish of, I. 159; VI. 170; world globes itself in, II. 101; IX. 247, 337.
- Dexterity, value, XI. 224.
- DIAL, THE, X. 343; PAPERS FROM, XII. 307-417.
- Dial, in shade, II. 208.
- Dialectics, III. 58; IV. 62, 79; Scotch, V. 53.
- Dialogue, III. 148.
- Diamagnetism, VIII. 306.
- Diamonds, best plain-set, VII. 115; growth of ages, II. 209; road mended with, VIII. 106.
- Diaries, III. 188; VIII. 281, 308.
- Dibdin, V. 189; Bibliomania, quoted, VII. 209.
- Dice, Nature's loaded, I. 39; II. 102; VI. 221.
- Dickens, Charles, X. 54; in America, VI. 174; X. 246; works, V. 246; X. 339.
- Dictionary, life a, I. 98; a good book, III. 18; VII. 211.
- Diderot, VIII. 170, 315; quoted, VII. 233.
- Dido, Chaucer's picture, VI. 207.
- Diet, III. 252; VI. 154; VII. 116 ff; XII. 382.
- Differences, perception of, I. 38.
- Difficulties, II. 132; VIII. 231, 311.
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- Digby, Sir Kenelm, V. 79; quoted, V. 79; XII. 40.
- Dignity, generous with, II. 261.
- Dime, value, I. 383.
- Dinners, art of, VI. 78; emphasis on, VII. 118; in England, V. 113; public, VII. 247; X. 170; a man believes less after, IV. 152.
- Diogenes, of Apollonia, quoted, VI. 324.
- DIRGE, IX. 145-147; of mountain blasts, X. 397.
- Dirt, chemistry knows no, XII. 55; children love, X. 367.
- Disasters, benefactors, II. 117; exaggerated, VI. 8; X. 164; opium in, III. 48. See, also, Accidents, Calamity, Misfortune.
- Discipline, I. 36-46; value, VI. 139; X. 143.
- Discontent, infirmity of will, II. 78; III. 251; VI. 265; XII. 318, 335, 396.
- Discouragement, easy, VII. 309 f.
- Discourse, II. 311. See Conversation.
- Discoveries, III. 183; IV. 11; VI. 44; VII. 293; VIII. 23, 269.
- Discrepancy, seers of, V. 238; VIII. 160-174.
- Disease, has its inlet in human crime and its outlet in human suffering, II. 249; no respecter of persons, VI. 7 f, 19, 32; VII. 324; IX. 381. See Sickness.
- Disinterestedness, VII. 253.
- Dislocation, in our relation to nature, II. 230; VIII. 188; in dreams, X. 5.
- Disparagement, IV. 268.
- Display, lust of, I. 176; VI. 152.
- Dispositions, a world for trying each other's dispositions, X. 407.
- Disputes, II. 238; VII. 226; XI. 485; XII. 24.
- D'Israeli, Benjamin, novels, IV. 278; XII. 377.
- Dissatisfaction, with achievement, III. 191; with Nature, III. 192; of youth, IV. 184.
- Dissent, III. 251, 255; VII. 234; fury of, X. 366; XI. 260.
- Dissimulation, II. 156.
- Dissipation, III. 28; VI. 73, 257; X. 65; XII. 54.
- Distempers, VI. 133, 196; VII. 324.
- Distrust, I. 252, 282; of sentiment, II. 48; VI. 210.
- Diver, genius a, I. 162.
- Divination, IV. 95; X. 21; women's power of, XI. 414.
- Divine, animal, III. 27; building, VII. 126; circuits, III. 284; is the truly human, XI. 392; mind, X. 199; moments, II. 317; nature, I. 127; persons, III. 108, 113; VII. 125; presence, III. 271; never quotes, VIII. 201; sentiment, III. 178; significance of things, VIII. 8; spirit, II. 65.
- Divinity, approaches, VI. 305; in atoms, VI. 221, 231; of beauty, II. 183; behind failures, III. 57; faith in, I. 127; immortal, I. 23; intimate, I. 221; of Jesus, See Jesus Christ; in man, VI. 231; VIII. 309; X. 97; XI. 479; Plato's faith, IV. 70; ray of, II. 93. See, also, Deity, God.
- DIVINITY SCHOOL, CAMBRIDGE, ADDRESS AT, I. 117-151.
- Division of labor, See Labor.
- Divorce, IV. 128; XII. 272.
- Divulgatory, XI. 487.
- Do, and you shall have power, II. 114; what you are afraid to do, X. 406; what you can best, II. 54, 83; VI. 91; VII. 291; X. 274; what we must, III. 57; what you know, I. 222.
- Doctors, See Physicians.
- Doctrine, new, II. 343.
- Doddington, Bubb, quoted, X. 48.
- Dogmas, I. 139; VII. 226, 301; X. 108, 200.
- Dogmatism, I. 186; II. 96, 313; X. 229.
- Doing, and being, VI. 215; and having,
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- II. 143; and knowing, I. 222; VII. 321; VIII. 344; and saying, III. 6; is success, I. 181; II. 157; teaching by, II. 152; facility in, is talent, XII. 47; test of worth, X. 49.
- Dollar, I. 249; II. 52, 136; heavy and light, VI. 102 ff; X. 272.
- Dolls, VI. 163; X. 197.
- DOMESTIC LIFE, VII. 101-133; English, V. 109; VI. 77.
- Domestics, I. 253; VI. 276; VII. 117. See, also, Servants.
- Donne, John, VIII. 53; quoted, II. 175, 184.
- Doors, of truth in every intelligence, I. 229; II. 327; III. 26, 54; IX. 122, 135, 341; X. 133.
- Doria, Andrew, VIII. 308.
- Doric temples, II. 19.
- Doses, people to be taken in, VII. 13.
- Double consciousness, I. 353; VI. 47.
- Doubts, II. 132; IV. 173, 180, 181.
- Drainage, in Concord, VII. 149 f.
- Drama, Elizabethan, IV. 192, 201; dramatic power rarest talent, XII. 326.
- Drawing, II. 336, 337.
- Dreams, X. 3-28; absurdities, VI. 41; make us artists, II. 337; attractive, II. 322; bad, IV. 141; dislocation their foremost trait, X. 5; sequel of day's experiences, II. 148; VIII. 227; a fact worth a limbo of, X. 166; Germany of, I. 17; Heraclitus on, X. 20; have a poetic integrity, X. 7; melting matter into, X. 259; the maturation of unconscious opinions, X. 8; jealous of memory, X. 4; on memory's wall, IX. 295; poetic, VIII. 44; prophetic, X. 8; and surface, III. 43; IX. 269; a rush of thoughts, XII, 108; wisdom in, I. 66; VIII. 280; world a, I. 62, 303; of youth, III. 201; VI. 265; VIII. 185.
- Dress, adaptation, VIII. 171; American good sense in, VIII. 87; best when not noticed, V. 84; and manners, VIII. 80, 87 f; relation to person, VIII. 171; restraint, VI. 151; gives tranquillity, VIII. 88. See, also, Clothes, Fashion.
- Drift, we can drift when we cannot steer, X. 196.
- Drill, virtue of, VI. 77, 79; X. 144.
- Drinks of literary men, VIII. 150.
- Drop cannot exhibit storm, IV. 103.
- Drowning, experience of, XII. 109.
- Drowsy strength, III. 140.
- Drowsiness of usage, III. 258; IV. 172.
- Drudgery, I. 95.
- Druids, V. 200, 278, 282.
- Drunkard's hands, III. 60.
- Drunkenness, counterfeit of genius, II. 322; with time, VII. 319.
- Dryden, John, VIII. 72; quoted, IV. 97; VIII. 279.
- Dualism, of Nature and man, I. 50; II. 96.
- Dubuc, quoted, VIII. 192.
- Du Guesclin, Bertrand, quoted, VI. 300.
- Dumont, Pierre, quoted, IV. 226; VIII. 283.
- Duration, II. 284, 317; VI. 239; VII. 179, 185; VIII. 349.
- Dust, grandeur nigh to, IX. 207.
- Dust-hole of thought, X. 7.
- Duties, that belong to us, II. 53; VI. 233; X. 57; not detachable, II. 316; heeded, II. 164; heroism in, II. 262; living without, is obscene, X. 52; lowly, II. 262; X. 208; pack of, IX. 184; relative, II. 74.
- Duty, clarion call, VII. 252; IX. 208; difficult, never far off, VII. 275; direct and reflex, II. 74; X. 185, 198; fate and, XI. 231; grows everywhere, X. 111; a guide, VI. 233; intellectual and moral, II. 341; law, XI. 479; lightning-rod, VI. 232; the old, XII. 403; know your own, II. 53; our place, II. 81; sense of, I. 121, 125; whispers
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- low, VII. 251; IX. 207; wishes and, X. 94; true worship, XI. 480.
- Dyspepsia, III. 61; II. 189.
- EACH AND ALL, IX. 4.
- Each for all, VII. 143; IX. 123.
- Eagle, spread, XI. 530.
- Ear, VIII. 226; IX. 53; a sieve, XII. 32.
- Earth, a balloon, I. 332; tremulous battery, IX. 370; cup of Nature, VII. 172; eyeless bark, IX. 341; factory of power, VIII. 139; fills her lap, II. 147; laughs in flowers, IX. 35; glass to crime, II. 116; goes on earth, VIII. 326; and heaven correspond, VI. 205; VIII. 49, 327; host who murders guests, VIII. 245; howling wilderness, IX. 41; hunger, XII. 135; insignificance in Nature, X. 336; lonely, II. 91; a machine, VII. 144; VIII. 139; XII. 31; makes itself, VI. 38; and man, I. 12; VII. 144; IX. 22; XI. 542; works for man, VII. 144, 152; IX. 34; burnt metals, X. 70; productiveness, X. 71; a reading-room, XII. 323; quaked in rhyme, VI. 279; shape, I. 372; a cave for slumber, XI. 434; conspires with virtue, VII. 51; white-hot, I. 331; wise man's hearth, IX. 46. See, also, Planet, World.
- Earthquakes, VI. 7; the first chemist, XII. 160; dresses, X. 165; learn geology from, VI. 262; persons who dislike, VI. 140.
- EARTH-SONG, IX. 36 f.
- Earth-spirit, X. 329.
- Ease, to be dreaded, VI. 162.
- East, genius of, X. 176, 179; seat of devout expression, I. 126.
- Ebb of the soul, II. 32.
- Eccentricity, success has no, VI. 81.
- Echo, do not be an, II. 208; organize the, XI. 209; the world our, VII. 47; VIII. 319; X. 191; XII. 30.
- Eclecticism, I. 171 f; X. 308; Nature's, II. 352.
- Eclipse of genius, VIII. 282.
- Economy, I. 245; II. 234; V. 156; VI. 90, 106, III; VII. 109; X. 128; XI. 301; Nature's, I. 373; look for seed of the kind you sow, VI. 124; symbolical, VI. 125.
- Ecstasy, I. 201, 204, 211, 213, 227, 256, 335; II. 281, 329; IV. 61, 97, 114; VI. 41, 213, 311; VIII. 277; X. 177; XII. 336.
- Edelweiss, X. 484.
- Edgeworth, Maria, novels, XII. 375.
- Edinburgh, V. 294.
- EDUCATION, X. 123-159; agitation on, in America, I. 365; VII. 119; XI. 527; of amusements, VI. 142; best, II. 133; bias in, VIII. 307; Carlyle on, X. 496; classics in, III. 258; college, VI. 144; defects, III. 257; VIII. 128; X. 133 ff, 152; defined, VIII. 22; a system of despair, III. 267; X. 136; two elements, X. 147; fruitless, VI. 141; gymnastic in, IV. 65; VI. 142; and happiness, III. 269; ideal of, XII. 128; labor, I. 234, 240; in dead languages, III. 258; love a liberal, VIII. 93; in Massachusetts, XII. 195; masters in, XI. 236; best mode of, XII. 123 f; subject to Nature, XII. 75; object, I. 320; X. 135; XI. 487; XII. 256; power, III. 268; preventive, VI. 140; reform, III. 257; fosters restlessness, II. 82; Roman rule, III. 257; routine and genius in, XII. 124; its secret lies in respecting pupil, X. 143; self-denial for, VI. 155; of senses, VI. 213; of sexes, XI. 425; skepticism of, III. 270; spiral tendency, VI. 281; stereotyped, III. 258; sympathetic, II. 133; VI. 149; to things, III. 257; of women, see Woman; in words, III. 257; world for, VIII. 334; effect on young men, XII. 398. See, also, Colleges, Schools.
- Education Farm, III. 58.
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- Effect, III. 83; thing done for, VI. 189. See Cause and effect.
- Ego, X. 20; XII. 62.
- Egotism, aid, VI. 257; antidotes, VI. 139; buckram, VII. 289; chorea, VI. 132; dropsy, VI. 134; defined, XII. 326; exaggerated, V. 164; all things fuel to, VII. 125; genius consumes, X. 431; goitre, VI. 134; influenza, VI. 132; Nature utilizes, VI. 134; VII. 289; of prophets, XII. 8; root, VI. 134; in society, II. 207; scourge of talent, VI. 133; test of, VIII. 342; XII. 314; universal, III. 187 f; vanishes in presence of Nature, I. 10; weakness, I. 391.
- Egypt, and Egyptians, architecture, II. 19; art, VI. 288; X. 243; debt of churches to, VIII. 182; Herodotus on, VIII. 324; hieroglyphics, II. 353; immortality, VIII. 324; marble deserts, III. 176; metaphor, I. 253; mysteries, I. 241; mythology, I. 129; Napoleon in, IV. 246, 249; X. 253; obelisk, VII. 54; XII. 324; "sitting still," XI. 471; XII. 411; vote of prophets, VI. 249.
- Eldon, Lord, V. 202; quoted, III. 246; V. 97, 110.
- Election, doctrine of, VI. 5.
- Elections, VI. 14; XI. 524.
- Elective affinities, II. 314.
- Electric, light, VIII. 317; telegraph, see Telegraph; thrills, VI. 84.
- Electricity, of action, VIII. 115; effect on air, III. 185; arrested, X. 271; not to be made fast, V. 230; inspiration like, VIII. 273; a luxury, VI. 70; message-carrier, VII. 28; of poets, VII. 6; XII. 383; power, VIII. 139; river, III. 40; wisdom like, VII. 250; XII. 27.
- Elegance, true, I. 247; III. 148; VII. 114.
- Elegies, living on, VI. 68.
- Elements, as allies, VII. 28; IX. 142, 332; X. 73 ff.
- Eleusinian mysteries, facts as, IV. 132; VI. 304.
- Elevation, is making new estimate, II. 143.
- Elgin Marbles, V. 91.
- Eliot, John, quoted, II. 254; XI. 51, 85.
- ELLEN, LINES TO, IX. 387.
- ELLEN, TO, AT THE SOUTH, IX. 93.
- ELOQUENCE, VII. 59-100; VIII. 109-133; demands absoluteness, VIII. 130; aids, VII. 46; dog-cheap at anti-slavery chapel, XI. 100, 138; magic of personal ascendency, VII. 76, 91; depends not on beauty, VI. 301; calamity instructs in, I. 95; its despotism, VII. 38, 65; based on facts, VII. 93; indicates universal health, VIII. 117; needs heat, VII. 61, 67; VIII. 117, 119, 276; irresistible, I. 263; VII. 240; VIII. 217; X. 53, 78; XI. 223; of ancient law-givers, VII. 235; manliness, VIII. 126; audience meter of, VII. 66; Milton on, XII. 261; based on moral sentiment, VII. 97 f; natural as swimming, VIII. 119; shows possibility of man, VIII. 112; rule of, VIII. 30; secret of, X. 282; of slavery agitation, VII. 95; is translation of truth for hearer, VIII. 130; XI. 223; triumphs, VII. 49, 70; in war, VIII. 218; Webster's XI. 221.
- Emanations, I. 199.
- Emancipate, man should, X. 56; poet, III. 33; religion, XII. 204.
- Emancipation, III. 98; XII. 200; makes union possible, XI. 208, 304, 307.
- EMANCIPATION IN THE BRITISH WEST INDIES, ADDRESS ON, XI. 97-147.
- EMANCIPATION PROCLAMATION, ADDRESS ON, XI. 313-326.
- Emblems, I. 26, 32; II. 101; III. 16; IV. 116, 217; VI. 318. See, also, Symbolism.
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- EMERSON, EDWARD BLISS, IN MEMORIAM, IX. 261-265; FAREWELL BY, IX. 258.
- EMERSON, ELLEN TUCKER, IX. 93-98, 387, 392, 396; poems by, IX. 96-98.
- Emerson, Rev. Joseph, quoted, X. 384.
- EMERSON, MARY MOODY, X. 397-433; IX. 217; a Bible, X. 408; quoted, II. 260; X. 403 ff.
- Emerson, Ralph Waldo, his brothers, IX. 145 ff; visits to England, V. 3 ff; 25 ff, 291-298; garden, II. 221; IX. 229-231; habits of work, VIII. 288; IX. 142, 143; house, III. 172; portraits, I. frontispiece; IX. frontispiece; death of son, III. 48; IX. 148-158; quoted, VIII. 287.
- Emerson, Waldo, III. 48; IX. 148.
- Emerson, Rev. William, X. 400; XI. 72, 77.
- Eminence, cost of, II. 99.
- Empedocles, I. 198.
- Empire, an egotism, I. 375.
- Employments, daily, I. 271; III. 253; VIII. 23. See, also, Labor, Occupations, Vocation, Work.
- Emulation, IV. 14, 26; VII. 11; VIII. 293; in education, X. 154.
- ENCHANTER, THE, IX. 372.
- Enchantments, VI. 315; X. 191.
- Ends, and means, VI. 8, III; X. 37; brought about by paltry means, VII. 160; all momentary, I. 209; III. 190; III. 245; IV. 109, 126.
- Endymion, VI. 167; IX. 277.
- Enemies, to be made now and then, VI. 162, 255; each thing has, I. 238; met everywhere, IX. 302; are from within, X. 120.
- Energy, VII. 81; conscious and unconscious, III. 26; VI. 70; VII. 81; X. 85, 276, 277; XI. 538; original necessary, III. 123; VI. 62; VIII. 142 ff.
- England, I. 17; III. 230; agriculture, V. 95, 189; air, XI. 107; and America, see America; anchored, V. 41; anomalies, 94; army, 64, 85; arts, 83, 96; bank, 161; civilization, XI. 123; climate, V. 38; colonies, 151, 304; constitution, VI. 253; contrasts, V. 50; decadence, 37, 275; no place for faint-hearted, 103; foreign policy, 301; a garden, 34; rich in gentlemen, III. 141; V. 208; a law-giver, V. 137; genius maritime, 64; is a museum, 188; nationalities, 52, 260; politics, 122; population, 44; maintains trade, not liberty, XI. 239; visits to, V. 3 ff, 25 ff, 291-298; why is England, V. 35.
- England, Church of, V. 214-231; X. 112, 203; symbol of social order, XI. 465.
- English language, in England, V. 100, 234; in America, XI. 194.
- English literature, V. 36, 93, 232-260; XII. 372. See, also, Books, Literature, Reading.
- English people, ability, V. 74, 101, 139, 157; activity, 93; aggressiveness, 147; fine animals, 71; VI. 69; aristocracy, I. 393; V. 172-198; X. 498; arithmetical mind, X. 167; artificialness, V. 95 ff; imprisoned in backbone, XI. 537; bluntness, V. 133; body speaks, 104; brutality, 63; centrality, 43; character, IV. 4; V. 50, 127-143, 312; cockayne, 144-152; coldness, 106; commerce, 93, 96, 159; common sense, 88, 232; cosmopolitan spirit, 92; country life, 177; courage, 132, 147; decorum, 107, 112; dinners, 113; diet, 69; dress, 84; domesticity, 109; dulness, 124; of the earth, earthy, 130; earth-hunger, 119; eccentricity, 105, 144, 164; economy, 156; education, 63, 199-213; VIII. 129; estates, V. 180; faces, 66; love of facts, 81, 233; fair play, 78, 81; family, 108; no
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- fancy, 232; and French, 82, 122, 125, 141, 146, 149, 180 f, 307; fruit, 94; game-laws, 73; genius, III. 229 f; gentlemen, V. 208; heroes, 136; honesty, 119; horses, 71; hospitality, 293, 301; houses, 107, 109, 193; X. 167; hate humbug, V. 122; humorists, 144; hunting, 70, 73; private independence, 142; indifference, 104; influence, 36, 125; insularity, 105; intellect, 77, 79; law, 97; levity, 255; liberty-loving, 141; XI. 107; libraries, V. 211; literature, 232-260; logical, 79 ff; loyal, 186; machinery, 103, 157 ff, 251; manliness, 67; manners, 102-115; mastiff nature, 78; materialism, 233, 252; melancholy, 127 f; XII. 406; mind exact, X. 167; money questions, V. 88; mutual help, 99; myriad personalities, 303; names, 179; neatness, 107; newspapers, 137, 261; nobility, see Aristocracy; obstinacy, 78, 81, 131; openness, 78, 126; patriotism, 144; patience, 88; permanence, 106, 141, 178; plainness, 113; VI. 152; pluck, V. 102, 296; poetry, I. 167; V. 251 ff; practicality, 247, 255, 304; poverty, 153; product of political economy, 98, 154; love of precedent, 110; pretension, 112, 118; X. 48; probity, V. 119; property, IV. 152; V. 87, 144, 164; race, 44-73; rank, 99; love of reality, 118; religion, 214-231; reserve of power, 303; regard for rights, 81; XI. 136; routine, V. 305; sailors, 32, 64; Scandinavian spirit, 52; X. 42; science, V. 253; self-complacency, 104, 145; shop-keepers, V. 40; XI. 123; solidarity, V. 99; society, XII. 381; solvency, V. 155; pride in bad public speaking, 128; sports, 70; steam, 95; success, 305; table-talk, 114; taciturnity, 128; temperament, 130, 134, 166; thoroughness, 89; "Times," 261-272; no Transcendentalists, 224; travellers, VI. 69; XII. 337; truth, V. 116-126; universities, 199-213; utility, 254; voice, 112; walk, 70; wealth, 98, 124, 153, 162, 169, 173; VI. 118; wit, V. 124; women, 65, 108; wrath, 140.
- Ennui, I. 284.
- Enthusiasm, I. 251; II. 281, 321; V. 112; VII. 56, 61; not to be measured by the horse power of the understanding, VIII. 229, 275; X. 147, 171; XI. 343, 478.
- Envy, II. 46; X. 47.
- Enweri, quoted, VIII. 258, 262; IX. 303.
- Epaminondas, II. 162 f, 257; III. 126; VI. 151.
- Epic poetry, III. 29; XI. 244.
- Epilepsies of wit and spirits, II. 199.
- Epitaph, IX. 300; Sir Jenkin Grout's, III. 145.
- Epochs of life, II. 161; of history, XI. 161.
- Equality, III. 203, 279.
- Equator of life, III. 62; X. 193.
- Equilibrium, IV. 171; VI. 292; X. 192; XII. 412.
- Equivalence, II. 317; VIII. 213, 220.
- Eric, VI. 55.
- EROS, IX. 100, 362.
- Errors, VI. 257; XII. 55. See, also, Mistakes.
- Essence, II. 121; IV. 94.
- Essence, I. 341.
- Eternal, in man, VII. 97; X. 97.
- Eternity, I. 259, 287; II. 272; not duration, VII. 178, 183; VIII. 326; IX. 24, 350; study for, XII. 131.
- Ether, sulphuric, VI. 147; VII. 160.
- ETHICS, SOVEREIGNTY OF, X. 181-214.
- Ethics, of the chisel-edge, II. 115; the essence of religion, I. 58, 122; X. 109, 112 f; its laws execute themselves, I. 122, 304.
- Ethiops sweet, IX. 41.
- ...
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- Etiquette, III. 99, 132, 134; of visits, VIII. 91. See, also, Decorum, Manners.
- Eton, V. 206, 208.
- Euler, I. 56; V. 252.
- Eumenides, IX. 32.
- Euphuism, III. 177.
- Euripides, VIII. 202; quoted, I. 364; II. 255; IV. 138; VII. 312; X. 13, 313; XII. 351.
- Europe, IV. 52; and America, see America; fee for entrance, V. 30; gardens, I. 367; faded garment, II. 214; genius of, XI. 211; migration to, XII. 398; Plato embodies, IV. 45; VII. 198; receding in the imagination, I. 363; tape-worm of, VI. 145; travel to, II. 80, 214; VI. 145.
- EUROPE AND EUROPEAN BOOKS, XII. 365-378.
- EVA, TO, IX. 95.
- Evelyn, John, quoted, V. 181; VII. 284.
- Evening, influence of, VII. 280; knowledge, I. 73; XII. 94.
- Events, confirmation of, III. 97; man dependent on, III. 97; VII. 123; faculties predict, VIII. 42; man a match for, VII. 76; not events but man, responsible, X. 191; and persons made of same stuff, VI. 39 ff, 53, 56, 232, 251; man reinforced by, VII. 92; robe of soul, II. 274; X. 191; test our theory of life, X. 133; victims of, X. 37; what imports is what we think of them, VIII. 293, 294.
- Everett, Edward, X. 330-335.
- Evil, good of, IV. 138; VI. 253 ff; VII. 25, 307; made to serve good, VII. 30; is good in making, VI. 35, 253; V. 1. 289; IX. 14, 15, 275, 276; X. 190 ff; XI. 103, 178, 486, 542; XII. 413; debt to, XII. 55; not unmixed, II. 318; merely privative, I. 124.
- Evils, end themselves, X. 191, 232; needless, II. 135.
- Evolution, I. 372; III. 24, 180; IV. 80; VI. 15, 165; VII. 19; VIII. 7; IX. 281; XI. 143, 299, 525; XII. 21; of custom, I. 313.
- Exaggeration of evils, I. 270; II. 131; XII. 414; of single aspects, II. 339; III. 184 f, 226 f, 244; should be avoided, VIII. 86; from want of skill to describe fact, X. 164, 174.
- Examination-day, X. 284.
- Excellence, lames, VII. 166; of man, X. 189; special, XII. 343.
- EXCELSIOR, IX. 293.
- Exclusiveness, excludes itself, II. 110; X. 64; unavoidable, VII. 14; VIII. 90.
- Exercise, I. 241; VIII. 279.
- Exhilaration, III. 27; VI. 195.
- EXILE, THE, IX. 298, 376.
- Exiles from Nature, VIII. 188.
- Existence, the problem of, II. 326; IV. 78; VI. 271; wonder of, XII. 16.
- Expansion, power of, III. 56; IV. 81; XII. 58.
- Expediency, I. 310; XI. 170, 388, 421, 422, 425, 519.
- Expedients, See Resources.
- Expense, what for, I. 244; II. 234; should proceed from character, VI. 112 ff; VII. 109; XI. 534.
- EXPERIENCE, III. 43-86; IX. 269; I. 96, 340; II. 38, 171, 267, 333; VI. 78, 139 f; VII. 263, 320; XII. 91, 96, 102; on countenance, VIII. 84; none satiating, III. 75; one's own stained with error, that of others, ideal, II. 171, 195.
- Experiment, II. 318; III. 51, 78, 258, 280; VII. 183; X. 329.
- Experimenter, Emerson an endless, II. 318.
- Explanations, just persons refuse to explain themselves, III. 74; XII. 329. See, also, Apologies.
- Expression, III. 226; IV. 45; VII. 326; VIII. 247, 281; X. 270; XII. 41 f; excess of, X. 173; Nature bent on, VI. 177; need of, IV. 263 f;
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- VI. 299; implies a mixture of will, II. 336; III. 5, 7, 24, 66; tax on, VI. 191; in public speaking, VIII. 117.
- Extremes, IX. 122; X. 163-179; in English character, V. 67; human life not in, IV. 156; meet, VIII. 313.
- Extremists, the soul of political party, XII. 202.
- Eye, Eyes, VI. 177-181; adaptations of, I. 169; alter all, VIII. 319; indicate antiquity of soul, VI. 177; artist, I. 15; VI. 178; bandage, I. 146; beauty a necessity to, VI. 48; IX. 38; frame cities, IX. 64; color of, VI. 9; compasses in, XII. 228; compliment to the race, VII. 302; confessions in, II. 159; VI. 180; conversing with, IV. 47; VI. 19, 179; VII. 303; IX. 114; courage of, II. 237; VII. 255, 258, 264; Cupid's, VI. 289; IX. 104; debt to, X. 166; dreaded, III. 135; education of, XII. 157 f; makes estates, VI. 509; effect of exercise on, XII. 143; exorbitant, III. 225; farmer's, VI. 178; fate in, VIII. 320; fineness of appreciation, VII. 157; few see flowers, XII. 32; man's in his forehead, I. 90; have logic, XII. 67; look straight forward, III. 134; goodness makes, VIII. 342; govern by, X. 156; art the gymnastics of, II. 357; sympathy with hand, VII. 157; X. 23; XII. 228; hate in, XI. 165; show health, VI. 290; hero's, VI. 30; holden, II. 147; holiday in, III. 149; VI. 180; makes the horizon, III. 76; predicts light, II. 37; makes what it sees, I. 15, 73; VI. 311; VIII. 220; meeting of, IX. 12; military, VI. 181; muddy, II. 156; two pairs, I. 242; X. 237; passion gives, VII. 303; VIII. 10; of poet like meteors, IX. 311; power of, VI. 58, 181; VII. 77; X. 157; indicates rank, VIII. 312; reverted, II. 126; makes hero or saint, III. 76; sees through earth, VI. 284; VII. 171; seeing without, III. 285; sky full of, II. 364; study of, XII. 12; supplicating, VIII. 80; upside down, I. 51; will gives, VIII. 144; womanly, VIII. 289; of youth, VII. 297.
- Eye-ball, transparent, I. 10.
- Eyvind, conversion, VI. 205.
- FABLE, IX. 75.
- Fables, I. 296; II. 29, 62, 108; VII. 184; VIII. 186; we shall be, IV. 154; VI. 307; VIII. 23.
- Face, ancestral, V. 50; animal, X. 7; XII. 22; charm, II. 179; cheerful, VI. 159; of children, VI. 286; conquering one's, VI. 175; English, V. 48, 67; expression, VI. 181, 301; XII. 349; inviting and warning, VIII. 83; never lies, II. 156; power of, VII. 77; a record, VI. 299; a revealer, VI. 177; VII. 126; VIII. 84; sour, II. 56; subordinates costume, VIII. 170, 171; symmetry, VI. 299; types, VI. 299.
- Facility, VIII. 308; XII. 47.
- Factory, IX. 16; earth is farmer's VII. 142; VIII. 139.
- Facts, books of, VIII. 295; no contending with, VIII. 97; XI. 144; day full of, X. 132; cannot dispose of other people's, III. 81; and dreams, X. 166; eloquence grounded on, VII. 93 f; epiphany, X. 132; faith in, III. 91; better than fiction, VII. 107; ask fact for form, VIII. 54; fugitive, II. 9, 273; fulcrum, XII. 59; are gold and gems, X. 132; the great are the near, VII. 108; hug your, VIII. 129; as illustration, VIII. 11; immortalized, II. 327; not the fact, but the impression on mind, important, X. 471; preëxist as laws, II. 3, 10, 326; language of, II. 335; life an endless flight of winged, II. 32; made over in memory, XII. 103; memory
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- holds only so many, XII. 99; natural parallel with moral, VII. 230; XII. 5; new, not needed, III. 18; nouns of intellect, VI. 304; other people's, III. 81; true poetry, I. 75; public and private, II. 21; all related, VIII. 71; no sacred and no profane, II. 318; statement of, II. 39; VII. 68, 85, 94; symbolism of, III. 21; VI. 304; terminus of past, I. 34; XII. 59; time, II. 9; two sides, IV. 149; no ultimate, II. 304; use, II. 332; VIII. 11, 201, 293; wishes coined into, VII. 327.
- Faculties, III. 229; VI. 185; VII. 327; no inventory of, VI. 53; X. 279; XI. 122.
- Failure, VI. 262; inlet to higher advantage, I. 155; X. 58.
- Fairies, II. 18, 35; VI. 304; VII. 176; IX. 337.
- Faith, course of things teaches, II. 139; Americans have little, I. 249; X. 205; XI. 532; not parasite on authority, II. 295; IV. 180; dawn of new day, VI. 215; and dogma, I. 142; fire of, IX. 393; flash-of-lightning, I. 352, 353; makes its own forms, I. 150; governments stand on, X. 211; makes us, I. 150; mark of loss of, VI. 218; in moments, II. 267; not of ounces or pounds, VI. 202; poetry is, VIII. 31; founded on science, VI. 240; expressed by skepticism, IV. 182; not proved by syllogisms, VIII. 346; test of, I. 137; transcendentalism, an excess of, I. 338; and works, VIII. 275; X. 433; want of, III. 268; VI. 207; X. 217, 221. See, also, Belief, Doubt, Skepticism.
- Falkland, Lord, III. 124; IV. 14; VII. 121.
- Fall of man, the discovery that we exist, III. 75.
- Falsehood, betrays itself, II. 156; VII. 37; VIII. 160; is nothing, II. 121; first show of, X. 217; with every truth, I. 301. See, also, Lies, Truth.
- FAME, IX. 383; air was, IX. 222; meaning of, VIII. 313; XII. 248; profitless, IX. 327; unaccounted for, III. 89.
- Familiarity, gift of, XII. 286
- Family, the centre of life, VII. 108; spiritual, IX. 381.
- Fanaticism, no strong performance without a touch of, II. 141; III. 185; VII. 290; XII. 53.
- Fancy, VI. 312; VII. 182; VIII. 28; IX. 124, 315; X. 78. See, also, Imagination.
- Faneuil Hall, VI. 262; VII. 89; XI. 520.
- Faraday, Michael, VIII. 4, 306, 311; X. 70; XII. 3.
- FAREWELL, THE LAST, IX. 258.
- Farmer, I. 368, 381; VI. 101; XII. 358; benefactor, VII. 140; hereditary calling, VII. 139; manners, VII. 153; his servants, VII. 142 ff; timed to Nature and not to city watches, VII. 138. See, also, Farming.
- FARMING, VII. 135-154; XII. 358-364; aesthetic, I. 42, 236, 240; III. 252; VI. 118; not to be united with scholarship, VI. 114. See, also, Agriculture.
- Fashion, hates pretenders, III. 131; hates solitary, gloomy people, III. 139; is virtue gone to seed, III. 122, 128, 142 f, 146, 152, 155; VI. 186, 292; VII. 133, 214; VIII. 171; X. 36; XI. 528; XII. 377.
- FATE, VI. 1-49; IX. 196, 294; I. 302, 304; II. 189, 353; IV. 52, 175; VI. 36, 221, 245, 251, 317; IX. 280; XI. 244; name for unpenetrated causes, VI. 31 f; freedom a part of, VI. 21, 23, 240; and necessity, VII. 37; and courage, VII. 276; VIII. 303; IX. 14, 124, 137, 240; X. 9, 73, 206; XI. 231, 530; XII. 107; is limitation, VI. 20; is power
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- that shall be, VI. 35; solution of, VI. 47; subdued to use, VI. 32; tragic element in life, XII. 406; an immense whim, XII. 408. See Destiny, Necessity.
- Faults, X. 52, 196; we have to thank our faults, II. 117; III. 97; VI. 258.
- Faust. See Goethe.
- Fear, a bad counsellor, II. 238, 259; III. 186 f, 197; VII. 258; VIII. 147, 170; X. 87, 483; XI. 171; lost with age, VII. 323; IX. 22; God prefers atheism, X. 87, 483; springs from ignorance, I. 104; VII. 262; superficial, VII. 265; surmounting, VII. 276; from wrong, II. 111 f; XI. 140; paralyzed with, III. 277.
- Fellowship, excess of, I. 343; III. 136; IV. 129.
- Fellowes, Sir Charles, V. 91, 278, 293; X. 145.
- Feminine element, X. 121.
- Fence, powers of a, VII. 146.
- Fenris wolf, V. 161; VI. 20.
- Ferguson, I. 9.
- Ferideddin Attar, quoted, VIII. 263 ff.
- Fermentation, foes to, III. 252.
- Ferocity in Nature, II. 249; VI. 8; X. 188.
- Feudalism, I. 179, 376 ff; V. 175, 306; XI. 172.
- Fiction, insipid compared with fact, VII. 107; X. 12, 411.
- Fidelity, he general purpose, III. 279.
- Figures, foundation of speech, I. 28; III. 30; VIII. 11.
- Firdousi, III. 151; VIII. 241.
- Fire, VIII. 289; cry of, VI. 140; a muse, VIII. 281, 289; Nature's, VII. 145; New England, XI. 39; Massachusetts ice burned more than, IX. 168.
- First books best, XII. 360.
- First-born, of world, II. 213.
- Fish, man in sea, XII. 22.
- Fitness, VI. 37, 44, 290; VII. 53; VIII. 219.
- Five, nature loves the number, IX. 44.
- Fixtures, none in nature or man, II. 302, 306; VI. 292; VIII. 200.
- Flags, III. 16; XI. 530.
- Flattery, sincerity more agreeable than, II. 292; III. 273; X. 22.
- Flaxman, John, III. 82; XI. 511.
- Flea of conventions, X. 375.
- Fletcher, John, quoted, II. 78, 177.
- Floors, scouring, II. 166.
- Florence, XII. 181, 223, 229, 243.
- Flowers, IX. 336; calendar, IX. 176; celestial, IV. 143; ciphers, II. 176; of Concord, XI. 38; of courtesy, III. 138; cut, VI. 300; X. 185; as gifts, III. 159 f; jilt us, III. 182; of the mind, I. 213; III. 27; of old age, III. 31; of pleasure, II. 103; Shakers, IX. 93; of sky, III. 21; tint of, from root, VI. 291.
- Flowing, all things, I. 27; III. 20, 34; IV. 112, 172; VI. 43, 292, 306, 320; VII. 145; VIII. 5 ff, 71, 200, 223; IX. 52, 58, 287, 315; XII. 91.
- FLUTE, THE, IX. 303; heard farther than cart, VI. 295.
- Fly, as untamable as a hyena, VI. 269; Musagetes, VIII. 285.
- Flying-machines, XII. 393. See, also, Balloons.
- Foibles, III. 227; VI. 258.
- Folly, II. 98; remedy against, VI. 269 f, 287; XII. 387.
- Folsom, Mrs. Abigail, the flea of conventions, X. 375.
- Fontanes, quoted, IV. 228.
- Fontenelle, VII. 322; quoted, V. 42; VII. 302; X. 109; XI. 156.
- Fools, of ideas, VI. 238, 253, 325; acrid, VI. 270; X. 145.
- Fops, II. 158; III. 133; VI. 91; X. 63; XI. 291; of fields, III. 177.
- FORBEARANCE, IX. 83.
- Force, a practical lie, III. 214; needed where men are selfish, III. 220.
- FORCES, PERPETUAL, VIII. 211; X. 67-88, 186, 247.
- Foreign things, admiration of, II. 82.
- ...
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- Foreigners, V, 145, 149.
- FORERUNNERS, IX. 85.
- FORESTER, IX. 292; 50.
- Forests, I. 9, 169; III. 169; VII. 298; IX. 183; architecture, II. 20; changes in, XII. 150-152; old, decomposed for new, VIII. 200; uses of, XII. 149 f; wait till wayfarer has passed, II. 18.
- Forgetfulness, IX. 152; XII. 101, 107, 414. See, also, Memory.
- Form (figure), I. 16; II. 14, 276, 337, 354; III. 65; IV. 105; VI. 296, 302, 305; VII. 182, 302; dependence on soul, III. 3, 10, 13, 21; IV. 114 f; VI. 9, 214, 292; VII. 127; VIII. 17, 159; XI. 409; XII. 220, 221.
- Forms, religious, I. 150; III. 70; X. 85, 104, 107, 204, 218; XI. 20, 22, 234, 287; political, XI. 258, 271.
- Fortescue, Lord Chief Justice, quoted, V. 69.
- Fortune, II. 89; III. 72; VI. 40 f; VIII. 245, 303; IX. 33; X. 15, 19, 23, 43, 45, 191.
- FORTUNE OF THE REPUBLIC, THE, XI. 509-544.
- Fortune-telling, II. 283; VII. 107; X. 10.
- Fouché, quoted, VI. 132.
- Fountains, III. 100.
- Fourier, and Fourierism, I. 382; IV. 183, 258; X. 245, 346-359, 367; XI. 390; quoted, VIII. 289.
- Fourth of July, Ode, IX. 199.
- Fox, Charles James, III. 142, 274; VIII. 22, 318; XI. 109; quoted, VI. 260; VIII. 22.
- Fox, George, III. 187; IX. 297; X. 111; quoted, IV. 183; XI. 488.
- Fractions, in society, we are, VII. 9.
- France, blackboard for England, V. 145; changed into young Ohio, IV. 242; influence, V. 36, 125; poet never grew in, IX. 223; revolutions, V. 180; X. 34.
- Franklin, Benjamin, VI. 247; quoted, VI. 248; VII. 258; VIII. 339.
- Frankness, II. 237; VIII. 229.
- Fraud, in commerce, I. 230 f.
- Frederick the Great, VIII. 318.
- Free, one must be, to free others, VII. 94.
- FREEDOM, IX. 198; American, VIII. 210; IX. 206; necessitated, or part of fate, VI. 21, 23, 240; English, V. 304; has its own guards, X. 205; virtue essential to, X. 86; XI. 174, 234; the perfectness of man, XII. 271, 366. See, also, Liberty.
- Freemasons, VI. 132; XI. 480.
- FREE RELIGIOUS ASSOCIATION, REMARKS AT, XI. 475-481; SPEECH AT, XI. 483-491.
- Free trade, III. 255; V. 310; VIII. 32; XI. 301, 541. See, also, Protection, Tariff, Taxes.
- French people, must have a career, X. 48; celerity, IV. 176; and English, see under English people; language, V. 118, 146; ruffles, V. 84; women, VIII. 93; XI. 415.
- Friends, I. 46; III. 111; VII. 128; VIII. 89; do not apologize to, II. 160; mutual attraction, I. 77; II. 150, 294, 314; III. 112; VIII. 92; like books, for occasional use, II. 214; compact between, VI. 192; do not run to seek, II. 293; III. 112; for conversation, one to one, II. 206; give depth, VI. 268; dreams and fables, II. 213; echo, II. 208; are not their own highest forms, VI. 287; VII. 126; not to adopt their follies, II. 71; easily great with, VIII. 92; God-given, II. 194; indicate growth, II. 307; gulfs between, VII. 8; hope of heart, III. 113; embody ideas, I. 46; X. 60; represent ideas they do not exceed, II. 308; III. 56; X. 60; Janus-faced, II. 214; how we know them, II. 285; letter to, II. 198; life is too short for, VI. 244, 273; limitations, II. 197, 216, 308; not made but allowed, III. 112; magnetism, VI.
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- 41; make us do what we can, VI. 272; VIII. 92; under masks, VI. 161; not one to spare, IX. 302; ornament of house, VII. 128; we cannot part with, II. 125; enlarge our powers, VI. 274; VIII. 289; related, meet, III. 112; remembered by their reading, VIII. 194; rubies, IX. 217; need not seek, II. 293; select, II. 240; self-elected, II. 209; give standard of excellence, I. 46; trust in, III. 111; VI. 192; truth, II. 202, 208, 307; unknown, XII. 397; advertise us of our wants, I. 346; frozen wine, IX. 352; the wise have no, III. 216.
- FRIENDSHIP, II. 189-217; IX. 274, 300; is for aid and comfort, II. 205; beatitude, III. 113; too good to be believed, II. 196; a compromise, II. 199; endeavors after, VII. 8; essence, II. 217; ethics, VII. 129; evanescent, II. 215; feet of, II. 205; festival of Nature, III. 111; VII. 129; buys friendship, VI. 124; not frost-work, II. 201; is good understanding, VI. 192; Hafiz on, VI. 273; VIII. 258; IX. 300; happiness, III. 111; VII. 129; VIII. 89; of heroes, VII. 9; Nature its husk and shell, II. 201; the higher the rarer, II. 213; laws eternal, II. 199; love, the symbol of, III. 111; VII. 129; manners a guard to, V. 187; a looking-glass, IX. 80; all momentary, III. 77; IV. 128; VI. 241; not named, VI. 273; order of nobility, X. 141; in Oriental poetry, VIII. 258; place of, I. 214; knit by persecution, XI. 31; provision for, VI. 273; pudency in, VI. 273; reality, VI. 323; religion, XI. 480; reverence in, II. 209; never unrequited, II. 216; friend should be high enough to slight us, II. 307; strict and serious, II. 205; VI. 273; tenderness in, II. 204; needs time, VI. 187; training, VI. 273; trust, II. 200; truth in, II. 202; two, before there can be one, II. 208; virtue attracts, IV. 15; X. 210; the only way to have a friend is to be one, II. 212.
- Frigga, XI. 406.
- Frivolity, VI. 269; VIII. 348.
- Froissart, Jehan, Chronicles, quoted, V. 128.
- Frothingham, Dr. Nathaniel L., X. 335.
- Frugality, base and heroic, I. 245; II. 112.
- Fruits, III. 159 f; V. 49, 52; X. 70.
- FUGITIVE SLAVE LAW, XI. 179-214; 215-244; 130.
- Fuller-Ossoli, Margaret, X. 343, 362, 364; XII. 108.
- Fuller, Thomas, quoted, V. 64, 119, 139, 175, 195, 220; VI. 149; VII. 289; X. 472; XII. 107.
- Fulton, Robert, VI. 33; VII. 293; X. 12.
- Fungus, I. 254.
- Furies, I. 244; III. 161; VI. 109, 166, 258; IX. 296.
- Fury of performance, V. 103; VII. 11; X. 149.
- Fuseli, quoted, VI. 185.
- Future, VI. 234; VIII. 338; X. 9; God has no answer about, II. 67, 284; III. 67; present and, VII. 12; past and, VII. 170; party of the, I. 268; X. 325.
- Future life. See Immortality.
- Gait, private history in, VI. 177.
- Galiani, Abbé, VII. 233.
- Galileo, II. 86; VIII. 137; XII. 244.
- Gallery, art, imposes on us, XII. 68.
- Games, the education of, VI. 142, 318.
- GARDEN, MY, IX. 229.
- GARDEN, THE, IX. 348.
- GARDENER, IX. 292.
- Gardens I. 367; III. 174; VI. 115 f; VII. 148; European, XII. 173; joy in, XII. 172. See, also, Farming.
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- Garments of dissimulation, II. 202 f.
- Garrets, II. 227, 332.
- Garrick, David, quoted, VIII. 277.
- Gas on the brain, VI. 152.
- Gate of gifts, VI. 10; IX. 294.
- Gates, the world all, VIII. 137.
- Gautama, IV. 3; quoted, XII. 35.
- Geese, wild, I. 168; IX. 164.
- Gems, century makes, I. 278; facts are gems and gold, X. 132.
- Genelas. See Venelas.
- Generalizations, II. 309; III. 226, 236 f; IV. 185; V. 241, 244; VIII. 72, 229; XII. 40, 99.
- Geniality, VI. 137.
- Generosity, III. 145, 159; VII. 114.
- Genius, admirable at distance, III. 227; no lazy angel, XII. 43; arrogance, IV. 150; ascetic, II. 231; needs audience, V. 47; and beauty, VI. 302; has a bias, VIII. 307; has no external biography, IV. 43; teaches how to blame itself, XII. 333; borrows, VIII. 191, 194; call of, II. 51; catholic, II. 288; VIII. 318; no choice to, IV. 190; exalts the common, VII. 176; XII. 43; a consoler, XI. 448; courage of, VII. 268; creating power, I. 90; VIII. 201; XII. 17; not to be criticised, III. 241; dearly paid for, II. 99; VI. 138; or daemon, III. 45; VI. 287; X. 16; debt to, VI. 246; defined, II. 45, 231, 271; III. 22; VIII. 201, 229; X. 76; XII. 42; despotism of, VI. 302; why divine, XII. 77; and drill, X. 144; in Elizabethan era, V. 243; English type, V. 251; favoritism shown to, X. 270; makes fingers, I. 206; and foresight, IX. 197; forlorn, IX. 315, 326; enemy of genius, I. 91; seeks genius, X. 146; ours should be more of a genius, III. 46; geographer of supersensible regions, IV. 16; unites two gifts, II. 334; XII. 46; greatest good and harm, VII. 145; growth of, II. 274; is health, X. 43; an infinite hope, III. 271; a hospitality, I. 243; tyrant of the hour, II. 355; of humanity, I. 371; IV. 32 f; imperfections, VII. 6, 7; imprudent, II. 232; is intellect constructive II. 326, 334; XII. 49; influence as cause and effect, IV. 34; isolation, VII. 6; XII. 84; labor, I. 348; liberates, IV. 18; X. 52; draws up ladder after it, IV. 208; obedience to, the only liberation, III. 284; of life, IV. 273; VII. 8; is love, I. 217; madness, VIII. 279; work of, is no one man's, IV. 199; memory, XII. 100; miracle, VIII. 229; moral tone, X. 185; is seen, etc., in music, I. 219; of nations, III. 229; XI. 337; nearness to Nature, VIII. 43; obedience to, III. 284; XII. 61; is love of perfection, I. 217; pierces to simple and true, II. 361; pith of, in few hours, III. 47; and practical power, III. 86; progressive, I. 90; receptive, IV. 191; from rectitude, VI. 216; religious, II. 288; repels, IV. 27; versus routine, XII. 124 f; royal right, X. 52; best plain set, VII. 115; secret of, IV. 290; service of men of, I. 182; shyness of, XII. 124; sickly, IV. 288; solitude the friend of, VI. 155; solstice of, VI. 218; of the day, speculative, I. 283; spontaneous, I. 165; VII. 182; works in sport, VI. 264; Stoical plenum, I. 164; surprise, III. 68; and talent, I. 164, 218; III. 11; IV. 150, 170; VI. 231; X. 275 f, 284, 334; XII. 335; test, its power to use facts as symbols, VIII. 35; of the time, XII. 335; ultimates its thought in a thing, VIII. 17; theory of, I. 207 f; in trade, I. 231; III. 92; tragedy of, I. 243; should tell plain truths, XII. 379; detects eternal unity. 11. 13; universal, I. 90, 164, 218; II. 231, 288; III. 272; universities hostile to, V. 212; unlocks chains
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- of use, X. 52; its value is its veracity, III. 11; in virtue, VIII. 275; grown wanton, X. 51; wearies of itself, XII. 70; implies will, XII. 46.
- Gentility, II. 245; III. 122.
- Gentleman, III. 120 ff, 137, 145; V. 118, 208 f; VIII. 102; X. 31, 36, 52, 62, 65; XI. 230, 280, 537.
- Geography of fame, II. 257.
- Geology, I. 169; II. 16; III. 80; VI. 262; history, III. 179; VI. 15, 281; VII. 142; VIII. 8, 16, 212; X. 187, 336; XII. 5.
- Geometry, III. 183; IV. 84; VI. 219; VII. 191; VIII. 107.
- George, St., V. 120, 152.
- Germans, V. 55; earnestness, IV. 282; generalizers, V. 244; Semi-Greeks, V. 254; honesty, IV. 281; V. 116; hospitable, IV. 4; language, V. 100; literature, XII. 255, 312; foremost scholars are, XI. 458; Shakspeare's influence, IV. 204; XII. 312; truth, IV. 281.
- Germany, I. 17.
- Gettysburg, XI. 334, 368.
- Gibbon, Edward, VII. 205; quoted, I. 20; IV. 164.
- Gibraltar of propriety, V. 112.
- GIFTS, III. 157-165; IX. 283; II. 160; IV. 8.
- Gifts, natural, II. 83; VI. 10; IX. 32, 294; X. 84, 275, 279.
- Gingham-mill, VI. 81.
- Gilbert, IV. 104.
- Giotto, VII. 310.
- Girls, II. 172 f, 259; III. 246; VI. 170, 197. See, also, Maid.
- GIVE ALL TO LOVE, IX. 90.
- Giving, III. 162; IV. 7; IX. 350. See, also, Gifts.
- Gladiators, VII. 232.
- Gladstone, William E., quoted, VI. 209.
- Glauco, quoted, VII. 179.
- Globes, human beings like, III. 77.
- Gnat grasping the world, XII. 12.
- Go alone, I. 145.
- God, all in all, II. 313; all-fair, I. 24; attributes, II. 272; VI. 314; belief in, II. 139; comes without bell, II. 271; bridegroom of soul, IV. 128; his nature a circle, II. 301; cleave to God against God, XII. 6; behind cotton-bales, XI. 392; day, name for, VII. 167; in your debt, II. 123; denial, X. 265; disposes, X. 232; in distribution, I. 210; III. 237 f; X. 276; enters by private door, II. 327; X. 133; enters world with each new soul, X. 144; exists, I. 134; II. 139; X. 193; expelling, I. 304; father, I. 27; indefinable, I. 62; incoming of, I. 204; III. 69; is, not was, I. 144; II. 66; ideas, III. 76; infinity, IX. 359; never jests, I. 48; pure law, X. 104; in man, I. 11, 64, 68, 122, 131, 194 f; II. 77, 79, 292; VIII. 348; X. 135; XI. 479; in men, I. 208; in matter, I. 62; X. 104, 222; without mediator, I. 145; messengers, II. 67; X. 99; works in moments, VII. 178; nobody against, but God, X. 18; under obligation, II. 254; omnipresence, X. 199; painter, VI. 313; permanence, II. 318; VIII. 333; politeness, III. 67; poor, VI. 215; speaks not prose, VIII. 12; savage idea of, VI. 12; sail with God the seas, II. 260; we see, VI. 324; his self-existence, II. 70; self-reliance is reliance on God, XI. 236; the servant of all, XI. 297; his speaking, II. 65; X. 200; speaking for, X. 97; substance, IV. 178; enveloping thought, II. 295; truth, XI. 136; hangs weights on the wires, VI. 257; needs no wise men, III. 187; without, is solitude, X. 221; his will sallies free, IX. 122; witness, XI. 486.
- Gods, apparition, X. 100; arrive, IX. 92; of our creation, VII. 299; crockery, XI. 242; disguised, VII. 175; IX. 135; XII. 23, 43; expressors
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- are, VIII. 215, 216; X. 145, 173; game of questions, VII. 238; Greek, III. 37; VI. 205; not hidden from gods, III. 112; ideas are, III. 231; IV. 87; love of, IX. 10; we make our, IV. 4; VI. 205; we meet none because we harbor none, VI. 230; let us sit apart as, III. 137; sell at fair price, VI. 109; silent, II. 343; upon spheres, IX. 349; of tradition and rhetoric, II. 292; talk in breath of woods, IX. 311; mankind believe in two, VI. 31; when a god wishes to ride, VI. 48; young mortal among, VI. 325.
- GOETHE, IV. 259-290; IX. 223, 373; XII. 322-336; on architecture, I. 43; VII. 54; VIII. 185; on art, V. 274; autobiography, IV. 285; on the beautiful, VI. 288; Carlyle on, V. 274; charity, III. 103 f; inspired by common things, I. 112; VI. 151; correspondence, VIII. 317; criticised, X. 19; culture his aim, IV. 284; delight in, III. 55; on the demoniacal, X. 17; on dreams, X. 9; Eckermann on, VII. 208, 237; Faust, IV. 271, 276; VIII. 69; X. 245, 328; XII. 74; want of frankness, XII. 326; gravitation toward truth, IV. 275; Helena, II. 33; III. 242; IV. 271; use of idiom, XII. 284; imagination, VIII. 10; on immortality, VIII. 342, 344; insight, X. 298, 307; on intellect, IV. 174; X. 307; misjudged, III. 242; Musagetes, VIII. 284; on Napoleon, VI. 232; on Natural History, XII. 161; perception of identity, IV. 18; on poetry, VIII. 66; on quotation, VIII. 200; representative of 19th century, IV. 270; on riches, VI. 97; scientific theories, X. 338; not spiritual, XII. 45; studies, VII. 331; Walpurgis Nacht, XII. 291; Wilhelm Meister, IV. 277; X. 121; XII. 329, 376; on wishes of youth, VI. 46; quoted, I. 389; VIII. 283; XII. 220, 222.
- Gold, only for gifts, IX. 299; and iron, III. 197; IX. 271.
- Good, aim of creation (Koran), IV. 95; beauty of, VII. 310; doctor, VI. 253; dowdiness of, I. 355; is effective, IV. 7; out of evil, see Evil; first, X. 271; fountain of, I. 125; inundation, II. 318; love of, III. 6; material and natural, II. 122; reproductive, I. 23; runs in veins, III. 261; X. 366; solid, II. 143; all souls led to, IX. 84; take what we find, III. 62; not without tax, II. 105; every thought and thing reflects, IV. 69; X. 91; visionary, XI. 163; world is for good of all, X. 91 ff.
- Good breeding, see Behavior, Manners.
- GOOD-BYE, IX. 3.
- Good Hope, IX. 387.
- Good nature, III. 141; VII. 233.
- Good will, makes insight, III. 164; VII. 309; VIII. 342; IX. 235; XII. 61. See Kindness.
- Goodness, in badness, VIII. 317; beam of, III. 249; IX. 284; oneness with beauty, IV. 57; XII. 217; is being, IV. 138, 144; must have edge, II. 51; makes intelligence, VIII. 342; not obsolete, VII. 57; raptures, VIII. 275; sanctity, I. 132; above self, X. 206; smiles, VI. 264; standard, I. 147; strong, I. 216; not separate from truth, I. 221; IV. 130; universal, VII. 307; dies in wishes, VI. 29; all works for, X. 91.
- Goods, II. 314; shadow of good, VII. 115.
- Gossip, VIII. 86, 91; IX. 291; of importance as safeguard, VI. 222; VII. 246; in socialist communities, X. 365.
- Gothic cathedrals, origin, II. 11, 20 f; built by love and fear, VII. 53, 56.
- Government, aim, III. 213; American
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- capacity for, XI. 528; bad, remedy for, II. 100; by bar-rooms, XI. 518; clumsy, I. 380; changes in, X. 328; in course of civilization, VII. 23; colonial, XI. 42 ff; its end, culture, III. 204; expression of state of cultivation, III. 200; dependence on, XI. 171 f; a dictator, XI. 302; rests on faith, X. 211; of force, III. 220; forms, III. 207; XI. 258; fossil, I. 379; an Intelligence Office, I. 378; the less the better, III. 215; X. 121, 143; meddling, III. 214 f; methods, I. 380; morality, XI. 309, 540; objects of, I. 380, 384; III. 201; XI. 134, 297; obstruction, XI. 258; of politicians, XI. 518; likely to fall into private hands, I. 385; an impure theocracy, III. 213; titular, XI. 520.
- Gower, John, quoted, VIII. 9.
- Grab, promptness to, I. 247.
- GRACE, IX. 359; VI. 279, 290, 299; VIII. 79; IX. 275.
- Gradations, VI. 292; IX. 281, 349, 356; X. 46, 100; XII. 17.
- Grafts, XII. 26.
- Grandeur, VI. 230.
- Granite, I. 289; XII. 211.
- Grasp of minds, XII. 48.
- Gratitude, III. 163.
- GRAVE, A MOUNTAIN, IX. 390.
- Grave, IX. 29, 36, 37, 48, 302.
- Gravitation, I. 151, 216; III. 284; VI. 7; VII. 146, 240; in mental phenomena, IV. 109; VI. 218; VIII. 16, 131, 221; X. 130; XI. 236; XII. 59.
- Gravity, centre of, II. 229; VII. 27, 300; X. 196.
- Gray, Thomas, quoted, II. 282; VIII. 56, 287.
- GREAT MEN, USES OF, IV. 1-35.
- Great Men, helped by adversity, II. 117; VI. 233; VIII. 230; of great affinities, IV. 41; the age mischooses, II. 214; IV. 202; not appreciative of others, XII. 238; only make beginnings, XII. 70; no boasters, VI. 5; born too soon, VIII. 215; indifferent to circumstances, VII. 118; composite, IV. 98; not convulsible, II. 321; mutual deference, X. 55; danger from, IV. 27; dependence on others, IV. 190; easy to follow, XI. 220; clear our minds of egotism, IV. 25; enrich us, VIII. 227; equality in all ages, II. 86; introduce us to facts, XII. 315; of facts and ideas, IV. 22; fame needs perspective, XII. 247; not few, VII. 296; none without foible, I. 195; III. 227; periods fruitful of, XI. 452; only great event, VIII. 220; make great things, I. 105; know not their own greatness, II. 155; depend on heart, not purse, VII. 115; do not hinder us, XII. 315; homage to, VIII. 216, 226; make land great, II. 258; live in several bodies, IV. 41; lives not harmonious, XII. 215; make up life, VI. 135; raise idea of Man, XII. 254; mark of, I. 105; means to produce them, I. 202; from middle classes, VI. 259; misunderstood, II. 58; lead to nature, XII. 315; are near us, X. 60; new, II. 365; III. 108; are great occasions, VII. 84; accept their place, II. 47; poverty their ornament, II. 255; VII. 115; recall us to principles, X. 102; absence of pretension, X. 176; not producers, IV. 93; readers, VI. 142; VIII. 178; XI. 504; rely on common people, X. 64; search for, IV. 3; selfishness, X. 21; self-reliant, II. 54; our greater selves, I. 106; VIII. 301; must serve, X. 51; sincere, VIII. 229; sportive, II. 256; success due to, II. 134; see that thoughts rule, VIII. 229; of our times, I. 265; treatment, III. 80; unique, II. 83; write proudly, XII. 329; much pardoned to, X. 51.
- Great tasks not needed, VI. 321.
- ...
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- Great things done in the spirit of greatness, XI. 171.
- Great wits and madness, VIII. 279.
- GREATNESS, VIII. 299-320; none without abandonment, VII. 181; beginnings, III. 114; only comparative, I. 172; needs not costly culture, I. 317; not due to conditions, II. 143; easy, IV. 54; good economy, II. 209; enlarges all, VI. 192; appeals to future, II. 59; not from following the great, I. 125; humanity, VIII. 320; humility, XII. 266; live for, VIII. 338; love follows, II. 151; measured by what it can spare, X. 174; regards not opinion, II. 261; and prudence, II. 314; pursuit of, VI. 154; right the essence of, XI. 279; self-respect is the early form of, VIII. 303, 307, 313; simple, I. 165; V. 186; is in tendency, III. 73; achieved unawares, VI. 262; is the perception that virtue is enough, II. 255; feels no little wants, VI. 154; not greatness, but sensibility to see it, is wanting, VIII. 319.
- Greek fire, wit like, VIII. 163.
- Greek period in every man's history, II. 24.
- Greek, power of achievement, X. 278; art has passed away, II. 302, 364; civilization in contrast with the East, X. 315; XI. 153; idea of death, VIII. 325; education, IV. 132; epigram, VI. 299; genius, IV. 52; history, II. 14, 23; V. 8, 299; VII. 201; VIII. 218; instinct, VII. 272; language and literature, III. 258 f; V. 204, 206 f, 237; VII. 197; manners, II. 24; mythology, II. 30, 106; X. 105; philosophy, X. 308; self-centred, VIII. 104; perfection of senses, II. 24; tragedy, II. 25 f; XI. 239; XII. 407.
- Greenough, Horatio, V. 5; quoted, VII. 293.
- Grief, VIII. 246; makes us idealists, III. 48 f; to be lightly stated, VI. 266; XII. 44, 410.
- Grimm, Hermann, quoted, VIII. 183, 184.
- Ground, conversation should keep on natural, VII. 232.
- Grout, Sir Jenkin, III. 145.
- Groves, I. 368.
- Growth, I. 202; II. 124, 275, 307, 319; VIII. 348; XII. 25, 58; arrested, is history of mankind, VIII. 7, 270; XII. 60; incessant, III. 102.
- Grumblers, VI. 265.
- Guano, races that have guano in their destiny, VI. 16.
- Guess, fruitful, I. 66.
- Guests, II. 192; VII. 118; VIII. 98; we are guests in nature, X. 194; XII. 413.
- Guinea-trader, IV. 152.
- Guizot, Fran&c;cedil;ois, P. G., V. 121; VII. 19; VIII. 128; X. 494.
- Gulistan. See Saadi.
- Gunning, Elizabeth and Maria, VI. 297.
- Guns, VIII. 231; XI. 513; are not to go in advance of right, XI. 540.
- Gustavus Adolphus, X. 57.
- Guthrie, quoted, VIII. 141.
- GUY, IX. 33.
- Gyges, ring of, VII. 5; X. 20, 126.
- Gylfi's mocking, VI. 313.
- Gymnastics, of work, III. 256; of play, VI. 142.
- Gypsy, V. 229; VIII. 84; Romany girl, IX. 227.
- Habit, III. 228; VI. 78; VIII. 288.
- HAFIZ, IX. 296; quoted, III. 151; V. 258; VI. 29, 40, 57, 233, 273; VIII. 186, 244-261, 289; IX. 299, 303.
- Half-gods, go, IX. 92.
- Halfness, II. 111; VIII. 158 ff.
- Hallam, Henry, V. 245; VII. 206; quoted, VIII. 195, 197.
- HAMATREYA, IX. 35.
- Hampden, John, IV. 14.
- Handel, III. 233.
- ...
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- Handles, two to everything, XII. 300 ff.
- Hands, XII. 245; can execute nothing not inspired by character, II. 367; and eyes must work together, VII. 157; X. 23, 270; XII. 228; instrument of instruments, VII. 157; of the mind, I. 37; right to, earned by use, I. 238; Saxons the hands of mankind, V. 76; type of flipper of saurus, I. 43.
- Hankal, Ibn, quoted, II. 253.
- Happiness, and another's misery, VI. 231; capacity for, endless, VI. 267; the highest, to behold beauty of another character, I. 343; X. 228; drugged with hope and fear, II. 176; does education increase happiness, III. 269; good delights us, VII. 179, 306; Hafiz on, VIII. 244; is to fill the hour, III. 59; VII. 181; Hume on, VII. 173; not dependent on persons, II. 188; search for, illusive, VI. 267.
- Happy is hearing, unhappy speaking man, II. 342.
- Harmony of man with nature, I. 11; III. 13; XII. 40, 215.
- Harness of routine, I. 231.
- HARP, THE, IX. 237-241. See, also, AEolian Harp.
- Harp, IX. 120; constellation, I. 82.
- Harvard College, X. 330; XI. 343.
- HARVARD COMMEMORATION SPEECH, XI. 339-345.
- Haste, vulgar, III. 137; VI. 160, 187.
- Hastings, Warren, VIII. 113; quoted, VII. 73.
- Hatem Tai, hospitality, VII. 253.
- Hatred, IX. 13; the doctrine of, to be preached, II. 51.
- Have, the coat of, VI. 117.
- Hawthorne, Nathaniel, X. 363; XI. 501.
- Haydon, Benjamin R., quoted, V. 153.
- Haydn, I. 43.
- Hay-scales, the speediest way of deciding a vote, VI. 14.
- Heads, adapting conversation to shape of, III. 53; expressiveness, VII. 127; VIII. 170.
- Headache, culture ends in, III. 59.
- Health, beauty is, X. 43; is consent to cause of universe, XII. 28; dormant in us, X. 93; condition of eloquence, VII. 68; VIII. 117; frolic, VIII. 40; give me health and a day, I. 17; of memory, XII. 106; the moral its measure, VI. 218; IX. 219; X. 185; XII. 62; the loftiest muse, VI. 243; VIII. 279; patriotic, VI. 13; preaches self-command, I. 43; sleep its condition, VIII. 280; of success in general, I. 17; III. 13; VI. 55, 60, 216, 263; VII. 297, 306; X. 43; natural greatness of, VIII. 316; XII. 106; should be universal, II. 231; first wealth is, VI. 56; is wholeness, I. 182; of a writer, VIII. 40.
- Hearing, a wise, I. 139; II. 342; VII. 301.
- Heart, its arguments, VI. 217; ask, VIII. 227; fountain of beauty, VII. 130, 306; lover of absolute good, III. 54; and intellect, VIII. 228, 233; XII. 60; love of, is permanent, IX. 157; not to be imprisoned, II. 304; obey, IX. 90; distinction of a royal nature, X. 61; scholar is world's, I. 101; on sleeve, V. 135; throne of will, VI. 51; IX. 284; wisdom of, VI. 217; VII. 132, 306; VIII. 227, 344; XI. 223; its world vaster than astronomical spaces, XI. 448; whole world in, IX. 56.
- Heat, source of power, III. 179; VII. 12, 61, 92; VIII. 119, 126, 276; of mind unwise, VIII. 86, 119; summer, IX. 170.
- Heaven, II. 140; III. 193, 276; VI. 204; VIII. 344; is brass, IV. 181; X. 265; bending heavens in dew, IX. 247; communion of souls, IV.
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- 128; is exercise of faculties, II. 140; XII. 46; man makes, I. 123; V. 242; Norseman's, VI. 137; a prison, III. 33; secret of, IV. 140; Swedenborg's idea, IV. 142; VIII. 327; "tiresome vault of," VIII. 289; war in, X. 423.
- Heavens, natural, VII. 171; IX. 341.
- Hebrews, muse of, IV. 134; genius, X. 244; religion, XII. 194.
- Hecateus, story from, X. 14.
- Hector, X. 13.
- Heeren, Arnold L., quoted, II. 19; VII. 99.
- Heimskringla, V. 57, 139; VIII. 59.
- Heir, to riches, I. 239.
- Helen of Argos, IV. 41.
- Hell, not without extreme satisfaction, II. 318; IV. 131, 137.
- Helmont, Van, quoted, VIII. 340.
- Help, real, IV. 13.
- "Help," I. 253.
- Henry IV., quoted, X. 295.
- Henry VII., anecdote, VIII. 316.
- Henry VIII., VI. 241; quoted, VI. 77.
- Heraclitus, VI. 324; quoted, I. 214; II. 326; VIII. 200; X. 20, 97, 321; XI. 341.
- Herald's office, III. 133.
- Herbert, Edward, VII. 208; quoted, V. 71; VI. 143.
- Herbert, George, II. 287; VIII. 88, 282; XII. 194; quoted, I. 13, 68; VIII. 88, 282; X. 11, 499.
- Hercules, III. 90; V. 282.
- Heredity, IV. 177; V. 46; VI. 10, 165, 176; VIII. 101; X. 33.
- HERI, CRAS, HODIE, IX. 295.
- Hermes, III. 46.
- HERMIONE, IX. 100.
- Hermits, I. 174; VI. 148; VII. 232; X. 142; XII. 237.
- Herodotus, VII. 197; quoted, VIII. 324.
- Heroes, acts speak, II. 159; all may be made, VI. 139; ancient idea of, X. 42; bores, IV. 27; self-centred, VI. 30, 277; VII. 184; X. 274; XI. 172; XII. 51; English, V. 136; everywhere at home, VI. 186; great, draw all classes, VIII. 318; humanity of, I. 228; VIII. 318; good humor, II. 255; need not laws, I. 324; hold life lightly, III. 274; limitations, II. 250; line not extinct, III. 145; we make, III. 76; masters of events, III. 97, 102; enlargements of the common nature, I. 107, 165, 324, 347; IV. 15, 32; power, VI. 283; live on resistance, VI. 255; respect each other, VII. 271; scholars, X. 273; self-sacrifice, VII. 253; of gentle soul, XI. 342, 358; give strength to state, I. 391; annuls Time, I. 330; represented in a transition, II. 180; draw universal enthusiasm, VIII. 19, 318; of the West, XI. 534; worship, I. 106, 161 f; IV. 15; VIII. 19.
- HEROISM, II. 243-264; IX. 272; cumulative, II. 6, 59; generous of its dignity, II. 261; military attitude of soul, II. 250; its characteristic is persistency, II. 260; never reasons, therefore always right, II. 250; sportive, II. 256; times of, are times of terror, II. 262; in unison with nature, I. 21; IV. 25; VI. 29; VII. 133; VIII. 311, 312.
- Herrick, Robert, VIII. 36, 278; quoted, VII. 248, 271; his use of low style, XII. 296.
- Herschel, Sir John, voyage to Cape of Good Hope, V. 90; quoted, V. 40.
- Hesiod, VII. 167; quoted, III. 162.
- Hibernation, VI. 37.
- Hieroglyphic, I. 4; II. 63; VIII. 65.
- Higher law, VI. 209; XI. 190, 228.
- Highways of mind, II. 36; III. 62, 243; IV. 13.
- Hindoos, fables, VI. 20; fate, VI. 12; on immortality, VIII. 349; maxims, IV. 138, 267; X. 57, 243; missionaries to, X. 109; scriptures, IV.
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- 49; VI. 221, 324; VIII. 15, 239; XI. 309; transmigration, IV. 96. See, also, India.
- HISTORY, II. 1-41; ancient, is that of to-day, II. 9; VII. 174; a great anthem, XI. 145; is biography, II. 61, 334; VII. 207; XI. 424; cathedral music, VII. 169; none contents us, II. 296; every man's worth knowing, VII. 305; dependent on existing classification, II. 310; English, V. 196; epochs in, XI. 315; everything writes its own, IV. 261; makes no fatalists, VI. 29; follows thought and culture, III. 201; geology effaces, VIII. 212; of arrested growth, XII. 60; teaches hope, I. 379; work of ideas, I. 219; an impertinence, II. 66; intrinsic identity, I. 160; II. 14; IV. 4; less intention than we suppose, II. 134; must be interesting, XII. 298; only moral, interests us, XI. 101; language is, III. 21; is the unfolding of law, VIII. 223; the great moments, II. 322; VI. 70; mythological names overawe us, II. 8, 63; natural, married to human, I. 28; nature and thought react in, VI. 43; two parties in, I. 268; throws our action into perspective, II. 5; poetry nearer to truth, I. 69; VII. 197; truth of present, unattainable, XII. 383; private, not interesting, VI. 135; read actively, I. 93; II. 8; undue regard for reputations, II. 8, 63; plays with reputations, XI. 269; a repetition, VII. 174; great results of, VI. 256; all sacred, II. 297; speculations of one age the history of the following, III. 267; XI. 425; its steps are moral generalizations, X. 187; symptomatic, IV. 32; XII. 78; a shallow tale, II. 40; III. 113; IV. 205; high tides in, V. 220; its use is to give value to the present, VII. 177; value of, I. 160; victory over necessities, I. 240; war its subject, XI. 154; each writes, for himself, I. 170.
- Hiving facts, etc., II. 226; VII. 328, 336; VIII. 336.
- Hoar, Elizabeth, "George Nidiver," VII. 277.
- HOAR, SAMUEL, X. 437-448.
- Hobbes, Thomas, quoted, VI. 148; XI. 242.
- Hodson's Life, X. 143.
- Hoe and spade, virtue in, I. 100.
- Hogg, James, VIII. 197.
- Hohenlohe, I. 73.
- HOLIDAYS, IX. 136; VII. 168; in the eye, VI. 180.
- Holiness, confers insight, VI. 217; X. 215; service of the common soul, XI. 167.
- Holmes, Oliver Wendell, quoted, VII. 24.
- Holy Ghost, II. 319; IV. 263; IX. 8; X. 97.
- Home, VI. 268, 274; VII. 107, 114, 119, 132; VIII. 99, 106; IX. 264; X. 128.
- Home, Sir Everard, quoted, III. 70.
- Homer, authoritative, I. 211; Chapman's, VII. 197; we are civil to, VIII. 67; makes all men look like giants, II. 357; perfect Greek, IX. 221; humanity in, II. 288; no limits, III. 41; Odyssey, VII. 71; one omen best, X. 13; resources, IV. 199; will be tin pan, VIII. 68; universality, II. 30; value, VII. 47, 197; X. 42; quoted, III. 112; VI. 205; VII. 178; VIII. 33, 293; X. 13.
- Homoeopathy, III. 234.
- Honesty, cannot come to loss, II. 119; in cause, VIII. 131; root of character, VI. 322; adds value to the State, VI. 103.
- Honor, no ephemera, II. 60; X. 65.
- Hooks and eyes, men made of, VI. 202; XI. 262.
- Hope, angel, III. 249; IX. 284; puts us in working mood, I. 215, 248,
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- 379; II. 267, 319; III. 271; VI. 265; VIII. 68, 229; X. 136.
- Horace, quoted, VIII. 122, 225.
- Horizon, I. 10, 16; III. 171, 176; IV. 118; IX. 55, 227, 300; the eye makes, III. 76; VI. 48; walled in by, VI. 267, 300; X. 106.
- Horn, in White Mountains, III. 175; VIII. 52; X. 265.
- Horoscope, IX. 294; II. 269.
- Horror-mongers, X. 164.
- Horse-block, a Hercules, VIII. 13.
- Horsemanship, X. 58.
- Horsed, on an idea, I. 251; VII. 49, 95; on opponent's logic, VIII. 96; on a truth, VIII. 293.
- Horses, go best with blinders, V. 88; XII. 51; company, V. 71; country, VIII. 151; eyes, VI. 178; of heavens and earth, I. 243; II. 259; III. 21; disputant neighing like, VI. 173; VII. 226.
- Hospitality, I. 243; II. 72, 253; III. 134, 153; VII. 111, 118, 247; to thought, VII. 293; to character, III. 114, 165; IV. 243; V. 301; VI. 180, 196, 237, 269.
- Hot, "so hot, little Sir," II. 135.
- Hotels, VII. 196; VIII. 288.
- Hotspur, VI. 124.
- Hours, the ages instruct the hours, II. 4; IV. 185; dance of, I. 200; happiness is to fill, I. 168; III. 59; VII. 181; illusions, VII. 173, 175; knots of, VII. 169; thief-like step, IX. 62; trifles eat up, II. 225; unlike, II. 267.
- HOUSE, THE, IX. 128; aims, VII. 110, 117 f; architect, II. 82 f; body, type of, IV. 160 f; the condition of civilization, VII. 21; for comfort, VII. 111; X. 356; culture, VII. 117 f; dogmatic, IV. 160; English, V. 107, 164; X. 167; French, VII. 242; friends make its ornament, II. 201; VII. 128; location, I. 368; we seek a man in, III. 134; the owner's master, III. 134; VII. 164; not measured by rod and chain, VI. 189; not a museum, VII. 130; nature tyrannizes over, VII. 41; not for show, VI. 223; VII. 111, 130; sanctuary, VII. 132; of spirit, IV. 125; VI. 9, 286; VII. 102; IX. 354; property of travellers, XII. 382; shows what a man honestly desires, VII. 110.
- Household joy, II. 215, 227; VII. 107, 133; X. 128.
- Housekeeping, I. 243 f; mendicant, II. 75; tyrannical, VI. 123; vice of, VII. 122; a sufficient accusation that it needs wealth, VII. 113.
- Houstonia, III. 172.
- Howell, James, quoted, XII. 183.
- Huckleberries, white, XII. 32.
- Hudibras, V. 234; quoted, VIII. 165.
- Hugo, Victor, quoted, VI. 183; VIII. 53.
- Human, the Divine, XI. 392.
- Human nature, entrance to thought, I. 45; symmetrical, II. 236, 277; XII. 254.
- Humanities, VIII. 302.
- Humanity, gives beauty to warp of life, X. 191; XII. 37; of the man of genius, VIII. 66, 320; religion not to be elevated above, XI. 489; unchanging, XII. 387; wisdom of, XII. 321.
- HUMBLE-BEE, THE, IX. 38.
- HUMBOLDT, ALEXANDER VON, XI. 455-459; VII. 323; X. 131; XI. 51, 391; a universal man, XI. 457; quoted, XI. 456.
- Hume, David, V. 244; VII. 173.
- Humility, I. 122, 159; VI. 228, 233; VII. 176; VIII. 313; X. 93, 122; XI. 297, 413; the avenue to truth, X. 185, 195, 208; XII. 266.
- Humor, VIII. 158; a safeguard, XI. 332 f, 467. See, also, Comic, Wit.
- Hunger, VIII. 280; X. 56; walking hungers, VI. 208; sole belief, VIII. 170.
- Hunt, Leigh, XII. 372.
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- Hunter, John, VIII. 7, 270.
- Hunter, III. 15; VII. 93; VIII. 144.
- Hurry, leave hurry to slaves, III. 138.
- Hurtful, will sink, VI. 21; XI. 237.
- Hurts, some you have cured, VI. 266; IX. 294.
- HUSH, IX. 291.
- Hutchinson, Lucy, VII. 273; XI. 407.
- Hydrostatic paradox, III. 280.
- HYMN, IX. 393.
- HYMN AT ORDINATION OF REV. CHANDLER ROBBINS, IX. 223.
- Hypocrisy, VIII. 248; begins at the entrance of a second person, II. 202; III. 261.
- I, use of, XII. 314; what am I, I. 354.
- Ibn, Jemin, quoted, VIII. 258, 263; IX. 302.
- Ice, will burn, IX. 14; dismal Massachusetts ice burned, IX. 168; skating on thin, II. 235; walking on, VIII. 163.
- Iceland, of negations, I. 354.
- Ichor, III. 39; VI. 20; VIII. 73.
- Ideal, truer than actual, XII. 330; torments till it finds expression, VII. 326; fugitive, VIII. 339; journeys with us, III. 71, 75; philosophy, I. 50; and practice, VIII. 160; practical, XII. 61; ever present, III. 75; not opposed to real, I. 48, 229, 330; II. 367; III. 42; XI. 231 f; rope to hold men out of slough, VIII. 74; rules, VIII. 231; service of, II. 367; state rests on, XI. 390.
- IDEALISM, I. 47-60; Berkeley's, II. 309; in English literature, V. 238 f; of Jesus, II. 309; not to remain detached, but go with other aims, XII. 239; incompatibility with practice, XII. 48; does not affect stability of nature, I. 48, 62; transcendentalism is, I. 329; the young American lacks, XI. 536; dies out of youth, I. 345.
- Idealist, Bacon an, V. 239; claims, IV. 151; complaint against, VIII. 71; X. 280; duties of, VIII. 230; grief makes, III. 48; and materialists, I. 329, 333; nature idealist, VIII. 26; in politics, XI. 390; the practical men are, X. 269; shrinks in practical life, II. 258; scholars, X. 254; tyranny of, VI. 94; in society, VIII. 160.
- Ideas, all advancement is by, XI. 531; illustration of the benefit of, IV. 21; building on, III. 200; cannon aimed by, XI. 515; make their own channels, IV. 7; countries great by, XI. 210; divine natures, I. 57; IV. 87; no better than dreams, XI. 310; generate enthusiasm, X. 113; are epochs, XI. 161; are essences, III. 231; exorbitant, I. 285; are the truth of facts, I. 75; fool of, I. 210; VI. 238; X. 145; heaven of, II. 329; horsed on, I. 251; VII. 49, 95; hostility of, V. 254; impregnable, VII. 30; indicators of, IV. 16; incarnate themselves in majorities, VI. 13; and materials, XI. 164; might of, I. 219 f; X. 82; rule the mind as moon rules tides, II. 326; X. 132; new, I. 229; men of one, XII. 50; not to be taken from others, XI. 217; XII. 31; Plato's definition, IV. 85; none premature, II. 147; we are prisoners of, II. 328; prove by objections to them, XII. 67; alone save races, XI. 143; reliance on, XII. 80 ff; religion the practice of, I. 57; are thought subversive, IV. 266; their superiority, IV. 151; their legitimate sway, I. 219, 229; II. 303; III. 205; VIII. 276; XI. 310; men and things, X. 88, 271; trust in, III. 212; IV. 49; XI. 163.
- Identity, of man, I. 82, 92; II. 165; in Nature, XI. 486; XII. 5, 20, 90; perception of, II. 69, 341; III. 182 ff, 194; IV. 11, 18, 33, 49, 69, 106 f, 117, 150; V. 238; VI. 179,
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- 314, 324; VII. 37; VIII. 8, 21, 273, 305; X. 9.
- "Ideologist," IV. 228.
- Idiom, use of, XII. 284 f.
- Idiots, XII. 48.
- Idleness, IX. 251; deferring of hope the reason of, III. 235.
- Idolatry, of Europe, II. 80; of the old, II. 125; of friends, II. 307; of heroes and saints, III. 76; IV. 18; X. 116; of opinions, III. 98.
- "IF," on temple at Delphi, VIII. 185.
- Illumination, divine, I. 227; III. 71.
- ILLUSIONS, VI. 307-325; IX. 286; X. 109, 287; pain and danger illusory, VII. 265; on duration, VII. 178; life made of, III. 50, 82; IV. 178; VII. 172, 177, 178, 316; VIII. 195, 319; X. 87.
- Imagery, I. 31; VII. 90; VIII. 17, 19, 20.
- IMAGINATION, POETRY AND, VIII. 1-75.
- Imagination, in all men, III. 30; VI. 312; X. 78; appeal to, liberates, IV. 245; beauty the creature of, VI. 302 ff; debt of books, XI. 503, 508; is the mind being what it sees, I. 52; III. 26; need of, VII. 212-216; of children, VII. 106; education should reach, X. 134; and fancy, VIII. 28; fear comes from, VII. 265; flute of, VIII. 18; genius is power to affect, X. 52; is health of all men, VIII. 56; homage to, X. 206; nature speaks only in solitude, VI. 156; the period of, X. 142; allied to all intellectual power, IV. 17; precursor of reason, VII. 214; X. 243 f; debt of science to, VIII. 10; and senses cannot be gratified at the same time, VI. 303; its work, X. 78. See Fancy, Poet, Poetry.
- Imbecility, key to the ages, I. 282; IV. 182, 246; VI. 54; convention is, VIII. 248.
- Imitation, I. 145, 157, 172; II. 46, 83; VIII. 188, 308; XI. 385, 534; of Nature, I. 248; VII. 45; of everything, VIII. 178, 179; of others, I. 185; XII. 29.
- Immaterial objects lure us, I. 212.
- Immensity, VIII. 334.
- Immigration, I. 371; VI. 16, 110, 275; VII. 161; VIII. 207; X. 242; XI. 322, 516; is eulogy of America, XII. 119.
- Immorality, brings misery, XI. 185.
- IMMORTALITY, VIII. 321-352; XI. 429; arguments for, II. 332; III. 31, 196; VI. 238, 294; VII. 336; belief in, II. 196; IV. 182; VI. 239. perception of, owed to books, VII; 190; Carlyle on, V. 18; confidence in, XII. 87; gives lustre to death, III. 196; evidence of, XI. 436; history gives no light on, II. 40; inconvenience of, VII. 320; not length, but depth of life, VIII. 347; Plutarch, X. 313; question not highest, VI. 239; not to be separately taught, II. 284; who is immortal, II. 264; VI. 230, 239; VIII. 343, 347.
- Impediment, poet the man without, III. 6.
- Imperial guard of virtue, I. 149.
- Impressionability, VII. 297, 301.
- Impressions, what impresses me ought to impress me, II. 46, 144, 334; VI. 44; XII 43; like, II. 15.
- Improvisators, VII. 70; VIII. 239.
- Impulse, III. 52; VI. 64.
- IN MEMORIAM, IX. 261-265.
- Inaction, I. 94, 278.
- Incendiary opinions, II. 263.
- Incognito, advantages of, VI. 151.
- Income, and outgo, VI. 117, 125.
- Independence, I. 147, 159; III. 137; from converse with truth, IV. 283; of courage, VII. 276; of Saxon race, VI. 90; of spirit, I. 174; III. 99 f. See, also, Self-Reliance.
- Independence, Declaration of, VI. 23; X. 92; XI. 235, 268; XII. 201; wars for, see American Revolution.
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- India, moral sentiment, I. 126. See, also, Hindoos.
- Indian summer, III. 169.
- Indians, American, characteristics, XI. 50; Cherokee, XI. 87-96; in church, XI. 156; and civilization, VII. 20; XI. 50; conversion, VIII. 165; XI. 53 f; cruelty, XI. 159; Henry on, VIII. 203; heroism, XI. 59; knowledge, XII. 149, 150; names, I. 304; rule for planting, X. 448; ruins of mankind, XI. 51; lost ten tribes, XI. 50; trail, VII. 22; wrongs, XI. 61 f; XII. 404. See, also, under Concord.
- Indifferency, all things preach, II. 81; III. 59; IV. 154.
- Indifferentism, as bad as superstition, VI. 207.
- Indignation and eloquence, VIII. 122.
- Indirection, all goes by, VII. 181.
- Individual, a momentary arrest of atoms or powers, XII. 27; each must follow his bias, XII. 84; extreme in Heroism, II. 250; not mass, is power, VI. 249 f; always mistaken, III. 69; and the race, XI. 430; makes State, I. 391; never spared, VIII. 343; XI. 30; none in Swedenborg's philosophy, IV. 133; in religion, VI. 214; versus Universal, I. 162.
- Individualism, I. 20, 85, 113, 115, 144, 205; II. 141, 144; III. 95 f, 215, 236, 240, 246, 255, 267; IV. 28, 77; VI. 214; VIII. 200, 201, 302; X. 93, 118, 137, 157, 326; XI. 534; XII. 27, 50, 53; distemper of, VI. 132, 134, 137 f; VII. 10, 49; English, V. 307; stress not to be laid on, I. 162, 165, 209.
- Indolence, III. 46.
- Industry, attractive, X. 350, 351.
- Inequalities of condition, II. 123; X. 33, 46.
- Inertia, the only disease, II. 319; IV. 24.
- Inevitable, the, I. 302, 372.
- Infancy, II. 48, 319, 327; VII. 103 ff, 257; the perpetual Messiah, I. 71.
- Infidelity, IV. 181; VI. 210.
- Infinite, the, I. 194, 198, 298; II. 132, 284; IV. 109; VIII. 333; X. 136; the feeling of, XII. 316.
- Infirm people, I. 246; VI. 154.
- Influence, I. 27, 147, 210, 216; III. 74, 94, 205; VI. 53; VII. 80, 254; X. 99, 129; of each on all, IX. 4 f; need not fear excessive, IV. 29.
- Influenza of egotism, VI. 132.
- INFORMING SPIRIT, THE, IX. 282.
- Ingenuity, limitations of, XII. 33.
- Innocence, IX. 51; an electuary, X. 212.
- Innovation, I. 285, 305, 326; V. 111.
- Insanity, I. 199; III. 115, 187, 234, 237; IV. 26; VI. 136; XII. 50; healed by Nature, XII. 159.
- INSCRIPTION FOR A WELL, IX. 376.
- Insect, IX. 343.
- INSIGHT, IX. 360; III. 26; VI. 25; VIII. 17, 310; good will makes, VII. 309; XII. 62, 330; holiness confers, VI. 217.
- Insolvency of mankind, VIII. 338.
- INSPIRATION, VIII. 267-297; XII. 35; advance, X. 233; XII. 78; age of, not past, I. 144; X. 117; counterfeit, III. 28; defined, XII. 68; every man a receiver of, II. 64, 231, 289, 341; III. 272; X. 144, 283; XII. 35, 59; nothing great done without, VIII. 271; doctrine lost, I. 127; English idea, V. 222; in hour, I. 211; no matter how got, VIII. 271; in rare moments, VIII. 276; in poetry, the rule is inspiration or silence, VIII. 72; is public and continuous, XII. 70; makes for simplicity, II. 290; makes solitude, I. 174; sources of, VIII. 279 ff; XII. 74 ff.
- Instinct, I. 72, 115, 338; II. 64, 330; VII. 39; VIII. 227; X. 198; XII. 34-37, 58; a brain of the brain, XII. 65; identical in all, XII. 66;
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- basis of wisdom, XII. 67; is universal and potential wit, XII. 122.
- INSTINCT AND INSPIRATION, XII. 65-89.
- Institutions, ours defective, III. 207; go-carts and baubles, IV. 248; houses of cards, I. 250; shadows of men, II. 61, 161; III. 101, 261; worthless if not spontaneous, I. 321.
- Insulation, II. 214; VII. 9.
- Insults, III. 76, 107; VI. 233, 261.
- Insurance of a just employment, VI. 232.
- Insurrections, great men serve us as, X. 102.
- Integrity, I. 279; II. 50, 236; VI. 91, 189, 277; VIII. 161, 347.
- INTELLECT, II. 323-347; IX. 283, 375.
- INTELLECT, THE CELEBRATION OF, XII. 111-132.
- INTELLECT, NATURAL HISTORY OF, XII. 3-64.
- Intellect, increases with our affection, II. 191; VIII. 233; is void of affection, I. 22; II. 326; XII. 44; essence of age, VII. 317; men ashamed of, X. 264; beatitude of, X. 263; beauty the object of, I. 22; makes its own boundaries, XII. 16; character excites, III. 105; comedy in, VIII. 160; confidence in, I. 158; a consoler, XII. 416; constructive, XII. 49; creeds, II. 79; no crime to, III. 79; IV. 257; VIII. 315; detaching power, XI. 235; XII. 38; disparaged, III. 84; duties, I. 185; is thought to kill earnestness, IV. 174; takes the earth into training, VII. 161; conversion into energy, X. 277; enlargement of, a miracle, X. 126; cannot be in excess, I. 282; annuls fate, VI. 23; XI. 147; feats of, IV. 16; a fire, VII. 145; growth, a larger reception, I. 164; office of age to reconcile intellect with holiness, I. 221; II. 275; IV. 94, 175; VI. 217; VIII. 302, 317; X. 95, 185; XI. 223, 385; XII. 60, 417; its grasp, XII. 48; and immortality, VIII. 340 f; intoxicates, XII. 11; counterpart of natural laws, I. 55; VIII. 222; X. 72, 183; XII. 5; in manners, III. 138; imagination its measure, III. 33; measure of, X. 252; miraculous, XI. 144; and morals, VI. 217; primary to nature, I. 197; IV. 63; the true nectar, III. 27; power, VI. 27; would play providence, XII. 45; is reception, I. 164; II. 268; III. 27; X. 306; reduces to sauce-pan, V. 247; to be revered, XII. 130; royal proclamation, XI. 540; a sea, XII. 15; scholars represent, VIII. 302; selfish, III. 141; its self-reliance, II. 344; all things serve, VIII. 96; talisman, XI. 144; surrendered to truth, VIII. 230; uses and is not used, VIII. 74; virtues of, XII. 86 f; must have wholeness, II. 340, 344; independent of our will, XII. 77.
- Intelligence, good will makes, VIII. 342; IX. 235; central, VII. 295.
- Intemperance, gifts cannot raise, II. 232.
- Intenerate, II. 99.
- Intention, I. 201; II. 134.
- Intercourse, international, VII. 162; social, VII. 227.
- Interests, never persuaded, XI. 300.
- Interference, III. 214 f; X. 196.
- Interpretation, I. 35; IV. 11.
- Interruptions, VIII. 288.
- Intoxication, as substitute for intellect, III. 27.
- Introductions, III. 133; V. 105.
- Introversion, I. 109; IV. 98, 130; X. 329; XII. 12.
- Intrusion, II. 210 f; III. 137.
- Intuition, I. 127, 288, 340; II. 64; IV. 95; X. 93, 283; XI. 406.
- Invention, I. 192; VI. 17, 44; VII. 157-159; VIII. 140, 179, 210; X. 40, 178.
- ...
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- Inventors, I. 92, 145; IV. 8; VII. 110, 166; VIII. 137, 204; X. 40; XII. 100.
- Investment, VI. 125; XII. 91.
- Invisible, I. 198; VI. 204; VIII. 18.
- Inward light, VIII. 310; X. 97.
- Io, metamorphosis, II. 14.
- Iole, III. 90.
- Iranis, III. 59; XII. 398.
- Ireland, V. 52.
- Irish, eloquence, VII. 68; "help," VI. 78; members of Parliament, V. 122.
- Iron, cinder in, VI. 276; metre of civilization, VII. 158; X. 178.
- Iron lids of reason, VII. 50; VIII. 193.
- Is, the fatal, VIII. 31.
- Isocrates, on oratory, XII. 300; quoted, VII. 64, 98, 231.
- Isolation, of personality, II. 71; III. 28, 67, 137; VIII. 81; XII. 21, 383; of genius, VI. 116; VII. 6; VIII. 290.
- Italicize, never, X. 169.
- Italo-mania, II. 22, 80; VI. 266.
- Italy, X. 278; caution in speech, VIII. 211.
- Iteration, in nature, IV. 107, 117; in poetry, VIII. 47, 54, 64.
- Jackson, Andrew, VI. 63; XI. 521.
- Jackson, Charles T., VI. 147.
- Jacob and Laban, III. 202.
- Jacobi, quoted, I. 336; VI. 191.
- Jacobins, IV. 27; XI. 172.
- Jamblichus, VII. 202 f; quoted, III. 13; V. 179.
- James, Henry, quoted, X. 121.
- Jami, quoted, VIII. 259.
- Jane Eyre, VII. 215.
- Janus-faced friend, II. 214.
- Jardin des Plantes, XII. 22.
- Jars, qualities potted in, VI. 10.
- Jason, V. 282.
- Jawing, VII. 75.
- Jefferson, Thomas, VI. 63, 161; X.
- Jeffrey, Francis, X. 172.
- Jelaleddin, verses, IX. 325.
- Jerusalem, centre of earth, V. 40.
- Jests, VIII. 164. See, also, Jokes.
- Jesus Christ, IX. 246; acts from thought, I. 335; answers, II. 283; VII. 235; his attitude towards Lord's Supper, XI. 5 ff; his attraction, II. 343; X. 228; has been given a position of authority, I. 133; II. 295; XI. 17; character, III. 114; X. 228; centre of horizon, III. 76; claims, X. 115; true commemoration, XI. 19; not dead, III. 244; described as a demigod. I. 131; II. 61; divinity, I. 129; X. 97; XI. 489; doctrine, I. 129; VIII, 347; era in history, X. 228; exaggeration of his personality, III. 227; face, II. 362; as God, I. 129; XI. 479; heavens and earth sympathize with, I. 22; a hero, X. 228; his history falsified, II. 28; X. 228; his idealism, II. 309; does not preach immortality, VIII. 348; his life degraded by insulation, I. 133; the blessed Jew, IX. 296; on problem of life, IV. 94; a lover of mankind, I. 255; knew worth of man, I. 130; mediator, XI. 18; miracles, I. 73, 129, 132; X. 199; XI. 21, 489; misunderstood, II. 31, 58; mystic offices, VI. 209; name ploughed into history, I. 126; drew upon nature, I. 41; the emphasis put upon his personality, I. 130; II. 124; 294; VI. 209; XI. 491; confounded with the possibility of man, II. 61; III. 239; prayer, II. 294; XII. 350; Prometheus, II. 30; prophet, I. 128; his republic, X. 353; quoted to justify slavery, XI. 234; symbolism, XI. 9; sympathy with, XI. 488; his teaching perennial, II. 273; serves by holy thoughts, I. 132; not unique, VII. 307; XI. 491; speaks from within, II. 287; Voltaire on, IV.
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- 27; names the world, I. 132. See, also, Lord's Supper.
- Jews, cultus declining, XI. 392; religion, XI. 489; XII. 194; scriptures, see Bible; self-centred, VIII. 104; sufferance, VI. 35.
- John the Baptist, X. 345; XI. 289.
- Johnson, Edward, quoted, XI. 33.
- Johnson, Dr. Samuel, I. 112; V. 80, 246; VII. 236; VIII. 303; X. 251, 493; XII. 338; quoted, II. 228; V. 196; VI. 76, 263; VII. 23, 194, 196; VIII. 125; XI. 503; XII. 105, 155, 158, 252, 267.
- Jokes, II. 224; VIII. 97, 157, 159 f, 164, 171.
- Jonathanization of John Bull, XII. 200.
- Jonson, Ben, IV. 202 f; V. 190, 237; VII. 207, 243, 248; VIII. 36, 55, 295; XII. 341, 371; quoted, III. 117; V. 243; VI. 161, 300; VIII. 38, 44, 53, 64, 252; X. 300; XI. 520, 524; XII. 330.
- Journal, keeping. See Diaries.
- Journalism. See Newspapers.
- Journey, rule for, V. 31.
- Jove, III. 6; nods to Jove, II. 278; medal of, IV. 54, 56; and Phoebus, VII. 184; is in his reserves, VIII. 216. See, also, Jupiter.
- Joy, I. 256; VI. 264, 311; IX. 396.
- Judaism, Swedenborg's, IV. 134.
- Judges, V. 125; VI. 76, 245; in slavery times, XI. 184, 271.
- Judging, IV. 62.
- Judgment, day of, VIII. 239; every day, II. 94, 157, 273; III. 98; IV. 139; Divine, X. 336.
- July, in heart, IX. 293; X. 448; night, VIII. 225.
- June, Epicurean of, IX. 39; flowers, IX. 48; glories, IX. 94; rose, IX. 242; walked as, IX. 351.
- Jung-Stilling, Johann Heinrich, VI. 6.
- Junius, VIII. 197.
- Jupiter, II. 106; III. 108, 155; VII. 167. See, also, Jove.
- Jury, not deceived by lawyers, II. 157.
- Justice, I. 122; II. 112; III. 60, 95; IX. 124; X. 86, 92, 94, 191, 233; XI. 67, 124, 239, 281, 308, 354, 543; one man's, II. 315; Plato on, IV. 83; injustice helped by, XI. 211.
- Kansas, XI. 356; Committee, X. 502.
- KANSAS AFFAIRS, SPEECH ON, XI. 253-263.
- Kant, Immanuel, I. 339; II. 287, 343 ff; VII. 27; X. 92, 328.
- Katahdin, Mt., I. 220.
- Keats, John, VIII. 55; XII. 319; quoted, III. 147; X. 185.
- Kemble, John, VI. 77.
- Kempis, Thomas a, VII. 219; XII. 193.
- Kepler, Johann, quoted, X. 270; XI. 505.
- Kertch, governor of, V. 212.
- Key, the key to every man his thought, II. 303; with key of secret he marches, IX. 357.
- Key-note of Nature, IV. 141; XII. 29.
- Kidnapping, XI. 179-214, 215-244.
- Kildare, Earl of, VIII. 316.
- Kind, every one after his, I, 331.
- Kinde, IV. 177; VII. 172.
- Kindness, I. 252 ff; II. 191, 238; XI. 166.
- King, imbecility of, IV. 232; tired of, IX. 201; a working, I. 386; II. 62, 291; IV. 239; VII. 63; VIII. 209, 218; X. 40; XI. 172.
- King's College Chapel, VI. 36.
- Kitchen clock, more convenient than sidereal time, V. 54; order, VIII. 37.
- Knapsack of custom, III. 169.
- Knaves carry forward the just cause, IV. 185.
- Kneller, Sir Godfrey, anecdote of, IV. 152.
- Knights, true, X. 55, 57; XI. 281.
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- Knower, the, III. 6.
- Knowing, contented with, III. 84; the step from knowing to doing, VI. 74; antidote to fear, VII. 262; measure of man, XII. 10; the world, II. 222; VI. 146.
- Knowledge, a canine appetite for, III. 269; buckets of, VI. 271; of character, II. 285; child's absorption of, VII. 105; communication of, VII. 227; VIII. 226; X. 149; diffusion of, the measure of culture, VII. 24; dreams the sequel of, II. 148; fatal to earnestness, IV. 174; the encourager, VII. 262; evening, I. 73; XII. 94; growth unconscious, II. 330; IV. 159; VII. 104; immortal, VIII. 341; cannot be hid, XI. 487; little of ours spoken, III. 40; loved for itself, VII. 294; morning, I. 73; XII. 94; only newest is inspiration, VIII. 295; is power, VII. 321; XII. 62; runs to the man, VIII. 269; a sea, VI. 271; not to be secondary, I. 145; the hope to get knowledge by short cuts, VII. 290; value depends on skill in using, XII. 91; is amassed thought of many, VIII. 200; use the condition of, I. 222; VII. 263; XII. 33; yesterday's, XII. 91.
- Knox, Robert, on races, V. 44; VI. 16.
- Koran, quoted, IV. 95, 217, 225; VII. 64; VIII. 98.
- Kosmos, I. 15; VII. 172; XII. 216.
- KOSSUTH, ADDRESS TO, XI. 395-401.
- Kossuth, VI. 211; XI. 334.
- Krishna, quoted, IV. 49-172.
- Laban and Jacob, III. 202.
- Labor, X. 114; all shall toil, IX. 202; alternation of, is rest, VIII. 150; attractive and associated, IV. 158; balanced by mental activity, X. 243; benefits, III. 256; at Brook Farm, X. 365; brute, VI. 85, 99; cheapest is dearest, II. 114; Nature's coin, II. 122, 226; illustrates law of compensation, II. 115; contempt for, VI. 91; cultivated, VI. 99; VIII. 219; the interests of dead and living, IV. 224 f; dignified, I. 100, 179; II. 142; XI. 297; division of, I. 235; IV. 53; V. 167; VII. 23, 116; duty of all, VII. 116; VIII. 310 f; XI. 542; emblematic, VIII. 311; God's education in laws of world, I. 241; III. 231; VI. 107; genius is power of, I. 348; government is for its protection, XI. 297; needful gymnastics, I. 241; III. 256; habits, XII. 403; importance, XI. 542; key to world's treasures, XII. 204; man coins himself into, X. 75; XI. 297; power of, XII. 205; the scholar's, VIII. 311; slave-holder's view of, XI. 297; basis for spiritual, I. 236; manual labor antagonistic to thought, I. 241.
- Laborer, foreign, VI. 225; not to be sacrificed to results of labor, I. 192.
- Lamb, Charles, quoted, VIII. 198; X. 389.
- Land, appetite for, VII. 167; English tenacity, V. 34-43, 57, 242; ownership of, VI. 115; VII. 137, 139, 151; IX. 36; XII. 135; its sanative influences, I. 366, 370.
- LANDOR, WALTER SAVAGE, criticism, XII. 337-349; on behavior, VI. 187; merit, XII. 321; visit to, V. 7-10; on Wordsworth, V. 257, 297; quoted, I. 350; II. 180; VI. 143; VII. 128; VIII. 191; XII. 347.
- Landscape, armory of powers, IX. 142; beauty, II. 351; III. 175 f; benefit, IX. 249; breath, IV. 143; compensation, VII. 298; cow's view of, VIII. 26; deceptive, III. 178, 192; difference of, in observer, III. 176; disappointment, III. 192; in dreams, X. 5; the eye makes, I. 15; III. 176; XI. 441; face of God, I. 65; horizon in, III. 176; man, a
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- compacter landscape, II. 352; reflects our moods, I. 11, 214; owned by no one, I. 8, 67; III. 19; trees, the hospitality of, I. 262; vanity, I. 19; needs water, VIII. 45; walk into, III. 170.
- Landscape gardening, I. 369.
- LANGUAGE, I. 25-35; of angels, II. 347; the building of, I. 26; VIII. 9, 140, 199; Lowland Scotch, made classic by Burns, XI. 442; demigod, VII. 43; of eloquence, VIII. 124; fossil poetry, III. 22; history in, III. 21; imagery, I. 31; VIII. 17; a monument, III. 230; Nature supplies, I. 29; VI. 304; VIII. 9; of mountain-folk, IX. 66; overstates, I. 198; played with, I. 177; VIII. 168; a poem, VIII. 193; straining of, X. 164; of street, VIII. 124; XII. 285-290; study of, XII. 26, 100, 252, 260; thinks for us, XI. 502; finest tool, VII. 163; is use of things as symbols, I. 25; III. 34; XII. 5; veracity, III. 230; always wise, X. 125; hostile to oppression, XI. 194.
- Lannes, Marshal, VI. 139.
- Lantern of mind, II. 330, 332.
- Laocoon, VII. 50.
- Large interests generate nobility of thought, X. 64.
- Lars and Lemurs, V. 15; IX. 350; X. 2.
- Las Casas, quoted, II. 87; IV. 237.
- LAST FAREWELL, IX. 258.
- Last judgment. Michael Angelo's, XII. 230. See Judgment, day of.
- Latimer, V. 121.
- Latin, poetry, I. 167; III. 258 f; IV. 282; V. 206, 235, 237; School, VI. 195.
- Laughter, VI. 182; VIII. 86, 98, 157 f, 162, 164, 173 f; IX. 337.
- Lavater, X. 337; XII. 328.
- Law, the higher, XI. 190, 228; simplicity of highest, II. 270.
- Laws, above, are sisters to those below, IV. 83; VIII. 327; alive and beautiful, III. 283; based on will of wise man, III. 213; begirt with, II. 135; beneficent necessity, III. 212; our consolers, VI. 242; Hindoo definition, VI. 221; divine, I. 121; III. 283; English, V. 164; must be written on ethical principles, X. 112; XI. 186; facts preëxist as, II. 3, 10; the world a fagot of, X. 85; God in, X. 222; growth, IV. 200; make no difference to hero, I. 324 f; history the unfolding of, VIII. 223; built on ideas, III. 200; ideal, VIII. 31; identity, VIII. 7; immoral are void, XI. 136, 186 ff, 226; instinctive, I. 72; invisible cords, VIII. 5; is king of kings, IX. 59; language of, IV. 200; no luck in, X. 19; an extension of man. I. 379; II. 6, 102; III. 199, 201, 212; VIII. 41; of matter and of mind correspond, VI. 219 f; VIII. 8, 16, 222, 232, 306; IX. 33; X. 72; XII. 20; are memoranda, III. 200; mind carries, VIII. 223; of nature, II. 228, 235, 249; III. 181; VI. 106; VII. 132; necessary for protection of unworthy, I. 325; civil, not to be obeyed too well, III. 208, 280; VI. 322; VIII. 42; X. 196; XI. 186; omnipresent, VI. 25, 106; to one's self, II. 75; non-intercourse, IV. 179; perception of, is religion, VII. 132; VIII. 342; X. 195; permanence of, I. 48; X. 195; the dream of poets, II. 231; VIII. 32; of repression, VI. 19; not to be too much reverenced, III. 280; none sacred but that of our nature, II. 50; III. 215; their statement is common sense, VII. 88; sweeter than grace, IX. 319; universal, I. 122, 125; II. 234; III. 204 f; VI. 49, 84; VII. 132; IX. 78; universal versus individual, XII. 408; not upset by accident, X. 196; useless, without loyal citizens, XI. 234; various
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- readings, XI. 225; of the soul, self-enforced, I. 122, 141; and virtue, VI. 238; world saturated with, IV. 183.
- LAWS, SPIRITUAL, II. 129-166; IX. 275.
- Lawgivers, VII. 235; VIII. 39.
- Lawyers, IX. 36; XI. 190, 272.
- Layard, Austen H., quoted, VI. 266; VIII. 239.
- Leaders, II. 354; IV. 20; VI. 301; VII. 254, 259; X. 48, 99.
- Learning, I. 222; II. 146; VII. 3; VIII. 341; X. 147, 266.
- Leasts, nature in, IV. 104, 114; VII. 176; IX. 297.
- Leave all, receive more, II. 343.
- Legion of Honor, III. 232; X. 59.
- Legislature, XI. 527.
- Leibnitz, quoted, VII. 158; X. 133.
- Leisure, astronomic, VIII. 288.
- Lenses, we are, III. 50, 75; IV. 5.
- Leonidas, I. 20.
- Leroux, Paul, VI. 209.
- Lesson, never get beyond first, XI. 232.
- L'Estrange, quoted, X. 312.
- LETTER, A, IX. 391; XII. 392.
- LETTER TO MARTIN VAN BUREN, XI. 87-96.
- LETTERS, IX. 217; II. 192, 211, 235 f; VII. 22; inspiration in the writing of, VIII. 281; IX. 351; XI. 360.
- Letters, men of, many, VII. 249.
- Level, difference of, needed for communication, IV. 31; VIII. 320.
- Liberalism. See under Religion.
- Liberty, I. 378; III. 32, 212; VI. 4, 23; VIII. 231, 248; index of general progress, XI. 229, 232, 236, 240, 243, 315, 399, 539; wild liberty breeds iron conscience, VI. 64.
- LIBRARY, CONCORD, ADDRESS AT OPENING OF, XI. 493-508.
- Library, help needed in using, VII. 191; Cicero and Bacon young men in, I. 89; a harem, VII. 209.
- Lichens, II. 39; VI. 83.
- Lies, I. 123, 337; II. 72, 236; III. 245, 278; IV. 84, 89; X. 172; XI. 165.
- LIFE, FRAGMENTS ON, IX. 349-358.
- Life, amount, VI. 60; not to be anatomized, VII. 180; is the angle of vision, XII. 10; art of, will not be exposed, III. 69; only avails, II. 69; a Beggar's Bush, X. 56; a bias to some pursuit the high prize of, VI. 267; not to be cheap, VI. 247; conditions, II. 105; is growing costly, XI. 533; crisis of, VII. 124; not critical, but sturdy, III. 59; IX. 30; cumulative, VII. 320, 326; in short cycles, VIII. 280; not long but deep is wanted, I. 350; III. 60; VII. 178; X. 274; seems a dormitory, VIII. 115; each sees his own defaced, II. 171; a scale of degrees, IV. 20; is not dialectics, III. 58, 64 f, 237; our dictionary, I. 98; a succession of dreams, VI. 322; X. 20; might be easier, II. 135; VI. 275; an ecstasy, VI. 41, 311; made of two elements, III. 65; VII. 300; embryo, VIII. 339; its end that man shall take up universe into himself, X. 131; epochs, II. 161; demands equilibrium, XII. 412; an expectation, III. 71; an experiment, I. 177; VI. 313; VIII. 90; expresses, I. 4, 177; VI. 169; external and inner, VII. 311; is advertisement of faculty, III. 73; festival only to the wise, II. 248; not to be carried on except by fidelity, X. 175; is freedom, VI. 38; a gale of warring elements, VII. 172; a game, I. 121; III. 262; its grandeur in spite of us, VIII. 75; in graveyards, VIII. 10; should be made happier, VI. 265, 275; headlong, III. 113; a hibernation, XII. 83; hidden, VI. 321; must be lived on higher plane, III. 270; of all is identical, VI. 323; a ring of
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- illusions, X. 87; intellectual tasting of, II. 240; III. 58; lengthened by rush of thoughts, XII. 109; the literary, XII. 342; loiters at book's first page, IX. 295; lords of, III. 43; IX. 269; less loved, VI. 275; love of, the healthy state, VIII. 330, 337; lyric or epic, II. 365; magical, VII. 180; between upper and lower mandibles, VI. 210; manners aim to facilitate, III. 127; is March weather, IV. 175; a masquerade, VI. 312, 318; mean, I. 227; II. 258; how did we find out that it is mean? II. 267; the measure of, VII. 179; has no memory, III. 70; a miracle, I. 129; III. 70; calendared by moments, VII. 169; a flux of moods, I. 352; III. 50, 72; a museum, I. 177; musical, VI. 10; VII. 180; mysterious principle of, I. 200; new ways of, III. 240; narrow, VI. 136; a pageant, I. 266; incessant parturition, XII. 18; the pitching of a penny, IV. 149; pervasive, I. 63; its pleasure is what we give it, VI. 41; its value lies in its possibilities, VI. 272; III. 53; VI. 262; a search for power, VI. 55, 60; a poor pretension, III. 229; is boundless privilege, VI. 262; not stationary, II. 122; III. 73; quarry, I. 98; the condition of release from, VI. 239; its results incalculable, III. 69; its richness, X. 81, 198; a riddle, VI. 313; a robust, IV. 159; the true romance, I. 177; III. 285; VI. 315; X. 144; no rules of, VI. 248; shortness of, makes no difference, III. 60; X. 232, 274; a sincerity, IV. 20; a sleep within a sleep, III. 65; a sparrow, XI. 30; a timid spectator, VI. 246; spiritual, I. 338; sturdy, III. 59; a surface affair, VII. 297; a series of surprises, II. 320; III. 67; symbolic, X. 132; the terror of, VI. 5; no reconciliation of theory and practice, IV. 154, 178; two theories of, XII. 56; tragi-comedy, X. 128; transits, VII. 181; seeming trifles cover capital facts, III. 46; VI. 321; tricks, III. 57; troubles, VIII. 37; truth the end of, XI. 188; true to poles, VIII. 70; unity, III. 78; value, III. 61; X. 96; visionary, III. 84.
- Light, I. 15, 329; II. 80; VII. 296; VIII. 317; dry, III. 140; V. 240; cannot be held, I. 171.
- Lightning, air would rot without, XII. 54; painting lightning with charcoal, III. 104; put to school, IX. 192; taught speech, IX. 216; struck an inch of ground, IX. 334.
- Lightning-rod, the best, one's own spine, VI. 232; X. 47.
- Like, draws to like, II. 144, 213, 314; III. 130; IV. 11, 125; VII. 14, 271; VIII. 92; IX. 50, 103, 117; old couples grow, IV. 25.
- Like, use of word, VIII. 12.
- Lime in people's bones, VI. 208.
- Limitation, Fate is, VI. 20; has limits, VI. 22; meter of man, VI. 30; the only sin, II. 308.
- LIMITS, IX. 375.
- LINCOLN, ABRAHAM, XI. 327-338; VIII. 125, 318; XI. 316.
- Line, not in Nature, IX. 14.
- LINES, IX. 96.
- LINES TO ELLEN, IX. 387.
- Linnaea, IX. 45.
- Linnaeus, VII. 208, 284, 329; XII. 188; his discoveries and improvements, XII. 137 f; his herborizations, XII. 136; on walking in Norway, XII. 155; quoted, IV. 104; XII. 172.
- Literalists, IV. 121; VI. 140; X. 234.
- LITERARY ETHICS, I. 153-187.
- Literary genius, III. 104; XII. 342.
- Literary men, I. 176, 242; IV. 150, 269; V. 4; VI. 79; X. 261; XI. 242.
- Literary reputation, II. 154, 308.
- Literary work, VIII. 288.
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- LITERATURE, MODERN, THOUGHTS ON, XII. 309-336.
- Literature, affirmation of many minds and many ages, XII. 303; American, XII. 404; ancient, II. 23 ff; beginnings of, VIII. 53; biography of man, II. 30; borrowing in, IV. 197; VII. 292; critical tendency, X. 328; a decalogue, X. 273; eavesdropping, VIII. 188; the effort of man to indemnify himself for the wrongs of his condition, XII. 341; English, see English literature; history the sum of few ideas, III. 47; imaginative, appreciation of, VI. 164; immortality, III. 34; a point outside of present life, II. 311; love of, VIII. 123; little magnificence in, XII. 389; nature not found in, VIII. 65; debt to past, VIII. 180; pedantry, VIII. 168; purest pleasure, XII. 341; of the poor, I. 111; praise, VIII. 178; quotation in, VIII. 189; reason of, doubted, III. 64; a generic result, XII. 404; secondary services, XII. 283; sinful, I. 221; to be learned in the street, VII. 10; subjective, III. 76; support, XI. 520; a record of the best thoughts, XI. 501; use, II. 312; values, XII. 309; variety, XII. 310; word-catching, II. 291; not yet written, I. 167.
- Liturgies, IV. 200; V. 225; VIII. 182; X. 113.
- Liver, religion in the, III. 51.
- Living, by desire to live, VIII. 345; earning a, VI. 85; the functionary, I. 99; modes of, not agreeable to imagination, I. 271; plain, VII. 116; with others, III. 111; VII. 10, 11, 122; X. 368; solitary, I. 341.
- Load, lift lightest, VI. 243.
- Locality, III. 153; excitant of muse, VIII. 290; XII. 184.
- Locomotives, VI. 15.
- Locke, I. 340; V. 239, 243; quoted, IV. 136.
- Logic, necessary, but must not be spoken, II. 329; V. 79 ff; VIII. 10, 21.
- Logs, II. 227; Walden, VIII. 281.
- London, V. 52 f, 91 f, 109, 299; VI. 150; XII. 188, 202.
- LONDON TIMES, THE, V. 261-272.
- Loquacity, VII. 61; VIII. 73.
- Lord, IX. 49; a good lord first a good animal, III. 124.
- Lords, House of, V. 60, 183.
- Lord's Prayer, IV. 200; V. 131; XI. 219; XII. 351, 407.
- LORD'S SUPPER, THE, XI. 1-25; I. 140.
- Lords of life, III. 43; IX. 269.
- Loss, none in nature, X. 71.
- Lot of life, II. 88.
- Lottery prize, VI. 118.
- Lotus, IX. 127.
- Louis XIV., I. 202, 376.
- LOVE, II. 167-188; IX. 295; abandonment, I. 217; arch-abolitionist, XI. 281; afar, is spite at home, II. 51; the affirmative of affirmatives, VII. 309; XII. 60; all are love's, IX. 305; all-suffering, III. 115; antidote to war, XI. 168; aspires to a higher object, I. 217; and beauty, II. 179; believing, II. 139; why blind, II. 238; VI. 289; IX. 111; remedy for blunders, VI. 218; village boys and girls, II. 172; ever enlarges its circles, II. 183; made a commodity, II. 205; concentrates, II. 354; court and parliament of, II. 170; XI. 439; basis of courtesy, III. 143, 147, 153; crimes from, III. 78; curiosity about, VII. 302; day dark without, IX. 299; debt to, II. 174; desire, I. 343; II. 72; defined, II. 271; disappointed, III. 193; disruption, II. 185; dream, II. 183; ebb and flow, II. 196; enchantment, II. 169; enlarges mind, VII. 309; enthusiasm, I. 217; expands powers, II. 177; VIII. 228; no excess to, II. 122; Fate
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- goes with, IX. 353; few capable of, XII. 410; and friendship, II. 201; III. 111; VII. 129; genius is love impersonal, I. 217; God of gifts, III. 164; of gods, IX. 10; growth, II. 183 ff; alone makes happy, I. 217; is in hope and not in history, II. 171; humility, XI. 413; illusion, VI. 319; makes immortal, II. 264; impersonal, II. 184; impressionability, VII. 303; inexhaustible, III. 103; insight, I. 217; mathematically just, II. 116; low, IV. 129; madness, VI. 41; new meanings, III. 153; might of, IX. 397; and mind, VI. 218; momentary, IV. 129; and nature, III. 244; a necessity, XII. 334; and the Muse, IX. 210; nobility, IX. 118; XI. 413; never outgrown, I. 125; overstaying its moment, IX. 13; panacea of nature, I. 252; gives perception, VII. 309; deification of persons, II. 174; profane, XI. 412; proofs, XI. 413; against property, III. 262; purifies itself, II. 182; purple flame of, IX. 367; test of poet, IX. 296; we can receive, III. 162; redeemer, VI. 218; remedy for ills, I. 252, 254; renewing principle, III. 262; science learned in, II. 369; teaches self-knowledge, II. 37; not won by services, III. 165; sexual, IV. 70; sharp-sighted, VI. 289; makes all things alive and significant, II. 176; me not for what daily spends, IX. 352; as basis of state, III. 219 ff; teaching, II. 37; temporary, II. 185; tent, XI. 413; has a speedy term, III. 77; transcends object, II. 216; transforms, II. 185; VI. 41; and truth, II. 345; universal, II. 191; VII. 303; unrequited, II. 216; wisdom, I. 217; IV. 219; work, II. 169, 175; rebuilds world, I. 254; II. 176; reflection of worth, II. 212.
- LOVE AND THOUGHT, IX. 210; II. 175.
- Love, if I, II. 180.
- Lover, all love a lover, II. 172; all should be lovers, I. 254; communications, VII. 303, 304; described, II. 177; eyes and ears, VII. 303; sees no resemblances in his mistress, II. 178; forgiving too much, III. 137; bide at home, VI. 244; marriage, III. 187; of men, XII. 61; nation of lovers, XI. 168; never old, VII. 336; has more and finer senses, VII. 303; sonnets, VIII. 10; strangeness, III. 137; like waves, IX. 109; what is loved, VI. 319; worlds of, IX. 154; worship, II. 196.
- Lovejoy, Elijah P., II. 262.
- Lovely, feeble souls do not wish to be lovely, but to be loved, III. 97.
- Lowell mills, III. 16.
- Lowliness, X. 195; XI. 413.
- Loyalty, II. 63; V. 186, 311; VI. 204; X. 57.
- Lubricity, II. 221; III. 49; XI. 520.
- Lucian, quoted, X. 11.
- Luck, I. 191; II. 235; V. 89; VI. 100, 220; X. 15 f.
- Lucretius, VII. 176; quoted, IV. 113.
- Lustres, II. 215; reading for the, III. 233.
- Luther, Martin, II. 29; VII. 94, 236; VIII. 9, 303; X. 204; XI. 289, 442. 537, 539; quoted, III. 187; IV. 153, 263; VII. 79; VIII. 93; XII. 251; on preaching, XII. 286.
- Luxury, I. 243; V. 163; XI. 536; not for hero, IX. 272; X. 58.
- Lyceum, XII. 195.
- Lyncaeus, III. 20.
- Lynch law, III. 212; VI. 63; XI. 528.
- Lyre, constellation, IX. 67.
- Lyric poets, III. 9, 29.
- Lyrical glances, VIII. 271.
- Macaulay, Thomas B., V. 247, 262, 292.
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- Macchiavelli, quoted, VIII. 14.
- Machinery, II. 85 f; V. 103, 157 ff, 166 ff; VI. 81, 89; aggressive, VII. 164 f; VIII. 139 ff; XII. 90; of society, I. 317; II. 136.
- Madness and genius, VIII. 279; of love, VI. 41.
- Magic, II. 34; III. 32, 69, 94, 110, 234; VI. 100, 283, 318; XII. 374.
- Magna Charta, V. 87, 301, 308; VI. 253; VIII. 214.
- Magnanimity, III. 164, 274; X. 64.
- Magnetic boat, II. 369.
- Magnetism, II. 96 f; VIII. 9; personal, I. 216; II. 63, 133; III. 90, 228; VI. 41, 54, 283; VII. 14, 305; VIII. 320.
- Magnetism, animal. See Mesmerism.
- Mahomet, quoted, II. 243; VI. 241; VIII. 98, 343; X. 177; XI. 417, 504.
- MAIA, IX. 348; VII. 172; VIII. 15.
- Maid, genius in maiden's eyes, IX. 352; in lover's eyes, IX. 5; obliterates the past, IX. 109; represents all virtues, II. 178; resembles no one, II. 178; sail with God the seas, II. 260; Shakspeare in heart, IX. 373.
- Maine, IX. 45; law, X. 163, 447.
- Maintenon, Madame de, story of, VIII. 95.
- Majestic men, III. 109.
- Majorities, VI. 13, 248; XI. 389.
- Maker, and not the made, IX. 331; X. 487; XII. 46.
- Malaga of praise, IX. 131.
- Malays, VIII. 215; X. 7; XI. 170.
- Malefactors, VI. 248.
- Mallows, X. 415; dine on, IX. 178; sacred, XII. 150, 151; spawneth men like, IX. 226.
- Malpighi, doctrine of leasts, IV. 104, 114.
- Malthus, doctrine, VII. 150 f, 162; VIII. 37.
- Mammoth Cave, VI. 309; VIII. 149.
- Man, able, I. 164; his ability his receptivity, X. 76; aboriginal, VIII. 270; of action, II. 120; IV. 150; is all, I. 114; who stands alone, VI. 193; arming of, II. 249; the proper object of plastic art, XII. 221; animates what he sees, III. 96; apostrophe to, I. 149; ashamed of self, I. 142; assimilates only his affinities, II. 144-152; must keep his own atmosphere, III. 132; beast-like, VII. 276; benefactor, I. 248; not born, I. 195; centre of being, I. 27; IV. 9; XII. 345; channel of heaven to earth, I. 210; III. 242; cheap, I. 346; IV. 31; clod truth has raised, X. 194; compensation in gifts, II. 97; made for conflict, XII. 60; by constitution, expensive, VI. 85; definition of, VII. 157; difference of men is in principle of association, II. 12; divided into men, I. 82; not domesticated in planet, III. 63; each a new Adam, X. 137; elusive, III. 135; encyclopaedia of facts, II. 3; not the end of Nature, I. 201; endogenous, IV. 8; epitome of history, II. 24-30, 38; equal to every event, VI. 232; everything carries, VI. 37; transparent eye-ball, I. 10; farmer, instead of man farming, I. 83; part of Fate, VI. 24; half-finished, I. 344; VI. 165; modified fish, XII. 22; Fourier's scheme for composing him, X. 350; a fraction, I. 233; fruit of ages, I. 206; rests on bosom of God, I. 64, 195; a god in ruins, I. 71; good, is contented, II. 162; growth, II. 307; enters into God, VIII. 348; X. 27; great men exalt the idea of, XII. 254; his guardians, IX. 269; should make life and nature happier, VI. 265; VII. 308; Herbert's poem on, I. 68; each a hint of, III. 225; explicable only by his history, II. 3; VII. 305; his home in God, II. 286; a golden impossibility, III. 66, 69; inventor,
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- V. 166; the only joker in nature, VIII. 157; in jail, II. 49; judged for his worth, II. 157; is a kingdom, XI. 172; a compacter landscape, II. 352; connecting link in nature, I. 207; VI. 22; a machine, VI. 81; nature economical in making him, IV. 97; the masses, I. 106; power over matter, VI. 43, 76, 89; meaning of, IX. 20; measure of, II. 60; VI. 190; VII. 166; X. 50; XI. 152; XII. 10; and men, I. 82, 107; VII. 10; VIII. 220; metamorphosed into things, I. 83; every man a new method, XII. 29; microcosm, I. 68; IV. 86; VI. 125; VIII. 23; Milton's idea of, XII. 254; relation to nature, I. 10, 13, 65, 68, 71, 77, 86, III, 195, 207, 317; III. 174, 178, 181, 183; IV. 9, II; VI. 89, 233; VII. 42, 132, 298; VIII. 9, 223; IX. 368; X. 73; XI. 240, 486, 513, 542; XII. 28, 164-167; Nature's self-explication, II. 352; each needed, VI. 252; a new, I. 196, 206; the only object that really interests us, VI. 286; one, I. 82; XI. 145; organized justice, IV. 120; action his ornament, I. 179; we owe man to man, VII. 115; palace of sight and sound, I. 205; II. 177; pendant to events, III. 90; physician's view of, VI. 138; one phenomenon, I. 207; given good light like picture, VI. 196; great, falls into place, IV. 7; plastic little creature, VIII. 141; a plant, I. 10, 317; IV. 159; XII. 24; popinjay, IV. 160; unbounded possibility, I. 64; II. 306; power, X. 74; should live in present, II. 67; pretension, III. 101; VI. 150; of principle, I. 323; XI. 173; a quotation, IV. 42; redeemer, I. 263; only is real, X. 191; bundle of relations, II. 36; representative, III. 225; IV. 8; V. 166; brings revolution, I. 144; none sane, III. 187; too content with secondary, I. 145; self-subsistency, XI. 173; servant, I. 69; of social earth, IX. 109; infinite soul, I. 136; with soul alone can teach, I. 135; of shreds and patches, VI. 299; steel-filing, III. 228; a stream of hidden source, II. 268; never symmetrical, III. 226; his characteristic, teachableness, X. 126; fa&c;cedil;ade of temple, II. 270; test of civilization, VII. 31; thinking, I. 84; power through thought, I. 105; one with his thought, II. 197; each obeys some thought, II. 303; thunderbolt, VI. 283; the timely, III. 37; VI. 39; a true man belongs to no time or place, II. 60; better than a town, II. 89; XII. 25; a torch in the mind, X. 275; must be unit, I. 106, 115; to be valued by best moments, VI. 287; victor over things, X. 127; wanted, but not much, III. 240; commonly the victim of events, X. 37; is for use, XI. 542; XII. 205; grows from within, IV. 6; fed to work, I. 14; carries world in his head, III. 183; infinite worth, I. 220, 249; has wronged himself, I. 106; upbuilding, I. 107.
- MAN OF LETTERS, THE, X. 239-258.
- MAN THE REFORMER, I. 225-256.
- Man of the world, his mark, VI. 150.
- Manchester, Speech at, V. 309-314.
- Manifest destiny, XI. 259.
- Manila of pepper, XII. 13.
- Manipular attempts to realize ideas, III. 85.
- Manliness, VI. 91; VIII. 126, 304.
- Mannerism, Nature abhors, III. 239.
- MANNERS, III. 117-155; IX. 276; affirmative, VII. 308; effect of air and place, VI. 149, 160; XII. 183; American, VI. 173; VIII. 79; associate us, VI. 171; Bacon on, VII. 13; basis, self-reliance, III. 132, 136; VI. 186; better than beauty, VI. 195; X. 34, 55; benevolence
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- the foundation, III. 142; presupposes capacity in blood, VI. 176; charm, III. 154; VI. 159; VIII. 79; a clothing, VIII. 80; communicated, VI. 139, 149, 170; reinforced by companionship, VIII. 82; defects, III. 138; deference the first point, III. 136; defined, VI. 169, 185; directness the mark of superior, VI. 193; and dress, VIII. 87; English, V. 102-115; rule of, to avoid exaggeration, VIII. 86; always under examination, VI. 171; factitious, VI. 174; fraternize, III. 131; genesis, III. 126; of girls, VI. 197; of Greeks, II. 24; happy ways of doing things, VI. 169; VIII. 83; heroic, VI. 195; hospitable, XII. 382; household, VIII. 106; intellectual quality, III. 138; interest, X. 34; irresistible, VI. 170; isolation, VIII. 81; Jonson on, III. 117; a language, VI. 170; and life, III. 127; VII. 125; majestic, III. 149; VII. 125; Nature values, VIII. 81; novels, the record of, VI. 191; VII. 214; XII. 373; of the old school, VIII. 102; ornament, II. 17; Phidias, XII. 382; poetry of, VI. 191; of power, III. 126; V. 186; VI. 170, 183, 188; VIII. 79, 81, 232; and religion, XII. 198; none but negative rules, VI. 197; VIII. 85 f; made up of sacrifices, VIII. 106; sculpture teaches, VI. 160; secondariness in, VI. 197; revealers of secrets, VIII. 83; must show self-control, VI. 195; their first service to make us endurable to each other, VI. 172; not settled, III. 131; and society, III. 149; VI. 171, 184, 191; table, VIII. 98; require time, VI. 187; tranquil, VII. 125. See, also, Behavior.
- Mansfield, Lord, VII. 88; XI. 105, 225; quoted, V. 262; XI. 140, 191.
- Manual labor, I. 234 ff. See, also, Labor.
- Manual skill, overestimate of, III. 7.
- Manufacturing, I. 192; VI. 81.
- Many-weathered world, IV. 142.
- Maple, I. 220; uncorrupt, III. 182; IX. 40; XI. 39.
- Marble holds statue, IX. 298.
- Marcus Antoninus, quoted, VI. 240, 260; VII. 218. See Antoninus.
- Marlowe, Christopher, VIII. 49.
- Marmontel, quoted, VIII. 192.
- Marriage, IX. 123; aims, II. 187; III. 187; VII. 128; bad, II. 150; III. 262; IV. 125; VI. 316; VII. 215; of character, VII. 128; connected with abundance of food, VII. 140; Fourier on, X. 354 f; a beneficent illusion, VI. 316; low views of, II. 183; Milton on, XII. 272, 275, 278; of minds, III. 77; in novels, VII. 215; open question, IV. 157; V. 214; Pandora-box, VI. 316; reform of, I. 274; Swedenborg on, IV. 125, 127; trap, VI. 316; chief in women's history, II. 183; VII. 124; XI. 407.
- Marseillaise, XI. 237.
- Marshall, Chief-Justice, X. 447.
- Martial, quoted, VI. 298; VIII. 186.
- Martineau, Harriet, V. 294, 296.
- Martyrdoms, most keenly felt by beholders, VII. 265; XII. 266; looked mean when they were suffered, III. 46; VII. 274.
- Marvell, Andrew, quoted. VII. 148, 245.
- Masks, which we wear and which we meet, VI. 188; VII. 108, 316; IX. 135, 249; objects as, I. 259; VI. 313, 318; VIII. 9, 196.
- Massachusetts, XI. 180, 210-214, 230, 261, 270; in the Civil War, XI. 343, 358 ff; climate of, XII. 158; planters of, comfortable citizens, XII. 191, 207; Italy upside down, XII. 158.
- MASSACHUSETTS, AGRICULTURE OF, XII. 358-364.
- MASSACHUSETTS QUARTERLY REVIEW,
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- EDITORS' ADDRESS, XI. 381-393.
- Massena, I. 149.
- Masses of men, I. 106, 252; IV. 30 f; we do not want any, VI. 249.
- Massinger, V. 284; XII. 368.
- Master, without apprenticeship, VII. 290; be master, VIII. 315; one in century, VI. 250; of living well, VII. 122; every man a, VIII. 313; likes masters, IV. 268; uses the materials he has, VII. 176; his measure is success, VI. 164; of mobs, VII. 96, 293; often a hidden man, VIII. 220; passive, IX. 8; source of his power, III. 57, 94; IV. 190; can formulate his thought, XII. 43; works for joy, VII. 182.
- Material, thought surrounds itself with, III. 14; VIII. 24; XI. 164, 386; XII. 5; has its translation into spiritual, IV. 11.
- Materialism, I. 191, 329; III. 53; IV. 154, 173, 224; V. 234; X. 217, 242.
- Mates, how found, VI. 46.
- Mathematics, millennium, VI. 208.
- Mather, Cotton, quoted, XII. 190.
- Matter, devotion to, II. 223; no finality, IV. 11. 118; VII. 127; VIII. 4; our friend, III. 171; the apparition of God, I. 34, 62; its laws run up into invisible world of mind, X. 72; has meaning, III. 4; VI. 43, 83 f; VII. 166, 300; VIII. 9; laws of, are laws of mind, VI. 28, 219; VIII. 11, 14, 16, 21; X. 183; XII. 44; and mind, VI. 81; IX. 285; is dead mind, XII. 17; perception of, VIII. 3; privation, X. 281; and spirit, II. 125; III. 53; VI. 22; X. 213; what and whence, I. 62.
- Maxims, counting-room, VI. 125.
- MAY-DAY, IX. 163-181.
- May and Must, XI. 231.
- Maya, VI. 20.
- Means, to ends, I. 179; XII. 71 f; degradation of man to means, I. 278; III. 245, 260; VII. 113; subdued by, XII. 117. See under Ends.
- Measure, love of, III. 139; party sacrifices man to measures, I. 278; XI. 519; half-measures, VI. 212; of civilization, culture, friends, health, life, man, master, mind, power, progress, success, time. See under those words.
- Mechanics, VI. 92.
- Mechanics' Apprentices' Library Association, lecture, I. 225-256.
- Mechanism in thought, XII. 27.
- Mediocrity, IX. 31; X. 413.
- Medusa, the Rondanini, VII. 3.
- Meeting-house, old New England, X. 384.
- Melancholy, V. 127, 136; VIII. 331; IX. 190; XII. 405, 413.
- Melioration, IV. 35; VI. 35; VII. 170; incapacity for, the only distemper, VI. 140, 165 f, 259; VII. 166, 276; VIII. 141; the law of nature, X. 188 f; XII. 19.
- Melody, VIII. 45-57; melody born of melody, IX. 31.
- Melrose Abbey, inscription at, VIII. 326.
- MEMORY, XII. 90-110; IX. 295.
- Memory, amber of, II. 175; an apotheosis, XII. 103; cave of, I. 205; X 277; and charlatanism, XII. 793 corpse, II. 57; a compensation, XII. 102; cure of bad, XII. 107; critic, VIII. 32; defect of, not always want of intellect, XII. 100; differs, XII, 96; diminution of, XII. 405; diving bell, X. 78; eloquence steals, VII. 70; English live by, V. 252; extent of, XII. 110; index of, XII. 93; not inert, IV. 262; of joy, XII. 103; life has no, III. 70; living by, instead of by inspiration, XII. 79; of love's visitations, II. 175; losing, XII. 98; raw material, VIII. 204; mendicant, III. 124; VII. 13; in men of ideals, XII. 95; mother of muses, VII. 3; XII. 95; note-books impair,
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- II. 85; praises by holding the best, XII. 103; never rely on, II. 57; sempiternal, II. 321; stone-in-carved traits, IX. 109; topical, VI. 131; things tragic are comely in, II. 131; a tutor, XII. 92; making and sleeping, X. 5; unconscious, II. 334; and writing, XI. 497; printing and writing weaken, XII. 99; wall, X. 1.
- Men, not actions, wanted, I. 278; all of one pattern, VII. 234; answers to questions, IV. 7; better than they seem, III. 273; descend to meet, II. 278; difference between, IV. 7; few have any next, IV. 233; fragments of, I. 265; go in flocks, I 144; hacks of invisible riders, VII. 125; helpful through intellect and affections, IV. 13; knowledge of, VI. 56; other men are lenses, IV. 5; nation of, I. 115; more than nations, VIII. 220; all at last of a size, IV. 31; wanted, XI. 133; well-mixed, X. 43; wiser than they know, II. 96.
- Ménage, Abbé, quoted, VI. 299.
- Menagerie, VI. 8; X. 6.
- Menander, quoted, VII. 128.
- Mencius, III. 73; IV. 14.
- Menial years, II. 161.
- Mental activity, law of, VIII. 150, 306; XII. 96.
- Menu, IV. 80, 94.
- Mercantile Library Association, Boston, lecture, I. 361-395.
- Merchant, the, I. 184; III. 92; VI. 100.
- Mercy, XI. 281.
- Merit, III. 84; all sensible to, VII. 305; class based on, X. 38; men cannot afford to live together on their merits, VII. 13; beyond opinion, I. 148.
- MERLIN, IX. 120-124; VI. 206; VII. 243; VIII. 60; IX. 239.
- MERLIN'S SONG, IX. 218.
- MEROPS, IX. 127.
- Merrimac River, XII. 186.
- Merry, a mask of sad, IX. 249.
- Mesmerism, I. 73; III. 179, 235; VI. 209; VII. 80; X. 12, 25, 337.
- Messiah, infancy a, I. 71.
- Meta-chemistry, V. 239.
- Metamorphosis, the soul advances by, II. 274; VI. 319; VIII. 8, 15, 18, 71; IX. 52; X. 338.
- Metaphor, nature a, I. 32; become religion, III. 73.
- Metaphysics, a showing of the relation of things to mind, I. 67; II. 196; IV. 109, 213; VII. 212; dangerous, XII. 13.
- Metcalfe, Sir Charles, quoted, XI. 121.
- Metempsychosis. See Transmigration.
- Method, II. 144, 227, 330; III. 260; IV. 105; XII. 52; analytical, to be avoided, XII. 14; in eloquence, VII. 89.
- Methodists, V. 48, 222; VIII. 114, 216.
- Metonymy, VIII. 15, 25; a low idealism, XII. 299-303.
- Metre, VIII. 46, 49. See, also, Measure.
- Metternich, quoted, XI. 514.
- Mexican War, VI. 63; IX. 76.
- Microcosm, each particle a, I. 43; II. 101; IV. 86, 113; VI. 125.
- Microscope, plague of, IV. 272; VI. 282; on stilts at a, VII. 183.
- Middle Ages, VIII. 214.
- Middle passage, XII. 415.
- Middle point, man a, II. 138.
- Mid-world, III. 64.
- Migratory instinct, IX. 166 f, 311; XII. 135 f, 153. See Nomadism.
- Miles, IV. 79; VI. 18.
- Military mind, X. 38.
- Militia, XI. 356.
- Milk, a man made of, VII. 68; of nature, VI. 69.
- Mill, of fate, IX. 274; of slavery, XI. 227; of truism, I. 165.
- ...
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- Mill, John Stuart, V. 150.
- Millennium, five minutes of to-day worth as much as five minutes in next millennium, III. 60.
- Milnes, Robert M., quoted, VI. 151.
- MILTON, JOHN, XII. 245-279; Channing on, X. 339; service to English language, XII. 260, 269; generalizations, V. 244; humanity, XII. 321; influence, X. 402; iteration, VIII. 48; too literary, III. 38; manliness, XII. 326; loved his poetry, VIII. 29; his prose, VII. 218; XII. 248, 277; style, V. 234; XII. 365, 390; a table-land, V. 244; tin-pan, VIII. 68; quoted, I. 64, 273; II. 195, 292; III. 29, 109; IV. 197; V. 135; VII. 105; VIII. 48, 327; X. 441; XI. 320, 413.
- Mimir's spring, VI. 138.
- Mind, special action of, III. 80; V. 77; does not age, II. 319; beauty in, VI. 303; a finer body, IV. 108; obedience of body to, VIII. 66, 281; every mind a new classification, II. 79; common to all men, II. 3; constructive, II. 338; XII. 45-49; courage of, VIII. 342; creator, XII. 17; diamagnetism of, VIII. 306; divine, X. 99; doors of, X. 133; everything corresponds to state of, II. 23; VIII. 201; flower of the, I. 214; III. 27; growth, II. 330; hand of the, I. 37; and heart, VI. 217; XII. 60; impressionable, XII. 43; laws of, VIII. 149; law of, its derivation, II. 327; VIII. 223; what it does not live it will not know, II. 10; a looking-glass, VIII. 281; XII. 93; measured by love, VI. 218; measure of, IV. 18; VI. 43; has its own methods, II. 330; mystery of, X. 72; influences of Nature upon, I. 84; III. 196; VII. 300; VIII. 66; observation, XII. 14; nothing old but, VIII. 213; one equal to many, VIII. 217; parallel to Nature, XII. 33; not enshrined in a person, I. 108; like plant, XII. 24; source of all power, VIII. 297; X. 130; rank in minds, VIII. 312; the only reality, I. 333; its reception of truth, XII. 32; retroactive, XII. 91; good sailor, V. 31; science of, II. 345; VII. 301; X. 283; XII. 11; sex of, VI. 58; sprained mind reacts, XI. 503; structure of, shows will of master, VIII. 333; temple of, VI. 306; its thinking prior to reflection, II. 327; unity, XII. 316; universal, I. 123; II. 3; VII. 40; X. 93, 198; better the more it is used, XI. 516; varieties, XII. 18; the world its fable, I. 120; III. 196; IX. 66; X. 132; youth of, II. 272.
- Mind-cure, VII. 227.
- Minder, VII. 142.
- Mine, and his, II. 124; who are, II. 194.
- Minerva, II. 106; III. 72.
- Minister. See Clergy, Preachers.
- Minnesinger, quoted, VIII. 37.
- Minorities, III. 129; VI. 248; VIII. 216, 219; influence of, XI. 235; 399.
- Mirabeau, IV. 226; VI. 248, 259; VII. 4; VIII. 283.
- MIRACLE, THE, IX. 368.
- Miracle, argument from, I. 127; XI. 488; belief in, VI. 283; Christianity does not rest on, X. 105; XI. 488; in the common, I. 74; X. 13; conversion by, I. 132; false emphasis on, I. 129; of enthusiasm, I. 73; of genius, VIII. 272, 308; the hero believes in, I. 338; VI. 283; of Hohenlohe, I. 73; life a, I. 129, 338; III. 70; of mind, XII. 6; comes to miraculous, VI. 238; is monster, I. 129; Nature requires as much faith as, IV. 112; X. 12; the one, X. 199; of poetry, VIII. 16; of science, VIII. 207; self-sacrifice the root of, VII. 253; universal, II. 66; of will, XII. 46.
- ...
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- Mirrors, of mind, IV. 262; VIII. 281; poets are, III. 41.
- Mirth, its limits, VIII. 174.
- Misers, V. 135; VI. 131; VII. 290.
- Miseries, insect; IX. 73.
- Misfortunes, the good are befriended by, II. 117.
- Missionaries, some men made for, VI. 146; things as, X. 86.
- Missions, I. 140; in India, X. 109; to negroes, XI. 111.
- Mist, affections as, II. 326.
- Mistakes, Nature makes none and pardons none, I. 38; X. 36.
- Misunderstood, II. 57.
- MITHRIDATES, IX. 28; XII. 409.
- Mixtures in Nature, XII. 26.
- Mobs, II. 119; III. 212; a course of, VI. 78, 261; VII. 77, 96; VIII. 147 f.
- Models are to be refused, I. 145; X. 31, 61.
- Moderation, be moderate as the fact, X. 166, 168; paid for with life, II. 98.
- Modesty, false, II. 162.
- Mohammed. See Mahomet.
- Molecular philosophy, III. 63.
- Moments, memorable, XII. 74; the quality, not number, imports, I. 350; II. 317, 322; III. 60, 113; IV. 4; VII. 169, 175, 178, 185; VIII. 36, 204, 277 ff; IX. 12 f, 350; X. 253.
- Momentum of thought and emotion, I. 357; XII. 23.
- Momus, VI. 313; X. 25.
- MONADNOC, IX. 60-75, 361; VIII. 109; IX. 25, 341, 399.
- Monads, IV. 30; VIII. 4.
- Monarchs, III. 207, 211; X. 41. See, also, Kings.
- Money, a barometer, VI. 102; blood, VI. 125; what it can buy, VI. 102; VIII. 269; often costs too much, VI. 109; and culture, XII. 402; not all debts paid with, III. 256; X. 63; dragon, V. 168; effrontery, X. 281; means of freedom, VII. 114; giving, VII. 115; Indians and negroes as, XI. 227; laws of the world written on, II. 234; making, I. 234; VI. 100, 131; VII. 23; XII. 402; a delicate meter, VI. 101; must have, XI. 523; not necessary to gentleman, III. 125; its paper wings, V. 168; prose of life, III. 231; laws beautiful as roses, III. 231; for what sought, I. 107; rule for spending, I. 383; II. 234; VI. 125; VII. 110; use, III. 252; IV. 153; VI. 125; wise man needs not, III. 216; possesses world, VI. 95.
- Monk, Basle, story of, VI. 194.
- Monks, I. 228; IX. 6; X. 142.
- Monoco, John, XI. 58.
- Monomaniacs, utility of, VI. 93.
- Monopolies not admitted, I. 275; II. 98; XI. 543.
- Monotones, XII. 51.
- MONTAIGNE, IV. 147-186; external biography, IV. 164; and bigots, X. 187; use of books, VIII. 289; delight in, III. 55; doubts, IV. 172 f; eclecticism, X. 309; Emerson's admiration for, IV. 162; essays, IV. 167; frankness and plainness, IV. 165; in Italy, III. 136; Landor on, V. 8; license of speech, XII. 339; and Plutarch, X. 299; prince of egotists, IV. 162; not to be read, VIII. 295; spirit, XII. 316; power of statement, VII. 88; use of low style, XII. 295; value, XII. 341; defence in civil wars, I. 323; quoted, II. 204; VI. 113; VII. 197; X. 295.
- Montesquieu, quoted, V. 82; VII. 34, 241; VIII. 330, 341; X. 296; XI. 141, 238, 505.
- Montluc, quoted, VII. 261; VIII. 147, 308.
- Moods, life a train of, II. 306; III. 50, 55 f, 72, 247, 271; IV. 175; VI. 321; VII. 169; VIII. 273.
- Moon, doing our work, VII. 28; heaped up harvest of, IX. 299; moonlight in verse, IX. 333; sprang
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- from woman, I. 71; some for seed, I. 256; IX. 310, 326; making world amber, IX. 347.
- Moore, Thomas, XII. 368, 370; quoted, VIII. 50, 186, 197.
- Moosehead Lake, I. 220.
- Moral, all things are, I. 40; II. 102; VII. 300; VIII. 5; XI. 386; defined, VI. 214; XI. 309; measure of health, X. 185.
- Moral discipline of life, X. 94, 192.
- Moral element, in beauty, VI. 216, 306; in life, VI. 202; VIII. 225; XII. 61; in poetry, VIII. 63.
- Moral evil, debt to, XII. 55.
- Moral forces in nature, I. 41, 42; III. 113; IX. 178; X. 86, 88, 186.
- Moral genius, XI. 145.
- Moral laws, VI. 209; universality of, I. 133; III. 212; X. 11, 135.
- Moral nature, XI. 101; fountain of society, I. 134; vitiated by interference of will, II. 132; VI. 214.
- Moral power has not kept pace with material, VII. 166, 190; the two allied, VIII. 316; X. 64, 72.
- Moral problems, XI. 167.
- Moral science, VI. 240; X. 91.
- Moral sentiment, absence of, means failure, IV. 258; adorers of, X. 117; its authority, X. 225; in animals, X. 184; its commanding attraction, I. 138; VI. 234; basis of eloquence, VII. 97; the causing force, I. 289; VI. 221; VII. 97; foundation of culture, III. 220; VI. 172; VII. 212; VIII. 228; X. 95; XI. 479; Carlyle's, X. 495; equalizes all, VI. 234; speaks to every man, XI. 486; critic of forms, X. 104; fountain of life, I. 272; Goethe's lack of, XII. 328; grows everywhere like grass, X. 111; makes free, VI. 28; X. 91, 225; images of, X. 96; intellect without, VII. 273; one with intellect, IV. 175; intellectual values of, IV. 87; supported by self-interest, XI. 125; Milton's devotion to, XII. 264; negations of, VIII. 233; newness of, XII. 76; new uses, III. 68; makes poetry, IV. 94; power, IV. 93 f; VI. 29; X. 87 f, 96, 101; permanence, VI. 212; VII. 306; X. 103, 113; takes precedence, IV. 93; the supreme reality, I. 41, 289; X. 91; religion its practice, X. 103, 114, 208, 212; renunciation of, VII. 78; measured by sacrifice, VIII. 343; in Saxon race, V. 311; science does not surprise it, VIII. 228; skepticism lost in, IV. 183; foundation of society, I. 126; VI. 227; VII. 26, 33; X. 66; Sophocles on, X. 313; sufficiency of, X. 212.
- Moral standard, no deviation in, II. 85.
- Moral union and intellectual, VII. 9; VIII. 302.
- Moral values and material, commensurate, VI. 103; XI. 386; XII. 206.
- Moral world, a world of precise law, IV. 84.
- Morality, the basis of legislation, XI. 186-192, 309, 390, 540; lack of, a departure from Nature, X. 338; mere morality, VI. 215; X. 202; XI. 183.
- Morals, the measure of, and arts, VII. 166; defined, VII. 27; dogmas rest on, X. 108, 113; mixed itself with economy, VI. 90; is direction of the will on universal ends, X. 92; and fate, VI. 21; object of government, XI. 309, 540 f; helps by putting us in place, X. 95; and intellect, VI. 218; language, the test of, III. 230 f; not lodged in us, but we in it, X. 98; of primeval man, VIII. 324; population depends on, VII. 152; immoral religions, VI. 207; X. 108, 113; science of substances, X. 91; and sensation, IV. 149; unity of thought and, X. 184; not to be voted down, XI. 236.
- ...
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- More, Henry, quoted, II. 265; XI. 413.
- More, tragedy of more and less, II. 123; VII. 307; X. 46.
- Morgue of convention, IV. 289; VII. 243.
- Moritz, quoted, XII. 217.
- Morning, air, IX. 178; date the, IX. 366; defend your morning, VIII. 286; hear what morning says, and believe that, XII. 157; inevitable, IX. 16; influences, VIII. 284, 286; let it be, VII. 180; of the mind, I. 168, 220; III. 194, 196; a magical painter, XI. 435; peace, III. 194; do not pollute, VI. 196; French proverb on, VIII. 286; spectacle, I. 17; summer, dear, III. 223; IX. 284; new thought awaits, VIII. 286, 311; tranquillity, III. 24.
- Morphy, Paul, VII. 269.
- Morte d'Arthur, VIII. 60, 291.
- Moses, highest merit of, II. 45.
- Mothers, men are what their mothers made them, VI. 10.
- Mother-wit, VI. 134, 214; VII. 235; X. 157, 283.
- Motion, Nature's secret, I. 50; III. 180, 183 f, 194; and beauty, VI. 292, 293.
- Motives, work depends on, X. 224, 255.
- MOUNTAIN GRAVE, A, IX. 390.
- Mountain and squirrel, IX. 75.
- Mountains, VI. 216, 318; VIII. 16; beads of rosary, IX. 68; float, VIII. 18; folk of, IX. 64; influence of their presence, VI. 160; IX. 63, 341; XII. 183, 320; must migrate into the mind, X. 131; are silent poets, XII. 156; swim in music, IX. 325.
- Mozart, I. 343.
- Much will have more, VII. 163; IX. 341.
- Mud, at bottom of eye, VI. 181; magazine, V. 16; pies, X. 367; sills, XII. 205; sings, IX. 365.
- Müller, Karl O., quoted, VIII. 191.
- Multiplication table, live by, III. 67.
- Mumps, the soul's, II. 132.
- Mundt, Theodore, quoted, XII. 399.
- Murder, as it appears to murderer, III. 78.
- Musagetes, VIII. 284.
- Muse, VIII. 65, 279 ff; X. 262; builder, IX. 128; coy, IX. 237; daughter of Memory, XII. 95; daughter of muse, IX. 51; defined, XII. 71 f; and Eros, IX. 210; and fear, IX. 334; Goethe's, XII. 331; is where heart is, II. 257; might of, IX. 328; poverty her herald, X. 287; its five representatives, IX. 220; makes solitary, IX. 324.
- Museums, VII. 130 f.
- Mush, of concession, II. 208; of materialism, VIII. 107.
- Mushroom power, I. 254.
- MUSIC, IX. 365; of angels, IX. 218; bath, VI. 99; of clock, II. 227; discord in, VI. 293; disdain, IX. 16; drunken, IX. 124; opens heavens, VII. 212; life is, VI. 10; Milton on, XII. 257, 261; mute, I. 18; mystery, II. 179; of Nature, IX. 240; omniscient, XI. 503; effect of place on, VII. 46, 47; poor man's Parnassus, VIII. 51; X. 80; power, VII. 44, 46, 56; VIII. 47; X. 80, 82; revelation of power, XII. 73; sky-born, IX. 365; every sound ends in, VII. 307; a suggestion, III. 190; tongue framed to, IX. 284; XII. 245; voice the sweetest, I. 263; II. 365; out of a work-house, III. 159.
- MUSKETAQUID, IX. 141-144; IX. 248, 345, 385; XI. 32.
- Musket-worship, V. 287.
- Must, and may, actual and ideal, XI. 231.
- Myrmidons, VI. 153.
- Mysteries, dramatic, X. 244.
- Mysticism and mystics, I. 275; III. 34; IV. 97; VIII. 263.
- Mythology, I. 206; II. 106; VI. 289,
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- 292; VIII. 181, 193, 220, 240; XII. 35, 193, 407.
- Nachiketas, VIII. 349.
- NAHANT, IX. 345.
- Namer, poet is, III. 21.
- Names, V. 72; faith in, I. 142, 304; II. 68, 257; IV. 3, 87; VIII. 25; things by their right names, X. 147.
- NAPLES, WRITTEN IN, IX. 395; II. 81, 361.
- NAPOLEON BONAPARTE, IV. 221-258; a right aristocrat, X. 51; art of war, II. 87; V. 56; VI. 54; VII. 176; XI. 343; story of a banker, VI. 100; battalions, heaviest, V. 85; belief, VI. 28; fell back on bivouac, II. 87; use of books, XI. 504; use of cannon, VIII. 279, 314; and Caprara, III. 135; caution, I. 180; VIII. 278; called "Cent Mille," VI. 250; VIII. 219; Channing on, X. 339; character, VIII. 314; celerity of combination, X. 80; common sense, VIII. 3; coolness, VIII. 80; Corsican entrenchment, VIII. 145; blunder worse than crime, III. 79; defects, IV. 253; diplomacy, II. 145; egotism, VI. 158; in Egypt, X. 253; endurance, XII. 416; on fighting same enemy, IV. 13; faith, I. 180; feared eyes, III. 135; army at Eylan, VI. 72; courted fashion, III. 127; fell on his feet, VIII. 314; trusted in his fortune, I. 180; accounted for his fortune, III. 92; on Fox, III. 142; might have been first man of world, IV. 233; great, VIII. 314; Greenough on, VII. 293; hand, VII. 273; X. 15; heart, VIII. 333; history, II. 9; intellectual, VI. 158, 317; XII. 97; impatience, IV. 243; Joseph, VI. 194; VIII. 315; Massena, I. 149; adaptation of means to ends, I. 180; Mediterranean a French lake, VII 168; not model, X. 62; knew but one merit, II. 165; modern, IV. 225; overthrow, V. 90; patriot, VI. 13; personal ascendency, I. 206; not for picket-duty, X. 246; and the plague, VI. 232; affected plainness, VI. 151; plans, II. 134; VIII. 278; in prison, II. 36; prudence, IV. 237; receptive, IV. 227; on religion, X. 190; and republicans of 1789, XII. 202; representative of middle class, IV. 252; royal armies against, II. 116; rule, VII. 288; sayings, VIII. 12; self-trust, VIII. 314; X. 15; skill, VII. 284; believed in force of soul, I. 180; Madame de Staël, III. 135; V. 119; tactics, VII. 84; vices good patriots, VII. 31; lesson of his virtues, IV. 247; a worker, I. 180; III. 128; needed a world, II. 36.
- Napoleon, Louis, XI. 238.
- Narcotics as inspiration, III. 27 f.
- Nations, expansion of, and religion, X. 119; each follows its own genius, VII. 19; genius of, III. 229; XI. 337; have been mobs, III. 113; IV. 45; are doing well when occupied solely with their own affairs, VIII. 220; XI. 531; die of suicide, X. 246.
- Natura, VII. 172.
- Natura naturans, III. 179; naturata, III. 176.
- Natural history to be married to human, I. 28, 74; III. 178; VI. 219, 282; VIII. 334; X. 183; XII. 3; resources in, VIII. 151, 305.
- Natural corresponds to mental law, I. 87; III. 183; IV. 149; VIII. 8, 222, 271, 306; XII. 4.
- Natural objects as meanings, I. 32, 212; III. 15, 17; not to be known out of their connection, VIII. 8; concentrate attention, II. 355.
- Natural religion, XI. 488.
- Natural science, I. 39; and religion, VI. 219; VIII. 211, 221; XI. 392.
- ...
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- Naturalist, as companion for a walk, XII. 176; goes everywhere in Nature, XII. 162; his methods, X. 54, 155; requires love, 1. 74; IX. 140; scope, V. 253; always studies, XII. 177.
- NATURE, I. 1-77; III. 167-196; IX. 225, 226, 281, 294, 297.
- NATURE AND LIFE, FRAGMENTS ON. IX. 335-358.
- NATURE, THE METHOD OF, I. 189-224.
- NATURE, SONG OF, IX. 244-247.
- Nature, never accidental, VIII. 336; an incessant advance, XI. 525; an allegory, X. 192; in America, V. 288; analogies, X. 11, 183; ancillary to man, I. 22; never wears a mean appearance, I. 8; and art, VII. 40 ff; beauty the aim of, VI. 298, 303; XII. 218; has her own best mode of doing things, III. 22; VI. 121; loved by what is best in us, III. 178; the book of Fate, VI. 15; bound to child's conscience, VI. 82; IX. 286; no braggart, X. 174; no Buddhist, III. 236; changes without violence, III. 22, 179; a system of circles, I. 13, 85; II. 313; III. 21; and the child, III. 185; is tyrannous circumstance, VI. 15; fashions cities, III. 183; a mutable cloud, II. 13; does not cocker us, III. 159; VI. 6; no seat vacant in her college, III. 242; compensation in, III. 195; no conjurer, X. 13; always consistent, III. 181; conspiracies against, X. 20; converse with, I. 170; VI. 311; VII. 154; counsellor, II. 234; a creation of the mind, VI. 311; her creatures a picture-language, III. 13; reveals crime, II. 116; deceitful, III. 192; definition of, I. 5; veils deformity, VII. 308; deifies us, I. 17; demands self-defence, VII. 260; departments, a man for each, VIII. 305; derivation of name, VII. 172; loves details, III. 236; descends from above, I. 199; despotic, III. 200; wears devout aspect, I. 61; her dice always loaded, I. 39; dilettantism about, III. 177; discipline of mind, I. 36, 40; not to be disposed of, IV. 78; dowry and estate of every rational creature, I. 20; dust allied to, X. 197; in earnest, VII. 250; economy, I. 373; VI. 38, 262; XII. 51; elusive, III. 192; embosoms all, I. 21, 248; equal to each emergency, XII. 128; encamped in, III. 190; a cup of enchantment, I. 213; III. 173; not end in itself, I. 19, 49, 201, 212; VIII. 4, 14; for no one end, I. 204; ethical, I. 41; uses evil for good, VII. 289; ever faithful, IX. 48; is fate, II. 352; VI. 15; VII. 41 f, 48; not to be feared, VI. 49; ferocity, II. 249; VI. 7; seen by few, I. 8; a perpetual filtration, VII. 195; loves number five, IX. 43; not fixed, but flowing, I. 76; VIII. 71; flattery, III. 192; fools us, III. 49, 193; has sprained foot, XI. 502; forces, X. 71; XI. 231; makes infinitesimal into cosmical forces, VIII. 140; a sea of forms, I. 23; frame for man as picture, I. 22; freaks, VII. 316; will not have us fret, II. 135; III. 107; frugal, III. 237; XII. 204; funeral, IX. 253; X. 397; will not have us live by general views, III. 237; genius a transmutation of, I. 206, 219; VI. 56; conditions of her gifts, XII. 28; gladness, I. 9; Goethe's study of, IV. 275; measure of greatness, X. 174; ever-growing, I. 202; we are guests in, XII. 413; rain the hermitage of, I. 175; hieroglyphic, VIII. 65; history, IV. 261; hotel, not home, VIII. 4; is honest, VI. 175; never hurries, IV. 81; VII. 139; XII. 49; idealist, VIII. 26; incarnation of
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- God in the unconscious, I. 64; III. 196; secures individualism, III. 66, 184, 185; IV. 28; VI. 132, 138; VIII. 343; works for all, not individual, I. 373; inexact and boundless, I. 200; inspiration in youth, VII. 297; instability, II. 303; insures herself, III. 22; intellect, see under Intellect; means integrity of impression, I. 8; interpretation, IV. 11; never jests, VIII. 157; X. 175; never jumps, VIII. 336; justice, X. 191; labor her coin, II. 122; language, I. 25-35; VIII. 9; unity of her laws, III. 180 f; XI. 125; identity with laws of human mind, VIII. 11; XII. 4, 20; works in leasts, IV. 104; VII. 176; IX. 297; lessons never lost, I. 31; life with, makes good behavior, XII. 178; likenesses in all her works, II. 15; no literalist, IV. 121; not in literature, VIII. 65; logical, XI. 389; love of, I. 200; III. 15; lover of, defined, I. 9; a manifold, IV. 51; her magazines inexhaustible, VII. 143; turns malfeasance to good, VI. 252, 255; a disguised man, XII. 23; man the end of, VI. 54; best expresses man, XII. 179; and man supplementary, XII. 164-167; abhors mannerism, III. 239; the measure of our rise and fall, I. 197; mediate, I. 40; medicinal, I. 16; melioration, I. 372; III. 171; VI. 140; X. 187 f; her method, VII. 143; XI. 143; metaphor of human mind, I. 32; is mass and particle, VIII. 223; middle-class, XI. 441; Milton on, I. 168; XII. 257; mimetic, VI. 310; mirror of man, X. 191; pardons no mistakes, I. 38; ministry, I. 12 ff; miracle, VII. 171; loves mixtures, X. 178; XII. 25; hates monopolies, II. 98; moral, I. 35, 40 ff; VII. 300; motion, III. 184, 194; VI. 294; music, IX. 240; does not like to be observed, III. 49; has but one stuff, III. 181; opposed to everything hurtful, X. 189; ornament, mark of excellence, VI. 290; never outwitted, X. 25; men ought to command, VI. 95 f; VIII. 100; XII. 205; over education, XII. 76; protects own work, VII. 6; we are parasites in, III. 171; paroquet, IX. 137; her patience, VII. 139; X. 155; XII. 51; hates peeping, III. 59; perfect by practice, VI. 78; permanence, I. 48; X. 131; pernicious elements, X. 190; hunting of the picturesque, III. 178; pictures, III. 62; Plato's word, IV. 67; posture-maker, VIII. 82; endless production, III. 23, 179, 186, 193; VI. 250; puts premium on reality, VI. 189; prodigies in, IX. 294; XII. 106; a vast promise, III. 193; proportion of means to ends, X. 174; prose, II. 351; Proteus, III. 179; provision for man, I. 12; punctual, X. 175; pure, II. 271; rag-merchant, VI. 262; ally of religion, I. 41; and religion which affronts it, I. 58; will be reported, IV. 261; repose in, VII. 298; never rhymes her children, III. 108; rhymes in things, IX. 54, 311; right manifested in, X. 192; XI. 318; no saint, III. 64; sanative, VIII. 224; restores sanity, XII. 159; has at heart formation of scholar, IV. 264; her secret never extorted, I. 8; II. 364; III. 193 f; IX. 339; sediment of mind, I. 197; no seeming in, VIII. 158; selects, VII. 195; selfish study of, III. 179; self-poise, VI. 204; self-registration, IV. 262; self-similar, IV. 107; VII. 220; VIII. 223; X. 112, 175; as our sensibility, III. 50; VIII. 223; no sentimentalist, VI. 6; servant of man, I. 40; X. 69; XI. 513; shadow of man, VIII. 23; simplicity, II. 137; X. 109, 174; solicits man, I. 84; solitary converse with,
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- VIII. 287; and soul, I. 4; spasms, X. 191; XI. 238; spends freely, XI. 525; wears colors of the spirit, I. 11; formed by spirit, I. 76; sprained foot, XII. 49; and states of mind, VIII. 68; crosses her stocks, VII. 162; VIII. 289; X. 178; stoic, IX. 253; X. 397; strength, III. 43; IV. 213; VI. 83; X. 266; XII. 54; study of, XII. 315; subjective, III. 76; sublimity, VIII. 225; not a substance, I. 49; subtle, VII. 145; suggestions, VII. 147; we can never surprise, I. 199; surprises, IX. 189, 193; swamp, X. 188; Swedenborg on, IV. 112 ff; syllables, IX. 240; symbol, I. 32, 214; III. 13, 35, 40; systematic, VI. 116; teachings, VI. 69; X. 127; best teacher, X. 149; tell-tale, X. 10; tells everything once, XII. 160; echoes the Ten Commandments, I. 41; cautious testator, VII. 143; theory of, I. 4; thermometer, III. 178; vehicle of thought, I. 25; thrifty, XII. 51; works in immense time, XI. 525; no toy to wise spirit, I. 8; authorizes trade, III. 92; transcendental, I. 339; treasures of, VII. 170; not tricked, III. 28; trips us up when we strut, V. 151; her touch should thrill, III. 6; a trope, VIII. 15; beats in tune, IX. 54; tyrannizes, VI. 15; VII. 41; nothing ultimate in, I. 49; never in undress, III. 176; unity, I. 43; VII. 143; VIII. 9; IX. 137; X. 183; universality, I. 201, 204; VII. 143; unresting, I. 248; VII. 145; unwritten, I. 167; variety in, XII. 150-152; her victims, III. 66; victories, VIII. 137; in league with virtue, II. 115; wealth, VI. 85 ff; VIII. 137, 139; X. 247; XI. 513; XII. 28; hits white once in million throws, VI. 250; whistles with all her winds, IX. 348; XII. 52; wholeness, II. 340; her preponderance over our will, II. 134; VII. 47; gets her work done, III. 237; XII. 204; works for man, IX. 34; rids the world of wrong, XI. 238.
- Naturel, X. 144; alone interests, XII. 164, 178.
- Naturlangsamkeit, II. 200.
- Navigation, the advancer of nations, V. 50; VII. 21.
- Naylor, James, III. 188; X. 203.
- Neander, on friendship, VI. 156.
- Neapolitan, a scoundrel, VI. 35.
- Near, value of, I. 111; II. 82; VIII. 203.
- Necessary, make yourself, I. 186; VI. 275.
- Necessity, beautiful, VI. 48; cannot emancipate ourselves from, II. 352, 366; VI. 4, 19, 48; VII. 37, 55; does all things well, I. 282; III. 160; X. 189, 284; XI. 147, 231; XII. 408; beauty rests on, III. 13; VII. 294; grapple with, I. 240 See, also, Fate, Liberty.
- Nectar, III. 27.
- Negations, IV. 173; X. 219; be patient with our, I. 354; shun, VII. 309; VIII. 98, 138, 233; of Boston Unitarianism, X. 204.
- Negro ages of sentiment, X. 329.
- Negroes, VI. 16; VII. 20, 163; XI. 100-147, 219-244, 326; XII. 404; civilization of, XI. 141 ff; kidnapping, XI. 131, 185.
- Nelson, Horatio, V. 68, 86, 101, 141; quoted, V. 131, 153. 197; VII. 288; VIII. 308.
- NEMESIS, IX. 196; II. 107, 152; VI. 203; IX. 124; X. 39; XI. 337.
- Neri, St. Philip, VI. 227.
- Nettle in friend's side, II. 208.
- New, not the old, is divine gift, VIII. 201; XII. 108.
- New-comers, VI. 58.
- NEW ENGLAND, NOTES OF LIFE AND LETTERS IN, X. 323-370.
- NEW ENGLAND REFORMERS, III. 249-285; church, X. 383.
- ...
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- New Englander, VII. 68, 96; X. 125; XII. 186, 193, 195, 197.
- New Hampshire, IX. 15, 77.
- New phrase, illusion in, VIII. 195.
- News, the poet the only teller of, VIII. 30.
- Newspapers, IV. 282; VII. 75; XI. 218; poor man's college, VII. 24; and crime, VII. 165; we hate to be defended in, II. 118; each believes his own, III. 204; influence, V. 261; VII. 163; notice in, VIII. 198; quotation from "Globe," III. 255; reading, VII. 196; VIII. 295; XI. 218; sponge for oblivion, XII. 99; not to be suppressed, IV. 191.
- New Testament, X. 115 f; XI. 489. See, also, Bible.
- Newton, Sir Isaac, desire to avoid new acquaintance, VII. 5; agitation in calculation, VIII. 222; alternation of employment, VIII. 149; and Bacon, V. 248; childless, XII. 210; discoveries, X. 130; eccentricity, IV. 99; Leibnitz and, VII. 158; unity and simplicity of his life, VII. 183; XII. 33; memory poor, XII. 100; method, VI. 75; misunderstood, II. 58; on navigation, XI. 511; old age, VII. 322; but one, VII. 296; his opinion of sculpture, II. 364; on Terence, VIII. 56; universe made at one cast, VIII. 224; whitest soul, XI. 251; quoted, I. 98; VIII. 96, 150, 224; XI. 496.
- New York, VI. 135 f; VII. 31; VIII. 319; XI. 543.
- Niagara Falls, VI. 159; made by difference of level, VIII. 320; swim against, XII. 12.
- Nibelungenlied, II. 107.
- Nicholas, Czar, I. 376; X. 496.
- Nicknames, effect of good, IV. 60.
- Nidiver, George, VII. 277.
- Niebuhr, Barthold, return of his genius, VIII. 282; quoted, VIII. 43; XI. 299; XII. 95.
- Night, I. 84, 119; IX. 317, 340, 342; XII. 309; in June, IX. 346; woe of, IX. 125.
- Nile, the fountains of, III. 274, 276; IX. 26; XII. 16.
- NIMETOLLAH, SEYD, SONG OF, IX. 304.
- Nineteenth Century, age of tools, VII. 157 ff; Goethe, the soul of, IV. 273; multiplicity of, IV. 271.
- Nisami, quoted, VIII. 261.
- No, inability to say, X. 314; valiant, III. 93.
- No-government reform, I. 214; V. 287.
- Noah's ark, poet's mind a, III. 40.
- Noblesse oblige, VIII. 230.
- Nobility, a new, I. 386 f; III. 41; VI. 113; VIII. 101, 210; X. 40, 57, 61, 64.
- Noise, III. 137; VI. 154.
- Nomad, every man a, XII. 135, 152 ff.
- Nomadism, II. 21 ff. See Migratory instinct.
- NOMINALIST AND REALIST, III. 223-248.
- Nonconformity, II. 50, 55; III. 100, 105; IV. 171.
- Non-resistance, III. 256; V. 287; XI. 168.
- Nonsense, refreshing, VI. 269; XII. 54.
- Noon, terror of, II. 112.
- Norsemen, V. 56 ff; VII. 287; VIII. 59; XI. 344; heaven of, VI. 137.
- North, Christopher, See Wilson, John.
- Northcote, James, VI. 185.
- Northington, Lord, quoted, XI. 136.
- NORTHMAN, quatrain, IX. 293; Freedom loved, IX. 206.
- Northerner, excels in force, II. 226.
- Norton, Charles Eliot, X. 335.
- Nose, VI. 181, 292.
- Not-me, I. 4.
- Nothing, beneath you, VI. 112; nothing fair alone, IX. 4; nothing for
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- nothing, the rule of the universe, VI. 222.
- Nouns of intellect, the facts in Nature are, VI. 304; in Nature, VIII. 9, 15.
- Novalis, quoted, IV. 280.
- Novelists, VII. 216; XII. 54.
- Novels, II. 172, 365; VI. 192; VII. 212 ff; VIII. 80; X. 142; XII. 373. See, also, Fiction.
- Now, ask the, I. 163; II. 11; VII. 175.
- Nullifiers, solitary, III. 255.
- Numbers, power of, I. 193, 276; II. 88, 294.
- Nun, story of, VI. 227.
- NUN'S ASPIRATION, THE, IX. 253.
- Nursery, common, X. 365; tales, omnipresent, VIII. 186.
- Obedience, I. 199; II. 70, 138; VI. 240; IX. 360; X. 84, 208; XII. 205; command comes through, XII. 77.
- Obelisk, VII. 54; XII. 325.
- Objections, III. 59, 261.
- Objective, point of view, XII. 38 f.
- Objects, I. 35, 214; III. 76; X. 201.
- Obliquely generous, III. 164; obliquely powerful, III. 69.
- Obscurity, from numbers, XI. 384.
- Obstacles, the conditions of, various, VI. 254; VIII. 144, 231.
- Occasion, rivalry of orator and, VII. 83, 84.
- Occupation, choice of, II. 139 ff; VIII. 304.
- Ocean, I. 205; V. 29, 52; VII. 299; there is enough of it, VIII. 139; of life, I. 288; of thought, II. 71; III. 57, 73. See, also, Sea.
- OCTOBER, IX. 362; I. 19; III. 169; woods, VII. 298; VIII. 287; IX. 293, 362.
- Ocular dialect, VI. 179.
- Odin, V. 59, 62, 92; VII. 175, 237; VIII. 59.
- OEdipus, III. 194.
- Oersted, Hans C., VIII. 222; X. 183.
- Oestrum, New England, X. 236.
- Office, public, III. 218; XI. 139, 390.
- Oil, VIII. 142.
- Olaf, King, VI. 205; VII. 284; quoted, V. 61.
- Old, abhorred by Nature, II. 319; corrupts, VII. 177; idolaters of, II. 125; nothing old but mind, VIII. 213; reverence for, VII. 292; VIII. 178; is for slaves, I. 144.
- OLD AGE, VII. 313-336.
- Old age, the only disease, II. 319; IX. 19; X. 136; perspiration of, VI. 41.
- Old-school gentlemen, VIII. 102.
- Old Testament, in England, V. 224.
- Olympians, bards, III. 2; IX. 89; exchange snuff-boxes, III. 113.
- Olympic games, II. 202; VII. 241.
- Omar, Caliph, I. 251.
- Omar Khayyám, quoted, IV. 39; VI. 5; VIII. 243; IX. 301.
- Omens, IX. 281; X. 13 ff, 22, 28; best omen to fight for one's country, X. 13; delicate omens traced in air, VI. 1; omens and signs fill air, IX. 326.
- Omission, art of, VI. 294.
- Omnipotence, attribute, X. 342.
- Omnipresence, II. 101, 314; III. 43; IV. 12, 102; X. 199.
- Omniscience, II. 280, 288; X. 183.
- One, eternal, II. 269; ever-blessed, II. 70; versus many, VIII. 220.
- One-hour rule, III. 247.
- One to one, law of, II. 206; Spartan rule, VII. 250.
- Opaline, nature of beauty, II. 179; III. 186.
- Open secret of the world, X. 238.
- Opinions, in bank-safes, VII. 65; confession of character, VI. 224; differences of, IV. 24; falsehood shows first as indifference, X. 217; few, III. 47, 247, 270; not final or organic, IV. 176; VI. 53, 141, 201; VII. 234; X. 110, 119, 202, 229,
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- 235; XI. 354; two handles to, XII. 300-303; should be native, II. 49; VII. 224, 277; VIII. 99, 303; X. 137, 229; XI. 287, 424; organic, XI. 287; public, I. 389; III. 98, 211; VI. 34, 156, 163; XI. 170, 220, 300, 354; react, II. 110, 146; variety of, an advantage, XI. 398; yoke of, IX. 394.
- Opium, distilled into all disaster, III. 48; IV. 23.
- Opportunities, VIII. 138; XI. 299, 541; the atoms of which world is made, VIII. 311.
- Opposition is opportunity, I. 149; II. 51; VII. 97.
- Oppression, XI. 102, 124, 237.
- Optical, life practical, not optical, X. 268.
- Optimism, II. 122, 135, 227; VII. 309; VIII. 138; X. 357; XII. 62.
- Oracles, never silent, II. 156; VII. 306; VIII. 38, 227; IX. 6; XII. 6.
- Oration, public, a gag, II. 141 f, 152.
- ORATOR, IX. 291; I. 31, 103; II. 142, 354; VI. 160; VII. 49, 95; VIII. 30, 309; X. 53, 282; XI. 316; XII. 98; his first qualification is manliness, VIII. 126. See Eloquence.
- Orbit, our orbit is our task, III. 284.
- Order, VII. 328 ff; equivalent to vast amounts of brute labor, VI. 85; IX. 69; X. 79; heaven's first law, X. 279; loyalty to one's, V. 172, 186; X. 57, 246, 251, 264, 274.
- Ordinance, self-denying, III. 284.
- Orestes, III. 82; XII. 407.
- Organ, silent, chants requiem, IX. 147.
- Organic actions and opinions, VI. 291; VII. 8, 266; X. 45, 471; XI. 287, 399; XII. 31.
- Organization, I. 165, 382; III. 184; VII. 254; VIII. 137; creates our facts, VI. 311.
- Oriental. See Scriptures, Oriental, and Persian Poetry.
- Orientalism, V. 258; VIII. 238 f; X. 176.
- Originality, III. 254; IV. 189, 195, 198 f; V. 9; VII. 126, 291; VIII. 178, 201 f; XII. 204. See Quotation.
- Origins, VII. 54; IX. 366.
- Ornament, VI. 290.
- Ornithology, VI. 281.
- Orpheus, I. 263; II. 31; VIII. 66; X. 82, 475.
- Orphic poet, I. 72.
- Orte, governor of Bayonne, quoted, XI. 192.
- Osman, III. 154.
- Ossian, VIII. 295.
- Otherness, IV. 5, 48.
- Others, working for, XI. 230; XII. 30.
- Ought, meaning of, I. 121, 125.
- Our own, we must be, II. 211; find, III. 241; XII. 29.
- Ourselves, all things allowed to, III. 78.
- Over-estimation, nobody forgives over-estimation of themselves, XII. 30.
- OVER-SOUL, THE, II. 265-297; IX. 8.
- Ovid, quoted, VIII. 208.
- Owen, Richard, V. 253; XII. 3, 97; quoted, VIII. 50.
- Owen, Robert, V. 260; X. 346 f; quoted, VI. 140.
- Owning, some men born to, VI. 97.
- Oxford University, V. 198-213, 224.
- Oxygen, X. 70; XII. 184.
- Oyster, I. 296; mends his shell with pearl, II. 117.
- Pacific Ocean, and Czar Alexander, VII. 168.
- Pack-saddles of thought, II. 310.
- Paddle, in lake, IX. 54.
- Pagan faculties, XII. 60; moralists, X. 116; world, III. 248.
- Paganini, II. 143.
- Paganism in Christianity, X. 109.
- Page, William, XII. 49.
- ...
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- Pain, due to interference of organization, VI. 311; memory sifts out, XII. 104; superficial, II. 131; VII. 265; XII. 415.
- Paint, ground into, III. 241; IV. 43; great is, VI. 313; X. 59; can make none stick but our own, XII. 53.
- Painter, paints the ideal, II. 336 ff, 351. See, also, Artist.
- Painting, II. 229, 352, 354, 356 f; XII. 370. See, also, Art.
- Paint-pot, of Nature, VIII. 41.
- Pairing-off, into insane parties, I. 302; VII. 14; of Greeks and Persians, VI. 250.
- Pairs, thoughts go in, VII. 230; IX. 123.
- Palaces, VI. 182; Lords in palaces, IX. 321.
- Palestine, value in universal history, IV. 135; XI. 122.
- Palm, man grows like, IV. 6.
- Palmistry, X. 10.
- Palsy of mis-association, XII. 26.
- PAN, IX. 360; I. 205; III. 42, 177; IX. 26, 58, 68, 71, 240, 335; XII. 35.
- Pancrates, fable, X. 11.
- Pandora-box of marriage, VI. 316.
- Panic, VII. 262; XII. 35, 411.
- Πάντα ῥεῖ (Panta rei), VIII. 200. See Flowing.
- Paphos, I. 17.
- Papyrus, XI. 497.
- Parables, everything spoken in, VIII. 71.
- Para coats, III. 49.
- Paradise, II. 243; XI. 236; only for good men, VIII. 153.
- Paradox, II. 204; V. 94; XII. 339.
- Parasites, huge animals nourish huge parasites, VI. 45, 62; VIII. 188.
- Parents and children, VI. 229; VII. 105; X. 137, 143.
- Parietal wit, V. 310.
- Paris, attractions of, XII. 187.
- Parish mince-meat, X. 229.
- PARK, THE, IX. 84.
- PARKER, THEODORE, XI. 283-293; X. 231, 234, 341, 344, 361, 366, 375.
- Parks, needed in America, XI. 432.
- Parliament, British, V. 154, 182 f, 225, 251, 307; X. 62; XI. 128. See Commons, House of; Lords, House of.
- Parlor, and kitchen, VII. 246; soldiers, II. 75.
- Parnassus, V. 243; VIII. 51, 237; X. 332.
- Parody, homage of, III. 145.
- Parry, Sir Edward, quoted, V. 68.
- Parsimony of providence, IV. 184.
- Parsons, Antony, V. 216; VII. 274.
- Parthenon, II. 15 f; IX. 7.
- Partialists, III. 66; IV. 47; need of, III. 245; VI. 258; XI. 422.
- Partiality, III. 263.
- Particulars, III. 195; IV. 185; VI. 160; VII. 112; X. 194, 280.
- Parties, political, I. 318; II. 54; III. 58; VI. 61, 94, 212; VII. 259; X. 325; XI. 184, 256, 387, 390, 514, 519, 523; XII. 55, 270; ordinarily parties of circumstance, not of principle, III. 209; necessity of, III. 208, 239; IV. 172.
- Parts, love of, II. 219, 231; III. 233 f; VIII. 158.
- Parts of speech, metaphors, I. 32.
- Pascal, Blaise, VII. 219; VIII. 228; XII. 255.
- Pass for what we are, II. 58; X. 47.
- Passions, IV. 142; X. 89; are educators, VI. 254, 258; powerful spring, VI. 259; VII. 324 f; VIII. 10, 276.
- Passover, Jewish, XI. 8.
- PAST, THE, IX. 257; and future, III. 67; VI. 234; influence of, I. 87, 92; II. 66, 82; VIII. 204; X. 254, 325; involved in the present, I. 163, 268, 295, 300, 305; II. 125; VI. 129; VIII. 200; turns to snakes, VII. 177; unalterable, IX. 257, 382; XII. 91, 101, 108; the warp in loom of life, VII. 170.
- ...
Page 567

- PAST AND PRESENT, Carlyle, XII. 379-391.
- Pastoral visits, I. 146.
- Patience, with delays of Nature, I. 115, 278, 354; VII. 139; IX. 300; X. 151 f, 155 f, 469; XI. 241; XII. 51.
- Patmos of thought, III. 106.
- Patriarchal government, I. 375.
- Patriarchs, action of the, III. 106.
- Patriotism, I. 369; V. 144; VII. 26; VIII. 173; X. 501 ff; XI. 387, 539.
- Pattern, men all of one, VII. 234.
- Patty-pan, enthusiasm, VII. 61; X. 364.
- Paul, St., XI. 13 ff.
- Paulding, Commodore, XI. 271.
- Pauline de Viguier, VI. 296.
- Pauperism, I. 374.
- Pay, always, II. 113.
- Peace, nothing can bring you peace but yourself, II. 90, 262; in proximity to war, VI. 71; VII. 275; XI. 161, 167 ff, 322; peace-parties, the cant of, VII. 260; peace principle does not involve loss of manhood, XI. 171, 323.
- Peacock, American eagle must be less of a peacock, XI. 530; wit, IX. 56.
- Pear-trees, V. 49, 52; VI. 108; VII. 148; IX. 343; XII. 145 f.
- Pearl-diver, scholar a, X. 265.
- Peasant and lord, IX. 49.
- Pedantry, II. 137; painted pedantry of the stage, IV. 121, 206; VI. 138; VIII. 166, 168.
- Peddlers, VI. 146, 317.
- Peeping, Nature hates, III. 59.
- Pendulum, law of mind, VIII. 150.
- Penetration, the fatal gift of, VI. 188.
- Pensioner, man a, II. 268.
- Pentecost of conversation, II. 310; IX. 8.
- People, correct mistakes of government, XI. 525 ff; you cannot march without, VI. 70.
- Pepper-corn aims, VI. 208; informations, I. 32.
- Pepperell, Sir William, VII. 78.
- Pepys, Samuel, V. 108; quoted, VII. 84.
- Perceforest, II. 34.
- Perception, accurate, II. 226 ff; III. 138 ff; VII. 298; X. 147; converted into character, I. 222; to our involuntary perception perfect faith is due, II. 65; VIII. 20; outruns talent, VII. 301, 311; X. 147; spiritual, II. 223; VIII. 292; value of new, XII. 402; involves will, XII. 37, 40, 41, 44, 91.
- Perdition to be safe, IX. 296; X. 96.
- Perfection, I. 271 f; III. 240.
- Performance, difference of law and, I. 179; III. 271; IV. 179; V. 222, 307; VI. 132, 216, 240; VII. 291, 293.
- Perhaps, the great, VIII. 185.
- PERICLES, IX. 296; IV. 52; V. 241.
- Periodicity, of evils, VI. 254; in Nature, IX. 169; of powers, VIII. 282; IX. 319; of solar system, VIII. 223, 232.
- Permanence, a word of degrees, II. 302; IV. 186; our delight in, VIII. 333; X. 247 f.
- Perpendicularity, II. 230.
- PERPETUAL FORCES, X. 67-88.
- Perry, Sir Erskine, quoted, XII. 183.
- Persecution, VI. 262; an endeavor to cheat Nature, II. 119.
- Perseverance, VI. 277; VIII. 283; X. 66; XII. 85.
- PERSIAN POETRY, VIII. 235-265.
- Persians, architecture, II. 21; copyright, VIII. 252; day of lot, VIII. 239; gnomic verses, VIII. 243; moved by poetry, VIII. 227 ff; pairing off of Greeks and, VI. 250; mythology, VIII. 240; proverbs, VI. 95, 325; VIII. 89; temperament in extremes, VIII. 238; self-centred, VIII. 104; saying, XII. 105.
- ...
Page 568

- Persistency, I. 358; III. 40; VI. 277; X. 78.
- Personal ascendency, I. 207, 263; III. 123, 205, 229; VI. 58, 190; VII. 76, 79, 81.
- Personality, in conversation, see under Conversation; dose of, XII. 53; effect of, VI. 190; XII. 374; in eloquence, VIII. 130; energy, X. 277; XII. 58; fails, VIII. 343; miracles, X. 199 ff; power, silence destroys, II. 343; of universe, IV. 95; value of, I. 162. See, also, Bias.
- Personification, VIII. 23, 53.
- Persons, III. 236; of the age, I. 265; attraction, I. 262; common nature, II. 276; tie of persons and events, VI. 39; faith in, I. 142; acquaint us with the impersonal, II. 277; government is to protect, III. 201; love's world, II. 174; new, II. 195; their influence impossible to fix, III. 205, 229; and property, III. 201 ff; regard for, II. 277; soul knows no, I. 130; are the world to persons, I. 262.
- Perspective, of time, I. 115; of persons, II. 5; III. 33, 108, 180; VI. 35; VII. 98.
- Perspiration of age, VI. 41.
- Persuasion, VII. 97; IX. 134.
- Pertinence, in speech, VII. 82.
- Pessimism, II. 122; VII. 309; VIII. 138.
- Pestalozzi, quoted, I. 113, 281.
- Peter, the mould of, I. 335; VII. 178; XII. 57.
- Peter's dome, IX. 7; XII. 231.
- PETER'S FIELD, IX. 363.
- Petroleum, VIII. 142.
- Phalanstery, England a, V. 34.
- Phalanx, Fourier's, I. 382; III. 264 f; X. 351, 356; XII. 48.
- Phantasms, III. 142; VI. 318, 321.
- Pharos of hope, X. 59.
- Phenomenal, the pied and painted immensity, II. 197.
- Phenomenon, Nature is, I. 49; VIII. 14.
- Phi Beta Kappa, addresses, I. 79 ff; VIII. 205 ff; poem, IX. 398.
- Phidias, II. 108; IX. 387; XII. 222; his Jove, IX. 6.
- Philadelphia, situation of, V. 40.
- Philanthropy, I. 280; II. 51; X. 117; XI. 217.
- Philip II. of Spain, anecdote of, I. 393.
- Philip of Macedon, III. 270; VII. 73.
- Phillips, Wendell, VI. 78;
- Philoctetes, II. 26.
- Philonic inspiration, VIII. 182.
- PHILOSOPHER, IX. 374.
- Philosophers, not at all times philosophers, I. 301; above audience, VIII. 216; all days holy to, II. 12; bees are, IX. 40; Greek, X. 308 f; do not joke, VIII. 159; know only laws, XII. 40; and poets, I. 55; are failed poets, VIII. 56; XII. 14; talk with two, III. 248; not quite trust-worthy, XII. 45; world large enough only for themselves, VII. 8.
- Philosophy, name used to gild crimes, II. 74; defining is, IV. 47; not to be distilled, I. 62; is familiar experience, VII. 301; cardinal facts, IV. 47; characteristic of modern literature, XII. 312; we want mobile, IV. 160; new, quotes old, VIII. 179; Plato on, IV. 60; taught by poets, I. 55; XII. 14, 312; price paid for, VI. 137; problem of, I. 55; rules nations, VIII. 66; use of, XII. 6; value of its history, I. 160; warped from nature, I. 171.
- Phocion, II. 260.
- Phoenicians, V. 74; XII. 26.
- Phoenixes, IV. 34; X. 163.
- Phosphorus, statue, III. 24.
- Photometers, we are, II. 166.
- Phrenology, III. 53, 234; VI. 9, 15, 34, 229; VII. 108, 290; X. 10, 337.
- ...
Page 569

- Physicians, view of religion, III. 51 ff; of mankind, VI. 138; VIII. 167.
- Physics, axioms of, translate laws of ethics, I. 33, 39.
- Physiognomy, V. 48; VI. 223, 229; VII. 108; X. 10, 337.
- Piano in log hut, VII. 21.
- Pickerel-weed, I. 19.
- Pictorial, all is, VI. 48.
- Picture-alphabet, Swedenborg's, IV. 118, 128.
- Picture-books, child's, VII. 106; the world, man's, VIII. 9, 23.
- Picture-collector, III. 62.
- Pictures, II. 356, 360; III. 55; VII. 131, 308; VIII. 170; in streets, II. 357. See, also, Art, Painting.
- Picturesque, hunting for, III. 178.
- Pied and painted immensity of the phenomenal, II. 197.
- Pied Piper, VII. 65; VIII. 186.
- Piety of the Puritans, I. 220; X. 207; XII. 194; an essential condition of science, VIII. 202, 228.
- Pilgrim Fathers, IX. 201; what brought them here, I. 219; IX. 201. See, also, Plymouth, Puritans.
- Pilgrim, the scholar a, I. 158.
- Pillows of illusion, VI. 313.
- Pilot, beauty the pilot of young soul, VI. 287, 289; we are never without, X. 196.
- Pindar, II. 15, 27; VII. 53; X. 253; quoted, VIII. 202, 231, 250, 294.
- Pine, I. 168 f; II. 58; VII. 147; IX. 5 f, 43, 45 f, 48 f, 164, 186, 229, 297, 311.
- Pinfold, II. 80; X. 106.
- Pistareen providence, VI. 6.
- Pitiers of themselves, VI. 265.
- Pitt, William, VI. 152, 182; XI. 141.
- Pity, XI. 193.
- Place, unimportant to hero, II. 257; each safe in his own, I. 312; II. 47; VIII. 83; X. 47; important to woman, XI. 409.
- Plagiarism, IV. 42, 226; VIII. 192. See, also, Quotation.
- Plague, depression of spirits develops, VI. 265.
- Plain dealing, VI. 272; X. 368.
- Plain living and high thinking, VI. 154; VII. 116; X. 176.
- Plainness, English, V. 116; VI. 152.
- Planes of life, VII. 311.
- Planet, compare with society, I. 250; makes itself, VI. 38; splits stick, VII. 27.
- Planters, Southern, XI. 104, 117, 125.
- Plants, clocks of summer hours, I. 18; III. 41; imperfect men, III. 181; IV. 107, 182; VII. 145; XII. 24.
- PLATO, IV. 37-89; academic, IV. 123; all may think as, II. 3; anticipates all, VII. 198; arrogance, IV. 150; authority on morals, VII. 191; banquet, VII. 200 f; basis of his fame, IV. 81; external biography, IV. 43; on boys, VI. 139; bridge between Asia and Europe, IV. 53; on children of gods, III. 109; Christianity in, VIII. 180; on citizen's duty, VII. 62; common sense, IV. 61; consumed his own times, and all times, IV. 41, 42; definitions, I. 55; III. 30 f; in England, V. 238 f, 295; earnestness, IV. 57; eldest Goethe, IV. 85; an enthusiast, X. 306; on exercise, VIII. 280; XII. 142; expansions, IV. 82; on genius, X. 271; Greek geometer, IV. 87; grandeur, II. 346; images, VII. 199; inspiration, VIII. 274; literary, IV. 75; gives feeling of longevity, II. 273; on memory, XII. 99; mind, IV. 57; modernness, IV. 45; his philosophy, IV. 61-70; the poet, VII. 198; on poetry, I. 69; II. 34; VIII. 202, 274; X. 303; prayer, XII. 351; purple, ancient, XII. 389; reading, I. 93; II. 154; III. 233, 259; reading him wrapped in cloak, VII. 297; on rhetoric, VII. 64; school, II. 308; secret doctrine, II. 146;
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- self-reliance, II. 45; and Socrates, IV. 70-75; use of low style, XII. 286 f; no system, IV. 76; synthesis, IV. 54-57; Timaeus, VII. 169, 199; truth, VIII. 177; value, I. 161; VII. 198; works, best, VII. 199; women, XI. 406; writing a barbarous invention, XII. 99; quoted, III. 271; IV. 17; V. 241; VII. 39; VIII. 177.
- Platonists, IV. 40, 88; V. 224, 239; VII. 202.
- Playmates, of man, VI. 90.
- Please, thinking to, VIII. 304.
- Pleased, too easily, VII. 125; VIII. 68.
- Pleasure, II. 98, 103, 105, 227; VI. 41, 93, 311; IX. 23; X. 58, 308; XII. 205, 217; and pain, XI. 356.
- Pleiades, IX. 13, 127; XII. 175.
- Pliny, on life of Romans, VII. 121; quoted, VII. 179.
- Plotinus, I. 58; II. 252; VII. 202; X. 461; quoted, IV. 97; X. 281.
- Ploughed into history, I. 126.
- Ploughing, IX. 332; emblematic, of Emperor of China, VIII. 311.
- Plus, condition, VI. 58, 61, 68, 71.
- PLUTARCH, X. 291-322; on Alexander, VI. 253; XI. 153; sacred animals, X. 14; bible for heroes, X. 318; boy's friend, VI. 312; VII. 120; our debt to him greater than to all the ancient writers, II. 234; encyclopaedic, X. 297; essays, VII. 191; heroes, II. 84, 234; VII. 191; humanity, X. 298; on immortality, X. 313; on influence of the air, XII. 141; on inspiration, VIII. 284; on intellect, X. 307; on jests, VIII. 163; his life, X. 293; many-sided, X. 301; on matter, X. 281, 307; memory, VII. 200; in modern literature, XII. 311; Morals, VII. 200; morality, X. 3II; oracles, VII. 266; on orators, VIII. 118, 121; Pericles, VI. 75; on philosophy, X. 308; on prediction, VIII. 284; on superstition, X. 14, 305; science, X. 309; and Seneca, X. 311; Timoleon, II. 133; XII. 263; translations of, X. 294, 320; value, I. 160; II. 248; VII. 191; XII. 309; quoted, II. 175; VII. 116.
- Plymouth Colony, XII. 191.
- Pocket, memory not a, XII. 92.
- Poem, made by its argument, not by its metres, III. 9, 234; is poet's mind, II. 17; the world a, IV. 120, 125.
- Poems, deathless offspring of poet, III. 23; names which are, V. 55; we parade nobilities in, VI. 191; we have no, VIII. 74; version of Nature's text, III. 25.
- POET, THE, III. 1-42; IX. 292, 309-334. Also, Merlin, IX. 120-124.
- Poet, Poets, no deep advantage, III. 281; aided by legend, IV. 194; all men, I. 169; analysis, XII. 14; authority, I. 211; man of beauty, III. 4; belief in importance of what he has to say, III. 187; IV. 189; VIII. 202, 229; Caesar of woods, IX. 43; cheerful, IV. 215; coming, XII. 333; the complete man, III. 5; as craftsman, VI. 157; crowning grace, IX. 329; all days holy to, II. 12; detaches, II. 354; dream, II. 231; electricity, XII. 366; early English, VI. 207; must have sensuous eye, X. 299; favoritism, X. 270; Five great, IX. 221-223; passes for a fool, III. 41; their genius a larger imbibing of the common heart, II. 288; genius inexhaustible, III. 41; Milton as to their habits, XII. 262; habit of living, III. 29; heart in the right place, VII. 306; must be hermits, I. 174 f; bad husbands, VI. 114; unknown at home, IX. 211; idealism, I. 52; imagery, VI. 304; jealousy of present objects, III. 192; joy-giver and enjoyer, IX. 133, 324 f; sense of justice, X. 185; landscape
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- owned by, I. 8; lawgivers, II. 231; VIII. 39; liberating gods, III. 30 ff; knows missing link, VIII. 10; Language-maker, III. 21; true landlord, III. 42; logical, VIII. 21, 39; love, the test of, IX. 296; man without impediment, III. 6; is universal man, II. 30; all men are, VIII. 25; men-making, VIII. 294; his rare moments, VIII. 277; reattaches things to Nature, III. 18; deals with things nearest, I. 75; VIII. 203; and philosopher, I. 55; XII. 14, 312; uses Nature's paint-pot, VIII. 41; patience, IX. 312 f; gives platform outside of daily life, II. 312; IV. 93; professor of joyous science, VIII. 37; X. 262; does not too much respect his writing, VII. 182; representative, VIII. 71; rhapsodist, I. 213; fabulous picture of society, III. 175; solitary, IX. 117, 292; sighed soul away, IX. 361; must not spin too fine, II. 205; stars and, IX. 314, 317; use of symbols, XII. 300; training, III. 22; IX. 310; not makes but made by thought, VIII. 39; universal language, I. 103; what is it to be a poet, VIII. 36; a beautiful woman is practical poet, VI. 296; XI. 412; works beyond his will, XII. 71 f, 74; worldliness, X. 264.
- Poet-priest wanted, IV. 219.
- Poetry, essential aim, V. 256; Arab fondness, VIII. 240; X. 177; is ascension into higher state, III. 24; Bacon's definition of, XII. 277; beauty, III. 234; VII. 46; and fact, books its inspiration, VIII. 295; and civilization, X. 421; cleanses, VIII. 294; of columns, VI. 294; creation in, VIII. 38; definition, VIII. 19; modern English, V. 234, 251, 255 ff; part of education, X. 134; essence of, IV. 206; essential qualities, XII. 366; of contemporary events, VIII. 34; to the wise fact is, I. 75; of fancy, II. 107; is faith, VIII. 31; found, not made, VII. 50; must be good sense, XII. 366; best history is, I. 69; VII. 197; feeling of infinite in, XII. 316; idealism, V. 238; source of its inspiration, III. 113; speaks to intelligent, VIII. 250; in common life, III. 231; VI. 317; magic influence, XII. 309; of manners, VI. 191; measure of poetic power, XII. 42; moral in, VIII. 63; "Thus saith the Lord," must begin the song, VIII. 64; mystery, II. 180; best in copying Nature, XII. 164; free necessity, VIII. 31; need of, VII. 212; organic, VIII. 42; pain changed to, XII. 416; Pindar's rule, VIII. 250; and prudence, II. 231; refreshes, II. 273; is seeing spirit instead of body, VIII. 17; revival, I. 82; in sense as in form, IV. 215; simplicity, VIII. 125; of society, XII. 368; success, II. 180; in a chest of tea, VIII. 281; Thoreau's, X. 474; shows unity by variety, IV. 56; only verity, VIII. 27; unwritten, I. 167; VI. 191; VIII. 193; of vice and disease, XII. 368; in whistle, VII. 297; XII. 43; every word necessary, XII. 57; written before time was, III. 8; for the young, X. 143; sempiternal youth of, IV. 88. See, also, Verse.
- POETRY AND IMAGINATION, VIII. 1-75.
- POETRY, PERSIAN, VIII. 235-265.
- Poisons, our medicines, VI. 258; VII. 319; XII. 55.
- Point of view, change in, I. 50 f; III. 247.
- Polarity, 1. 98, III, 295; II. 96; III. 97, 212; V. 52; VI. 3, 22; VII. 95; VIII. 7; IX. 21; X. 8, 54, 204; XII. 61, 82, 87.
- Pole star, in constellation Harp, I. 82.
- Police, in citizens' clothes, VI. 171, 222, 226; XII. 92.
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- Politeness. See Behavior, Manners.
- Political economy, V. 98, 167; XI. 519; based on laws of nature, VI. 101, 106, 225; VII. 141, 152; VIII. 37, 143.
- Politicians, III. 219; VI. 250; VII. 272; X. 47; XI. 220, 518.
- POLITICS, III. 197-221; IX. 271; I. 253; II. 88, 263; III. 37, 91, 255; VI. 13, 61, 65, 140; VII. 162, 165, 259; VIII. 173, 232; IX. 16; XI. 170, 387 ff, 421, 423, 514, 519, 520, 523; institutions cannot be voted in and out, III. 200.
- Polycrates, II. 112; IX. 33.
- Pompeii, tombs at, VIII. 325.
- Poor, the, I. 14, 240, 253; XI. 526; their fancies of the rich, III. 174, 191; VII. 115, 118; X. 69. See, also, Poverty.
- Pope, Alexander, I. 112; II. 287; V. 100, 255; quoted, V. 94; VIII. 155.
- Popguns, I. 102.
- Poppies, Nature's, IV. 24; VIII. 296.
- Popular, is important, XI. 424.
- Popular government, VI. 62.
- Popular standards, II. 74.
- Popularity is for dolls, VI. 163.
- Population, VI. 249; VII. 150 f; conditional, I. 372; condense, IX. 27; enormous, is disgusting, IV. 4.
- Porcelain, Nature's III. 130; X. 34.
- Porphyry, quoted, VI. 163, 247.
- Porter, Jane, novels, XII. 375.
- Portraits should idealize, II. 351.
- Positive, choose what is, VII. 307; XII. 61; positive power is half, VI. 15; is sinew of speech, X. 164, 167, 171; it takes too many positives to make superlative, X. 173.
- Possibilities, the great realities, I. 223; II. 76, 306; IV. 32 f; VIII. 137.
- Posterity, we build for, I. 374.
- Post-office, superseded, I. 385; meter of civilization, VII. 22 f.
- Postpone, I. 256; we are not to wish and postpone, III. 60.
- Posture-maker, Nature the best, VIII. 82.
- Potencies, men made of, VIII. 137.
- Potomac, XII. 187.
- Pound, always a pound, III. 205; X. 36; cake and prosperity, X. 58.
- Poverty, consists in feeling poor, VII. 118; VIII. 169; and riches, a costume, VI. 323; demoralizes, VI. 90; genius set in, VII. 115; the ornament of greatness, II. 255; gymnastics, III. 256; VI. 259; VII. 121; X. 128; XI. 236; herald of Muse, X. 287; rich, VII. 175; X. 208; value of, to poet and youth, VII. 119; IX. 310.
- POWER, VI. 51-82; IX. 284, 294; and age, VII. 317; ascending, IX. 349; of assurance, VII. 77; and cheerfulness, VI. 265; needs concentration, XII. 51, 58; and culture, VI. 131; cumulative, VII. 20; desire of, X. 129 ff; educates, VI. 61; and Fate, VI. 22; can be generous, XI. 539; is God, VI. 33; the first good, VIII. 270, 272; now here, now there, III. 58; good horse, VI. 317; not imitative, XII. 30; impudence of, IV. 18; luxury of, XI. 118; man's use of materials, XI. 513; natural, VIII. 316; needs wisdom, X. 21; in unity with Nature, VI. 56; practical, VII. 254; XII. 48; a certain quantity belongs to a certain quantity of faculty; he who wants more must truckle for it, VII. 268; X. 47; XI. 139; makes its own place, X. 47; costs nothing to powerful, XII. 130; the essential measure of right, II. 70, 89, 114 f; III. 67, 100, 281; IV. 184; VI. 93; IX. 270, 360; X. 128; of science, VII. 162; secret of, XII. 82; authentic mark of spirit, XII. 73; in tone, X. 233; total, not in details, XI. 222; its use, XI. 318.
- Practice and theory, I. 94, 222, 250; IV. 178, 266; V. 247; VI. 277; X.
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- 152, 224, 235, 268 f, 280; XII. 48; is nine tenths, VI. 78.
- Practical men, VI. 317; XII. 10.
- Praise, less safe than blame, II. 118, 292; III. 74, 103, 106; VI. 237, 246; VII. 294; IX. 132; XI. 289; the foolish face of, II. 55; shows us what we have not, II. 221; VIII. 68; XII. 210.
- PRAYER, IX. 380.
- Prayer, Prayers, in all action, II. 77; adornment of man, I. 216; answers to, VI. 6; not brave or manly, II. 77; church, I. 139; a church, XI. 236; a condescension, V. 221; defined, II. 77; false prayers, II. 77; of farmer, II. 77; granted, a curse, VI. 46; iteration in, VIII. 53, 54; Jewish, V. 224; over poor land, XI. 520; beginning of literature, VIII. 53; love prays, II. 185; of others, hurtful, II. 294; to ourselves, granted, VI. 40; are prophets, VI. 277; of Quakers before meals, VIII. 86; Dr. Ripley's, X. 386 f; show lack of self-reliance, II. 77; ship-master's, X. 14; study of truth, I. 74; that do not uplift but smite us, I. 137; disease of will, II. 79; of youth, III. 201.
- PRAYERS, XII. 350-357.
- PREACHER, THE, X. 215-238; I. 134-151; II. 54; VII. 94; VIII. 120.
- Preaching, characterized by tradition, I. 141; defined, I. 135; the office the first in world, I. 135; do not preach, IX. 297; good preaching, VII. 94; XII. 380; secret of, I. 138; sensation, X. 231.
- Pre-cantations, things in, III. 25.
- Precedent, love of, V. 110; VII. 292; XI. 299.
- Precision, III. 140.
- Premonitions, VIII. 227, 309.
- Prescott, Col. George L., XI. 358 f, 361-379.
- Presence of mind, VI. 59, 76; VIII. 17, 126; XII. 100.
- Present, VII. 302; and future, I. 256; II. 240; VII. 12; the present infinite, II. 297; and past, I. 300; II. 67; III. 64, 103, 170; VI. 234; VII. 173, 177, 304; VIII. 201, 204; IX. 75, 295, 350; XII. 91, 108; reading of Present Age, XII. 310; subjective, XII. 313; truth of, unattainable, XII. 383. See, also, Time, To-Day.
- Presentiments, I. 159; II. 215, 295; X. 9; XI. 236.
- Press, an educator, VII. 24; spawn of, VII. 196.
- Pretension, I. 179, 186; II. 158; III. 100, 131, 133; V. 112; VI. 150; VIII. 169.
- Pretty people tiresome, VI. 299.
- Price, highest price for thing to ask for it, II. 113; everything has its price, II. 115; III. 48; VI. 107, 108; VII. 109; X. 48 f; tariff of, IV. 21.
- Pride, II. 110, 117; economical, VI. 114.
- Priestcraft, II. 28.
- Priesthood, VI. 285; VIII. 325; X. 271.
- Prince Rupert's drop, the American Union a, XI. 205, 528.
- Principles, I. 146, 250, 276, 279, 323; III. 97, 209; V. 88; VII. 30; X. 108, 232; XI. 173 f, 290, 308, 353, 357, 514; XII. 110, 206, 209.
- Printing, XII. 99.
- Prisoners, V. 4; VII. 323; X. 80; XI. 363.
- Prison, every thought a, II. 339; III. 33, 52.
- Privacy of storm, IX. 42.
- Private ends and uses, VIII. 342; X. 84, 92, 94.
- Privation, need of, I. 242; VII. 121; IX. 310.
- Prizes, of virtue, IV. 142; X. 59, the high prize of life, VI. 267.
- ...
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- PROBLEM, THE, IX. 6-9.
- Proclus, reading of, III. 233; quoted, III. 14, 31; VI. 303.
- Production, in nature and thought, II. 363; IV. 93, 214; VI. 85, 251.
- Professions, choice of, II. 139 ff; selfishness of, I. 233. See Occupations, Trades.
- Profits that are profitable, II. 153.
- Profligacy, VI. 112.
- Progenitors, qualities of, potted, VI. 9.
- Progress, I. 164, 214, 261, 300; II. 122, 286, 318 f; VII. 20, 33; VIII. 348; XI. 147, 151, 229, 516.
- Projectile impulse in Nature, III. 184, 193; VI. 219.
- Prometheus, II. 30 f, 106; IX. 180, 193.
- PROMISE, IX. 283.
- Promises, II. 169, 235; III. 51, 190; IV. 185; VIII. 338; IX. 87.
- Property, III. 202-207; amelioration of laws of, I. 254; in its present tenures degrading, I. 274, 306; III. 204; VI. 99, 106, 158; VII. 109; X. 128, 189 f; XI. 157; whole earth made, I. 308; good always moral, I. 37; III. 231, 262; IV. 152; rise of law of, I. 304; covers great spiritual facts, II. 6; III. 201; V. 87, 144, 164; X. 355; XI. 519; timid, I. 234, 238; II. 87, III; women's rights in, XI. 416, 419, 424.
- Prophets, III. 187, 247; VIII. 159, 272; XII. 8, 45.
- Proportion, X. 174; impossible to men, III. 234.
- Propriety, VI. 39; Gibraltar of, V. 112.
- Proprium, of Swedenborg, VIII. 307.
- Prose, in Englishman, V. 111; God speaks not in, VIII. 12, 32; of life, III. 231; of Nature, II. 351; rhyme in, VIII. 50, 52.
- PROSPECTS, I. 66-77.
- Prosperity, man not born for, I. 220; II. 112 f; insecurity of, VII. 64; and pound cake, X. 58; a rush of thoughts the only prosperity, VIII. 272.
- Protection, III. 256; VI. 224, 261.
- Protestants, X. 454; XII. 203.
- Proteus, I. 43; II. 5, 31; III. 179; IV. 49, 121, 157, 273; VI. 308, 313.
- Proverbs, the wisdom of nations, I. 33; II. 108 f; III. 231; quoted, I. 84; II. 237 f, 315; III. 84; IV. 228; VI. 218, 257, 264 f; VIII. 46, 89, 112, 185.
- Providence, terrific benefactor, I. 123; III. 282; V. 224; VI. 7, 31, 202; X. 203, 303; XI. 240, 244, 337, 544; for children, VII. 101; playing providence, IV. 89; V. 307; XII. 31, 45, 55; patronizing providence, I. 322; XII. 55.
- Provocation, not instruction, is what we receive from others, I. 127, 132, 162.
- Proxies, we are multiplied by, IV. 12.
- PRUDENCE, II. 219-241; IX. 280; I. 255; IV. 152, 237, 247; base, II. 223; is concentration, VI. 73; is God taking thought for oxen, II. 222; low, I. 185; II. 183, 249, 252, 314 f; in little things, II. 233; should coincide with poetry, II. 231; virtue of the senses, II. 222; VII. 111; X. 15; not only an outward virtue, II. 236; all virtues with, II. 240.
- Psyche, X. 185.
- Ptolemaic system, III. 180.
- Public, an eternal, II. 153; VIII. 215; IX. 291.
- Public and private forces, VI. 204, 217.
- Public opinion, I. 389; VI. 224; VII. 290; X. 36; XI. 170, 220, 306, 521.
- Public speaking, I. 166; II. 141, 152; III. 189; V. 128; VI. 78; VII. 62.
- Public spirit, III. 213; VI. 66; VIII. 102; X. 92.
- Public worship, I. 141.
- ...
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- Pudency of friendship, VI. 273; of life, III. 69.
- Pugnacity, interest in, XI. 156.
- Pulpit, I. 137; X. 113, 230, 233. See, also, Clergy, Preacher.
- Pulses, man lives by, III. 68; VI. 29, 56; VIII. 46.
- Pump, fetched with dirty water, if clean is not to be had, VI. 60.
- Pumpkins, men ripen like, III. 246.
- "Punch," V. 271; VI. 18; XI. 517.
- Punctuality, III. 140; IV. 237, 247; VII. 112; X. 175.
- Punishment, and crime grow from same root, II. 103, 121; IV. 84; XII. 92.
- Purgatory, X. 104.
- Purgstall, Baron von Hammer, VIII. 237.
- Puritans, I. 142, 219, 339; X. 244, 383; XII. 268; we praise them because we do not find in ourselves the spirit to do the like, XII. 210.
- Purpose, VII. 97, 239; X. 58; as necessity, II. 75; III. 234; VI. 268.
- Purse, great depend not on, VII. 115.
- Pursuit, heaven in, III. 193.
- Push, aboriginal, III. 184; VI. 43.
- Pyramids, II. 29; VIII. 325; IX. 7.
- Pyrrhonism, II. 138, 317.
- Pythagoras, quoted, VI. 156; XII. 80, 350.
- Quackery, in education, X. 155.
- Quadruped, age, IV. 173; VI. 166, 252; XII. 23; law, XI. 227.
- Quake, if I quake, what matters it at what? III. 98.
- Quakers, I. 339; IV. 140, 267; VIII. 86, 309; XI. 107, 415.
- Qualities abide, IV. 33; VI. 9.
- Quarantine, of calamities, XI. 240; of Nature, III. 171; VII. 140; of society, I. 319.
- Quarry, of life, I. 98, 259.
- QUATRAINS, IX. 291-297.
- Queen of Sheba, in Persian Poetry, VIII. 241.
- Questions, courage to ask, VIII. 95; IX. 24.
- Quetelet, VI. 9; quoted, VI. 17.
- Quietest, rapture, II. 282.
- Quincy, President, VII. 315; VIII. 286; XII. 203, 211.
- Quintilian, quoted, XII. 95.
- QUOTATION AND ORIGINALITY, VIII. 175-204; II. 67; IV. 42; VII. 46, 292.
- Rabelais, VI. 253; XI. 417, 441; quoted, VII. 20; VIII. 185.
- Race, XI. 30, 338; and individual, XI. 430.
- Races of men, V. 44, 140; VI. 7, 16, 35, 44, 90; XI. 30, 101, 144; XII. 26; ruled by a thought, XII. 81.
- Radiance of personal charm, II. 181; VI. 301.
- Radicalism, I. 297; is idealism, I. 319; III. 272; VI. 13. See, also, Conservatism.
- Ragged front of life, II. 249.
- Rag-merchant, Nature a, VI. 262.
- Railroads, a benefaction exceeding any intentional philanthropy, I. 13, 51; VI. 256; not for their builders, I. 374; no exchange for charity, XI. 183; iron of, is magician's rod, I. 364; VI. 121; Nature adopts, III. 19; how built, VI. 94; aesthetic value of, VI. 148, 256; VII. 161; VIII. 215; X. 226; XII. 392.
- Rain, the hermitage of Nature, I. 175; II. 227.
- Rainbow, IX. 86, 88, 126, 190, 242, 340; the eye makes, VI. 48.
- Raleigh, Sir Walter, IV. 14, 172; VIII. 311.
- Rambouillet, Hotel de, VII. 243; XI. 415.
- Rameau, Diderot's, VIII. 170.
- Randolph, John, quoted, XI. 200.
- Raphael, I. 206; II. 229, 362; VIII. 170, 219; XII. 232.
- Rarey, John S., VIII. 272.
- Rashness, no heaven for, II. 200.
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- Rate, man sets his own, II. 151.
- Rat and mouse revelation, VI. 209.
- Reaction, law of, II. 129; IV. 17, 83; VI. 215, 222, 226; VIII. 223, 232; IX. 13, 275; X. 192.
- Reading, I. 87-94; VII. 194-197, 220; VIII. 178, 295; X. 142, 157; XI. 499-508; good, VIII. 121; earth a reading-room, XII. 323; read proudly, II. 6, 62, 149, 164, 280; III. 233; VIII. 197; XI. 508; three rules for, VII. 197; value of, X. 256. See, also, Books.
- Real, in us alone avails, VI. 323; everybody who is real is open, V. 188; spiritual is, VI. 215; what is, I. 264.
- Realism, Goethe's, XII. 324.
- Realists, I. 157; III. 135; VI. 113; VIII. 106. See, also, Nominalist and Realist.
- Reality, channel to highest life is, III. 282; we crave, III. 274; elemental is moral sentiment, I. 289; III. 48, 133, 228, 237; IV. 149; V. 119, 187; X. 41; we are face to face with, X. 213, 493; XI. 236; XII. 55; is supreme good, IV. 63; the first thing that man demands of man, III. 133; poetry shows, VIII. 37 f; premium on, VI. 189.
- Reason, I. 27; and sense, I. 49, 102, 125, 129, 182, 295; IV. 23, 178; VI. 92; VII. 27, 50, 178, 262; IX. 68; deals with wholes, not with fractions, VIII. 157 f; infinite, I. 172; VII. 96.
- Receptivity, I. 194; enriches, I. 209, 210; II. 333, 334; III. 83; VII. 233, 302; VIII. 274, 296, 312; X. 82, 99; demands outlet, III. 51; intellect is, I. 164; II. 268; III. 27; X. 306.
- Recesses of life, I. 248.
- Recluse, the, his thoughts of society, III. 238, 241; VII. 12.
- Rectitude, wisdom does not seek a literal, I. 148, 215, 302; II. 122; III. 98, 164; genius takes its rise from, IV. 145; VI. 216; safeguards of, X. 85, 208.
- Red Jacket, quoted, VII. 178, 328.
- Red slayer, IX. 195.
- Redeemer, man a, I. 324; XII. 332.
- Reed, Sampson, quoted, XII. 104.
- Refinement, VII. 32; XII. 198; entails loss of substance, II. 85.
- Reflection, ours the age of, I. 109; II. 131; thinking prior to, II. 327, 331.
- Reform, is in adaptation of means to ends, XII. 72 f.
- Reformation, licentiousness treads on heels of, II. 29.
- REFORMER, MAN THE, I. 225-256.
- Reformer, man born to be, I. 248; new class of, X. 346; why offensive, III. 261; does not trust inward life, I. 276.
- REFORMERS, NEW ENGLAND, III. 249-285.
- Reforms, compare with conservatism, I. 297-299; must construct, III. 58, 101, 260; IV. 171; dangers, X. 119; each one of a chain, I. 271; must begin with education, VI. 3, 140; not to be pursued as end, I. 214, 260, 269, 285; II. 271, 317; error in, I. 277-281; facility of, in America, XI. 529; must begin at home, III. 261; compare idea and fact, I. 271; now, I. 228; origin in moral sentiment, I. 272; pedantry of, III. 262; concerned with possibilities, I. 303; the soul of, I. 276; first a thought in one man, II. 4; compare with war, I. 284.
- Refrain, in songs, VIII. 48.
- Regrets, are false prayers, II. 78; the voices of debility, XII. 397.
- Rejection, value of, III. 276.
- Relations, personal, II. 149, 150, 172, 173; III. 50; VII. 14; of things, III. 182, 243; VII. 302; VIII. 17, 89.
- Relative and absolute, IV. 149.
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- Religion, abiding sentiment, X. 336; every act should be religious, VII. 132; ages, XI. 392; agreement in, IV. 52; X. 226; XI. 490; American, X. 212; antidote to commercial spirit, XII. 197; base tone, II. 95; changes, VIII. 328; X. 104, 113, 207, 217, 223; charm of old, I. 220; XI. 287; of the present day childish, VI. 207, 239; glozes over crime, X. 114; a crab fruit, VI. 214; not to be crystallized, V. 225; the flowering of culture, VI. 204; XII. 197; in daily life, IV. 122; X. 199; decay, VI. 204, 208, 213; X. 112, 204, 217; XI. 392; defined, VI. 219; not distinct from life, X. 199; in disguise in barbarous mind, V. 216; VI. 207; XII. 193; disputes, II. 238, 239; X. 325; emancipator, XII. 204; is emotion in presence of universal mind, X. 198; endogenous, V. 225; of English, V. 217-230; enthusiasm, II. 281; essence lost by reliance on institutions, I. 321; and ethics, I. 58; VI. 207; X. 212; everywhere, XI. 486; will not fall out, VI. 204; false were once true, X. 103; disuse of forms, X. 107; formal, Christ's not a, XI. 22; of future, X. 209; geographical, X. 203; growth alarms, X. 118, 222; formal religion a hoax, VIII. 164; XI. 289; truly human, XI. 479, 489; not to be imported, X. 111; individualism in, X. 118; inexpugnable, VI. 213; X. 117; influence, I. 124, 125; V. 215; XII. 198; and intellect, XI. 497; must be intellectual, VI. 240; an iron belt, X. 204; liberal, X. 116, 204; the question of modern times, XII. 88; morbidness, IV. 97; rises from moral sentiment, X. 113, 208; narrowness, X. 106; XI. 487; national, V. 214; X. 106; natural, I. 58; X. 112, 208; XI. 487; need, X. 117; negative, I. 282; in New England, XII. 195; to say there is no religion is like saying there is no sun, VI. 213; estimated by numbers, II. 294, 295; object, X. 222; not occasional, VII. 133; opinions, VIII. 211; X. 223; great men its patrons, IV. 4; above persons, XII. 88 f; is sometimes pew-holding, X. 228; power, I. 124; V. 215; XII. 198; primeval, X. 297; and property, I. 320, 321; is the public nature, VI. 204; by proxy, I. 273; quoted, X. 111; reaction, X. 204; the most refining of all influences, XII. 198; of revelation, I. 3; revivals, X. 282; revolution in, VI. 208; X. 330; parodied by ritual, VIII. 164; science the source of revolution, X. 335; search for, VI. 203; XI. 392; dependent on seasons, III. 51; secret, V. 231; sects, X. 113; and self-dependence, XI. 487; shallowness, X. 229; surface-action, X. 224; and solitude, VI. 241; spasmodic, XI. 315; Swedenborg's influence on, IV. 122; X. 330; symbolism in, leads to error, III. 35; test, X. 228; theatrical, V. 229; time-serving, I. 320; of to-day, VI. 213; traditions losing hold, X. 113, 217; universal, VI. 204; X. 223; XI. 486; cannot rise above votary, VI. 205; war in name of, XI. 152; welcomed, VII. 301; and woman, XI. 412; of world, XI. 489. See, also, Christianity, Theology.
- Remedial forces, II. 126; X. 151.
- Remember, you will not, III. 68.
- Reminiscence, Plato's doctrine of, IV. 86, 96.
- Remorse, joy in, IX. 23.
- Remoteness of persons, II. 196.
- Renan, Ernest, quoted, VIII. 106; X. 245.
- Renovator must himself be renovated, III. 261.
- ...
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- Renunciations of the poet, III. 41.
- Repetitions, XII. 57; no repetitions in world, II. 83, 84.
- Reporter, the writer as, IV. 263; VIII. 30.
- Repose, VI. 159; XI. 531; choose between truth and, II. 341.
- Representatives, what they must represent, X. 50 f.
- REPUBLIC, THE FORTUNE OF THE, XI. 509-544.
- Republics, III. 210, 211; XI. 517.
- Repudiation, you cannot repudiate but once, I. 389.
- Reputations, decline of, I. 267; IV. 32; do not be impatient of false, III. 284; slavery to, VII. 164, 326; unaccounted for, III. 89.
- Resemblances, lover dislikes, II. 178; Nature full of, I. 43, 44; II. 15; IV. 123; VIII. 7, 336.
- Reserve, VII. 230 ff, 249.
- Residuum, unknown, in every man, II. 306.
- Resistance, sweet satisfaction of, XII. 207.
- RESOURCES, VIII. 135-154; I. 149, 158; VIII. 210; X. 69, 77; XII. 25.
- Respect, men respectable only as they respect, X. 205.
- Responsibility, need of, VI. 278; XI. 173, 291.
- Rest, VIII. 282; XII. 60; by alternation of employment, VIII. 149; man not made for, XII. 60; motion and, III. 180, 194; and rust, I. 350.
- Restlessness, our education fosters, II. 82; VIII. 22; X. 236, 245.
- Results, III. 69; respect for, V. 221 f; X. 279.
- Retirement, need not be unsocial, I. 342; VI. 134; VII. 227; X. 236.
- Retribution, in soul of man, I. 122; what is, II. 102, 121; X. 193, 197; XI. 186, 198, 239, 389.
- Retz, Cardinal de, quoted, VI. 182, 300; VIII. 196.
- Revelation, disclosure of the soul, II. 280, 282, 294, 335; VI. 251; VIII. 344; X. 114; not at an end, I. 134; persons on the eve of a, VI. 133.
- Reverence, a great part of friendship, II. 209; due from man to man, II. 63; VII. 15, 253; for the past, II. 56; for what is above us, X. 205 f.
- Revision of our manner of life, II. 161.
- Revivals, religious, II. 282; VI. 208; X. 282.
- Revolution, American. See American Revolution.
- Revolutions, come from new ideas, I. 285; II. 4; III. 219; X. 249, 253, 328; XI. 135, 161, 342, 406, 514, 530.
- Reward, cannot be escaped, II. 102; III. 283; VI. 231, 234; VIII. 303; X. 197.
- Reynolds, Sir Joshua, quoted, VIII. 290 f; XII. 232.
- REX, IX. 357.
- RHEA, To, IX. 9.
- Rhetoric, power to detach and magnify, II. 354, 355; IV. 59, 135; VI. 294; VII. 64; X. 169, 334; XII. 219; qualities of, XII. 283-303.
- RHODORA, THE, IX. 37.
- Rhyme, in Nature, III. 25; IV. 110; VI. 46; VII. 53; VIII. 45, 56; IX. 54, 311; XII. 343; ripples in, IX. 54; in things, IX. 69, 123.
- Rhythm of Nature, IV. 141; IX. 122.
- Rich men, I. 239, 244, 253-255; II. 7; who is rich, III. 99, 153, 174, 191, 206; IV. 4, 59; VI. 88, 94, 117, 261, 266; VII. 118, 141, 170; VIII. 100; X. 45 f, 455; the rich man is he in whom people are rich, VI. 97. See, also, Riches, Wealth.
- Richard of Devizes, quoted, VI. 206.
- RICHES, IX. 374; I. 236, 249, 316; man needs to be rich, VI. 85, 88, 99, 323. See, also, Rich Men, Wealth.
- ...
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- Richter, Jean P. F., quoted, II. 179; XI. 350 f.
- Rider, a good, the mark of, VI. 144; X. 58.
- Ridicule, peculiar to man, VIII. 163; as remedy, VIII. 147; shun, VIII. 98.
- Ridiculous, must expect to seem, II. 261.
- Right, basis of things, XI. 354; liberates, IX. 79; XI. 168, 231, 320, 525; XII. 46; meaning of, I. 25; measure of, I. 336; II. 50, 70, 116; III. 59, 213; X. 88, 93, 192, 197; and wrong together, III. 262.
- Rights, human, discussion of, III. 64; XI. 229; equality, III. 201; eternal, IX. 209; XI. 178; higher, III. 219, 255.
- RIPLEY, EZRA, D. D., X. 379-395; his life, X. 381; prayers, X. 386; scholarly, X. 391; simplicity, X. 390; masterly work, X. 390; speech, X. 392.
- Ripples, IX. 54, 321 ff.
- Ritualism, VI. 208; X. 104.
- River, taught to make carpets, XI. 539; of delusions, IV. 20; emblematic, I. 27, 300; man's impiety toward, VII. 254; perpetual gala, I. 19; good-natured, VII. 27; intellect, a river from unknown source, II. 268; III. 4; makes own shores, VIII. 247; XII. 16; of thoughts and events, IV. 190; IX. 248, 364.
- RIVER, THE, IX. 385.
- RIVERS, TWO, IX. 248.
- Roads, air, XII. 392; American rage for, I. 363; meters of civilization, X. 178; XI. 542; mended with diamonds, VIII. 106; vent for industry, VII. 22; through solidest things, III. 243.
- ROBBINS, REV. CHANDLER, HYMN AT ORDINATION OF, IX. 223.
- Robespierre, eloquence, VIII. 130.
- Robin Hood, XII. 359.
- Robinson Crusoe, as model of writing, X. 457.
- Rochester, Earl of, V. 124; quoted, VII. 239.
- Rockets, stars of heaven packed into, XII. 9.
- Rock, of ages, VIII. 284; IX. 355; X. 69; XII. 51; teaches firmness, I. 42, 300; made of gases, III. 180; VII. 143; X. 70, 271.
- Rodney, Admiral, V. 68.
- Rogues, under the cassock, X. 228; in politics, VI. 66, 211; X. 87; the choice of sensible persons, XI. 524.
- Roman, buildings, I. 245; VII. 40; conversation, VII. 242; education, III. 257; and Greek character, VIII. 318.
- Roman Catholic Church, influence, V. 216 f; X. 203, 227; peculiar rites, XI. 3, 12, 415.
- Romance, the root of, II. 257, 349; the life of man the true romance, III. 285; VII. 9, II, 216; X. 166.
- Romantic era not past, I. 109.
- ROMANY GIRL, THE, IX. 227.
- Romany patois, XII. 285.
- Rome, Caesar called his house, I. 76; charm, XII. 185; pictures, II. 361; sculpture galleries, VII. 51.
- ROME, WRITTEN AT, IX. 396.
- Romilly, Sir Samuel, V. 64, 90 f, 97, 108, 154, 224.
- Rope of sand, for little Asmodeus, VI. 173; VIII. 149; IX. 334; history of persecution is, II. 119.
- Rose color, soul has no, II. 290.
- Roses, language, I. 1; IX. 29, 126; otto of, X. 173; live in present, II. 67; renew their races, VIII. 41; red, through thee, II. 189; regal acts like, II. 127; rival of, IX. 38; Saadi's intoxication from, IV. 143; shames man, II. 67.
- Rose-water to wash negro white, VII. 163.
- Rotation, the law of Nature and of
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- man, III. 239, 242; Nature's remedy, IV. 19, 175; X. 46.
- Rothschild, VI. 75, 105.
- Rousseau, Jean Jacques, III. 274.
- Routine, acts of, II. 320; power of, VI. 77, 212; X. 153; XI. 170; XII. 59.
- Rowing and backing water, III. 266.
- Rubbish of Nature conceals useful results, I. 39.
- RUBIES, IX. 217.
- Ruby, chalk becomes, IX. 300.
- Rude people, how reached, VI. 172.
- Ruffian smoothed, II. 99.
- Ruins, men are, VII. 108.
- Rulers, natural, X. 121; physiognomy of, VI. 300; VIII. 80, 232; potency of good, XI. 318.
- Rules, easy, X. 153; not final, X. 225.
- Rum, good to tax, VII. 31.
- Rush, Dr. Benjamin, VII. 286.
- Rushworth, John, quoted, V. 308.
- Ruskin, John, quoted, VIII. 335.
- Russell, Lord William, I. 21.
- Ruts of custom, I. 250.
- Rydal Mount, V. 19, 294.
- SAADI, IX. 129-135; IV. 143; VII. 208, 223; VIII. 64; quoted, IV. 216; V. 27; VI. 95, 298 f; VII. 317; VIII. 121; IX. 320, 325; XI. 236.
- Sabbath, jubilee of world, I. 150, 220, 321; III. 251; VII. 169; X. 373; made unlovely, I. 137; odoriferous, XII. 194. See, also, Sunday.
- Saccharine principle, predominance of, II. 227, 317, 318.
- Sachem, head of, II. 16.
- Sacred Band, I. 382; X. 327; XI. 480.
- SACRIFICE, IX. 296; of small for great things, I. 256. See Self-sacrifice.
- Safety, bought by ourselves, VIII. 104.
- Sagas, Norse, V. 57, 59; VII. 258.
- Sahara, is man's fault, X. 349; XII. 183.
- Sailors, life of, V. 30; VII. 263.
- Sainte-Beuve, quoted, VIII. 94.
- St.-Evremond, Charles, X. 354.
- St. Just, Antoine L., quoted, VIII. 85.
- St. Pierre, Bernardin de, quoted, X. 184.
- St. Simon, C. H., Comte de, III. 264; quoted, VIII. 142.
- St. Vitus's dance, X. 224, 267.
- Saints, a slight taint of burlesque attaches to, I. 355; III. 79; history of, made universal, IV. 210; the only logicians, I. 194; not good executive officers, VI. 65; satiety of, IV. 174; self-respect of, III. 131; VIII. 313; cannot spare, XI. 488.
- Salad, grown by electro-magnetism, III. 195.
- Saliency, habit of, divine effort in man, VIII. 72; XII. 59, 359.
- Salisbury Cathedral, V. 66, 285.
- Salisbury Plain, V. 276, 281.
- Sallust, quoted, I. 20.
- Salt, truth a better preserver, VIII. 340.
- Saltations, I. 180; III. 68; VIII. 72.
- Salvator, I. 206; IX. 89.
- Same, IV. 49; IX. 140.
- Sample men, IV. 81.
- Samson, IX. 348.
- Samson, Abbot, X. 357; XII. 381.
- Sanborn, F. B., verses on Samuel Hoar, X. 435.
- San Carlo, IV. 174.
- Sanctity, IV. 94.
- Sanctorius, VI. 132.
- Sanctuary, of heart, I. 279; house a, VII. 132; IX. 354.
- Sand, George, IV. 278; V. 31; VI. 170; VII. 213 ff; quoted, VII. 215; VIII. 290.
- Sand, ropes of. See Rope.
- Sandemanians, feet-washing, XI. 11.
- Sanitary Commission, XI. 480, 538.
- Sanity, what is, VI. 277 f; VII. 91.
- ...
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- Sannups, IX. 142; XI. 51.
- San Salvador, wee, IX. 235.
- Santa Croce, church, XII. 243.
- Saranac, IX. 182.
- Sarona, VIII. 66.
- Sarsena, V. 278.
- Satellites, be not a satellite, I. 90; human arts satellites to Nature, VII. 40.
- Saturn, I. 296.
- Saturnalia, transcendentalism the saturnalia of faith, I. 338.
- Sauce-pan, Macaulay reduces intellect to, V. 247.
- Saurian, IV. 80; V. 60; VI. 15; VII. 171; IX. 245.
- Saurin, Jacques, quoted, X. 337.
- Savages, advantages, II. 84, 85; VI. 71; VII. 20, 151; arts, VIII. 215, 324; converse in figures, I. 26, 29; war of, XI. 151.
- Savant, everybody knows as much as the savant, II. 330; Napoleon and, X. 253; a pedant, VII. 182; VIII. 18; XII. 8.
- Savarin, Brillat, VIII. 150.
- Savoyards, who whittled up their pine-trees, I. 97.
- Saxe, Marshall, saying, VII. 263.
- Saxon race, citizens, XI. 262; democratic, V. 74; despair, X. 85; in England, V. 51 f, 74; face, V. 67; hands of mankind, V. 76; leaders, VI. 32, 90; VII. 287; friendly to liberty, XI. 147; merchants, VI. 90; moral sentiment, V. 311; precision, V. 236; privacy, X. 365; Protestants, V. 47; sturdiness, V. 174; training, VI. 32; type, V. 54; woman of, XI. 414; workers, V. 74.
- Sayer and doer, III. 6.
- Saying, not what you say, but what you are is heard, VI. 226 f; VIII. 96.
- Scandinavians, V. 52, 66, 137. See, also, Norsemen.
- Scaurus, Marcus AEmilius, VI. 195.
- Scenery, influence, II. 147; III. 176; VI. 160.
- Scheherezade, VII. 70; X. 81.
- Schelling, quoted, V. 242; VI. 13.
- Schiller, III. 89; quoted, VI. 254; VIII. 185, 329.
- Schisms of 1820, X. 325.
- Schlegel, quoted, X. 169.
- Schlemihl, Peter, X. 20.
- SCHOLAR, THE, X. 259-289; I. 79-115, 158-185; needs action, I. 95; aims, III. 269; asceticism, I. 176, 187; awkwardness, VIII. 82; bifold life, II. 233; and books, VII. 109, 189, 195; X. 288; born too soon, X. 242; brave, I. 104; a candle, VII. 11; VIII. 310 f; X. 273; sacrificed to be courtier and diner-out, XII. 9; defection of, XII. 121, 127; discipline, I. 173-185; duties, I. 100, 104; VIII. 230; X. 247, 252, 262, 288; effeminacy, VII. 275; egotism, XII. 7; enthusiasm, X. 273; XII. 23; every man a, X. 248; XI. 218; victim of expression, III. 66; failures, I. 155; faith, I. 250; and farming or gardening, VI. 114; gifts, III. 269; X. 275, 278, 283; and giddy girl, II. 151; wants gossips, VII. 246; habits, VIII. 296; X. 250; favorite of Heaven, I. 155; and heredity, VI. 164; heroism of, needed, XII. 113-117; bringer of hope, I. 193; idealist, VIII. 230; X. 254, 264; XII. 384; carrier of ideas, X. 248; independent of his times, X. 247; influenced by mind of Past, I. 87; indifferentism, XI. 242; represents intellect, IV. 264; VIII. 302; X. 275; irritability, VI. 138; labor, VIII. 311, 341; X. 273; a leader, I. 84; in what his learning consists, VII. 179; stands for liberty, X. 247; XI. 241; a literary foundation, VII. 110; his the white lot, X. 241; in a lumber-camp, X. 493; is man thinking, I. 84; manliness, VIII.
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- 127; men of the world, I. 94, 100, 229; VI. 137, 183; X. 280; not one, but many in one, I. 155, 156; accepts poverty and solitude, I. 101, 167, 181; X. 288; prophetic function, I. 181; X. 242; priest of thought, I. 191; resources, I. 158-166; ridicule of, IV. 266; realist, I. 157; his secret, VIII. 313; self-centred, I. 102, 113; self-denial, II. 341; as speaker, VIII. 127; speech of, XII. 285; his subject, I. 166-173; his superiorities, X. 241; everything his teacher, XII. 128; patron of new thought, I. 291; power over thoughts, XII. 43; nothing is valueless to, I. 184, 185; wariness, VII. 249; wealth an impediment, VIII. 297; the weather fits his moods, VII. 169; has wiser men around him, VII. 244; alone knows world, I. 102; must work, I. 181, 182; not to defend wrong, X. 247; victory, X. 249. See, also, Literary Ethics, and below.
- SCHOLAR, THE AMERICAN, I. 79-115.
- School-boys, VI. 59; VII. 120; IX. 165; X. 139.
- School-girls, X. 81; XII. 106.
- School-house, old, VII. 168.
- Schools, X. 148 ff; cheapest police, XI. 196. See Education.
- Schopenhauer, VIII. 138.
- Science, aids to man, II. 368, 369; VI. 165, 218; aim, I. 4; finding analogy, I. 86; at arm's length from its objects, VI. 281; attraction, I. 69; beginnings of, IV. 47; empirical, I. 66, 74; effect on man, VI. 284; English, V. 253; lessons should be experimental, III. 258; eye of, VIII. 71; destroys fictions of church, X. 336; formulas of no value except for owner, VI. 284; generalizations, IV. 80; half sight of, I. 69; lacks a human side, IV. 10; VI. 282; debt to imagination, VIII. 10; a search for identity, VI. 314; VIII. 7; jealous of theory, VI. 284; miracles, VIII. 207; continuation into morals, VI. 219; VIII. 228; motive, VI. 284; shows genesis of man, VIII. 8; its motive the extension of man into nature, VI. 283; pedantry, VIII. 168; Plutarch on, X. 309 f; and poetry, III. 20; VIII. 57; praise of, IX. 193; of sciences, IV. 62; index of self-knowledge, III. 15; VIII. 41, 220; sensual and superficial, III. 14; why study, X. 130; teachings of, XII. 87; unity of, X. 264; coincidence with virtue, IV. 83; wonder the seed of, VII. 158.
- Sciences, correlation, VIII. 222; like sportsmen, IV. 63.
- Scipio, II. 255; Scipionism of, II. 83.
- Scot, paying, II. 112; VI. 90.
- Scotch, estimate of wealth, X. 245.
- Scotland, V. 53; XII. 186.
- SCOTT, WALTER, XI. 461-467; XI. 279; boy's delight, VI. 312; IX. 240; and Byron, VIII. 318; XI. 464; novels, III. 148; poetry, V. 256; XI. 463; XII. 318, 368; power, X. 54, 314; and Wordsworth, V. 297 f; works, I. 172; II. 35, 247; III. 148; X. 462; quoted, III. 133; VI. 303; VII. 182; X. 4.
- Scougal, Henry, X. 203, 227; XII. 194.
- Screens, III. 41, 135.
- Scribatiousness, VII. 211.
- Scriblerus Club, Berkeley at, III. 273.
- Scriptures, Christian, VII. 218; fragmentary, I. 151, 211; V. 218, 225; Oriental, VII. 218; VIII. 15, 182, 213; XI. 490. See, also, Bible.
- Sculptor, finds form in marble, IX. 298.
- Sculpture, ancient is moral, VI. 306; VII. 51 f; Michael Angelo's art, IX. 298; XII. 229; and architecture, IV. 194; become effete, I. 367; II. 364; Greek, II. 15, 24,
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- 302; Greenough's theory of, V. 5; as history, III. 108; laws of, II. 179, 180, 354, 355, 364; III. 24, 38, 137, 234; VII. 44; office of, II. 356; teaches manners, VI. 159; Phidias, IX. 6; tranquillity of, XII. 411; true, VII. 50. See, also, Art.
- Scythe, sound of, in June mornings, II. 228.
- Sea, spray from antediluvian, V. 50; attraction, V. 26; VII. 171; beauty and might of, XII. 153 f; bellowing, IX. 5; takes Boston in its arms, IX. 212; cemetery, V. 29; chiding, IX. 242; road of civilization, VII. 21; IX. 293; of circumstance, II. 120; of delusion, VII. 98; genius a diver in, I. 162; dread of, V. 26, 29; drinking, IV. 112; drop outweighs, II. 189; drowns ship and sailor like a grain of dust, VI. 32; educator of the race, XII. 152; and English Empire, V. 33; Intellect a sea, XII. 15; of knowledge, VI. 271; life on, V. 28 f; masculine, V. 31; mastery, VI. 32, 89; VIII. 308; might, V. 30; poet, lord of, III. 42; Britain's ring of marriage, V. 41; educates the sailor, VII. 21; of science, III. 40; thorough-base of, VIII. 56 f; of thought, I. 45, 345; IX. 139; time, passing away as, I. 145; II. 26. See, also, Ocean.
- Seal and print, Nature and Truth, IV. 117.
- Seas, sail with God the seas, II. 260.
- Sea-shell, record of the animal's life, I. 300; England's crest, V. 111.
- SEASHORE, IX. 242; I. 168, 266; IV. 55; VII. 21; VIII. 289; XII. 183.
- Seasonable things, VII. 231; conversation, VII. 3, 64, 230.
- Seasons, I. 18, 28; thought of, XII. 150-152; dance of, IX. 62, 190; religious sentiment dependent on, III. 51.
- Seceder from the seceders, I. 305.
- Secession, peaceable, XI. 323.
- Second sight, ethical, IV. 84; VI. 305; VIII. 21; pseudo-spiritualist, X. 21.
- Secret, of God, VI. 217; VIII. 334; cannot be hidden, VI. 223; with key of, he marches faster, IX. 357; of Nature, IX. 13-25; of success, VI. 246; of world, III. 11, 243; X. 238.
- Secret societies, XI. 527.
- Secrets, all told, II. 102; VI. 223; not shown except to sympathy and likeness, II. 145-147; IV. 161; VII. 242.
- Sectarianism, makes false, II. 54; science destroys, VIII. 211; XII. 6.
- Sects, narrowing, X. 227; XI. 490; shifting, X. 113, 118; XI. 488.
- SECURITY, IX. 388.
- Securities, insecure, VI. 108.
- Seeds, I. 28; III. 186; IV. 35; produce their like, VI. 124, 231; VII. 103; X. 260; XII. 414.
- Seeing, we see what we make, II. 148 f, 257; III. 79, 177; VI. 15; VIII. 41; and doing, VI. 74; XII. 53, 157; upside down, XII. 158.
- Seek nothing, II. 293; IX. 134, 271.
- Seeker, endless, I. 186; II. 286, 287, 318.
- Seeming and being, II. 160; VI. 215 f; IX. 384; X. 29, 47.
- Seen, teaches us of unseen, II. 146; VIII. 337.
- Seer, I. 93; a sayer, I. 134; XII. 380.
- Selden, John, quoted, VII. 10; X. 108 f; XI. 505.
- Self, aboriginal, II. 63; fleeing from, II. 81, 82; is God in us, I. 131, 132, 288; condition of our incarnation in a self, I. 165; insist on, II. 83; leave to be one's, VII. 229; supplants all relative existence, III. 77.
- Self-absolution, II. 74.
- Self-accusation, II. 317; III. 271.
- Self-adapting strength, XII. 415.
- ...
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- Self-centred, X. 264.
- Self-command, I. 43; VIII. 85; X. 156, 163.
- Self-communion, X. 236.
- Self-consciousness, VII. 3 f.
- Self-content, III. 132.
- Self-control, VI. 195; VIII. 86, 126; X. 156.
- Self-counsel, II. 262.
- Self-culture, IV. 288.
- Self-defence, VII. 260; XI. 168.
- Self-denial, I. 220; II. 341; VI. 155; XII. 395.
- Self-estimates, III. 271.
- Self-existence, II. 70.
- Self-government, III. 219.
- Self-gratulation, IV. 28.
- Self-heal, III. 194.
- Self-healing, I. 73.
- Self-help, the only help, I. 246; II. 77, 78; X. 183, 251; XI. 144, 155, 487.
- Selfish, all sensible people are, IV. 176; VI. 276.
- Selfishness, I. 232, 246; our history the history of, I. 252; ours makes others, I. 279, 280; self-punishing, III. 276; VI. 133; X. 64; XII. 313, 317, 395; root of, VI. 135.
- Self-knowledge, II. 37; VIII. 41; IX. 14; X. 9.
- Self-love, VI. 135; VII. 253.
- Self-poise, III. 137; VI. 203.
- Self-possession, II. 237; VI. 159, 186; X. 102.
- Self-preservation, I. 374.
- Self-recovery, I. 66; III. 81.
- SELF-RELIANCE, II. 43-90; IX. 394; I. 279, 324, 334, 335; II. 344; III. 131, 260; VI. 186, 190; VII. 7, 292; IX. 395; X. 57, 60, 65, 83, 143, 206, 254; XI. 172, 235, 522, 534.
- Self-respect, I. 101, 102, 392; II. 47, 162; III. 136; V. 146, 295; not measured by number of clean shirts, VI. 247; VIII. 303, 307, 313; X. 36 f, 87; XI. 487.
- Self-sacrifice, attractiveness of, I. 122; VII. 253; VIII. 106, 343. See Sacrifice.
- Self-similar woods, IX. 186.
- Self-sufficingness, III. 99; VIII. 80, 103.
- Self-trust, the reason of, I. 100, 104, 106, 131, 144, 145, 156, 207, 208; II. 65, 250-252; III. 78, 81, 260; VII. 292, 295; X. 15, 37, 65. See, also, Self-Reliance.
- Senator, Senators, anecdote of two, VIII. 331 f; eloquence of, VIII. 113, 114; his office an apology, III. 218; Mr. Summer, XI. 248 f; tameness of, XI. 133.
- Seneca, quoted, VIII. 283; X. 311.
- Sensation, ascent to thought, VIII. 24; and morals, IV. 149.
- Senses, pleasure severed from needs of character, II. 103; despotic at short distances, I. 49, 157, 181; III. 138; education, VI. 213; fool of, III. 185; and imagination, VI. 303; imprison us, VIII. 23; overpowering influence, II. 272; interference, VI. 311; life of, III. 246; men of, IV. 153; ministry of, XII. 37; give representations only, I. 311; secret, XII. 32; skeptics, VII. 144; collect surface facts, VIII. 24; not final, I. 311; prudence the virtue of, II. 222.
- Sensibility, is all, III. 175; VII. 295; defined, XII. 61; fountain of right thought, VII. 301, 305, 328; VIII. 201, 223; X. 82, 230; XII. 42.
- Sensible men, rare, VIII. 304.
- Sensualism, II. 103, 231, 232; III. 54; VII. 121; X. 150, 151; XI. 531.
- Sentence, illusion in, VIII. 195; none holds whole truth, III. 245; reason for, II. 153.
- Sentiment, measure of action, II. 155; Americans deaf to, I. 249; beauty depends on sentiment it inspires, VI. 299 f; X. 55, 274; is color, VII. 300; consolation of life, VIII. 104; conversation excludes,
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- VII. 231; counterfeit, VIII. 105; illumination, VII. 296; largest is truest, IV. 139; law, II. 102; the inside aspect of life the means of its expression, X. 274; power, II. 172; XII. 210; moral, see Moral sentiment; realm, X. 83; religious, XI. 236; advantages of renouncing generous sentiment, IV. 228; sail of the ship of humanity, XI. 407; starving, X. 56; thought imbosomed in, X. 185; wise, VIII. 347; Woman the, XI. 407; never loses its youth, X. 235.
- Sentimentalism, VIII. 105; Nature no sentimentalist, VI. 6.
- SEPTEMBER, IX. 361.
- Sepulture, forms of, as the history of religion, VIII. 324.
- Sequestration, by intellect, II. 345; III. 106.
- Sequoias, VII. 148; VIII. 334.
- Seraphim, love most, II. 345.
- Serenity, the charm of manners, III. 137; VI. 296; X. 56.
- Sermons of the early times, X. 106 f.
- Seruzier, Col., quoted, IV. 234.
- Servants, false relations to, I. 252, 253; VI. 275 f.
- Service, being served an onerous business, III. 163 ff; blessing of, III. 277; none direct, IV. 7 f; doing a, II. 293; greatness is, IX. 203; XII. 205; does not join us to others, but only likeness, III. 165; always remunerated, VI. 231; X. 192; truth serves all, IX. 118; X. 211; the virtue of all beings, XI. 297, 541 f.
- Sets in society, VIII. 90.
- Settled, the wish to be, II. 320, 342.
- Seventeenth century writing, V. 236.
- Seward, William H., XI. 330.
- Sex, IV. 129; VI. 58; XI. 415, 425; two sexes in English mind, V. 67.
- Sexual attraction, VI. 134; VII. 324.
- Seyd, VI. 279; IX. 13, 275, 304, 320.
- Shadows, institutions shadows of men, II. 61; rhymes to the eye, VIII. 45; point to sun, II. 155; the world the shadow of the soul, I. 95, 334; II. 197; III. 76; VIII. 23.
- Shah Nameh, VIII. 241.
- Shakers, IV. 267; VI. 66, 203, 237; flowers, IX. 93.
- SHAKSPEARE, IV. 187-219; IX. 296; XI. 445-453; IX. 222; advantages, IV. 192; his sentences aërolites, IV. 208; Ariel, VIII. 43; autograph, III. 63; Delia Bacon on, VIII. 197; best-bred man, III. 148; his own biographer, IV. 208; external biography, IV. 205 f; cheerfulness, IV. 215; classified facts, in mind of, II. 333; common sense, VIII. 3; creative power, IV. 212; VIII. 44; debt to others, IV. 195; VI. 58; VII. 53; VIII. 191; dialogue, III. 148; in earnest, VII. 53; without egotism, XII. 326; without effort, VII. 182; and English history, VII. 197; equality in all his work, VIII. 72; XII. 50; exactitude of mind, V. 234; most expressive man, X. 173; unites extremes, XI. 450; Falstaff, VIII. 160, 250; generalizations, V. 241, 243; called out German genius, XII. 312; and Goethe, VIII. 69; XII. 327; humanity, II. 288; XI. 453; Imogen, V. 108; made up of important passages, VIII. 33; influence, I. 91; greatness of his inspiration, II. 289; best known of men, IV. 209 f; not known to his time, II. 31; VIII. 194; Lear, VIII. 28, 30; gives a feeling of longevity, II. 273; lyric quality, IV. 214; in maiden's heart, IX. 313; unmeasured, IX. 239, 296; chief merit, IV. 15; metre of culture, XI. 448; XII. 295; and Milton, XII. 253; miraculous, VIII. 275; imperial muse, I. 52; power of subordinating Nature to purposes of expression, I. 52; organ of mankind, II 108; no non resistant, I. 99, 100
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- XI. 172; perception of identity, IV. 18; personality, XII. 275; Platonist, IV. 88; use of Plutarch, X. 296; poet of human race, IV. 202; philosopher and dramatist, IV. 210; knows poverty, VI. 261; popular power, X. 54; XI. 441; realism, VIII. 27; richness, III. 41; keenness of sense, XII. 365; on study, VII. 196; style, IV. 15; XII. 293; and Swedenborg, IV. 94; Tempest, I. 54; robust thinker, XI. 450; unique, II. 83, 134; universality, II. 6; is a large utterance, XII. 294; value, I. 161; VIII. 220; versatility, VIII. 72; a voice merely, XII. 253; well read, VI. 141; wisdom, golden word, IV. 206; XII. 321; works unconscious, VII. 49; works imitated, I. 91; IV. 41; achievement as a youth, VII. 321; quoted, I. 34, 54, 109, 336; II. 37, 200, 252, 253, 361; IV. 88, 95, 207; V. 131, 291; VI. 258; VII. 65, 196; VIII. 152, 163; X. 44, 171; XI. 326; XII. 302, 350.
- Shakspeare of divines, IX. 8.
- Shakspearian, be a, IV. 29.
- Shams, IX. 254; in building, VI. 291.
- Sharpe, Granville, XI. 105, 110; quoted, XI. 136.
- Shaw, Col. Robert, IX. 208.
- Shelley, Percy B., VIII. 25; XII. 319; quoted, VIII. 325.
- Shell-fish, growth, I. 300; II. 18, 124; III. 25, 180; IV. 160.
- Shenstone, William, quoted, VIII. 93.
- Sheppard, Elizabeth S., quoted, VIII. 66.
- Sheridan, Richard B., VIII. 183; quoted, V. 178.
- Ships, V. 28; VI. 291; VII. 24; ship of heaven, X. 196; of humanity, XI. 407, 543; monarchy like, III. 211.
- Shirts, clean, the measure of self-respect, V. 84; VI. 247; X. 195; mankind in shirt-sleeves, XI. 526.
- Shop-bill, ethics in, II. 115.
- Shop-keeping, III. 64; XI. 123.
- Shop, talking, VIII. 98.
- Shopman, wrinkled, IX. 79.
- Shore, needed in shoving off, I. 305.
- Shot heard round the world, IX. 158.
- Should and would, VIII. 30.
- Shrewdness and wisdom contrasted, II. 118.
- Shyness, disease of, VII. 4, 7.
- Sibyls, writing, XII. 95.
- Sicily, VII. 69.
- Sick people, VI. 263, 266.
- Sickness, gets organized, I. 319; poor-spirited, III. 65; VI. 56, 133, 263; VIII. 98; a forbidden topic, VI. 196.
- Sidney, Algernon, quoted, X. 275.
- Sidney, Sir Philip, V. 112, 284; VIII. 44; XI. 281; quoted, II. 153.
- Sieve, the ear a, XII. 32.
- Sight, IV. 65.
- Sights and sounds, VIII. 23.
- Sign-boards of character, III. 53; VI. 175; X. 10.
- Signing-off, I. 143.
- Silence, better than discourse, II. 211, 311; VIII. 96; need of, I. 176; destroys personality, II. 343; XII. 260.
- Silenus, III. 155.
- Sills of state, XII. 205.
- Similar and same, X. 147.
- Simile, use, VIII. 11.
- Simonides, X. 476.
- Simorg, VIII. 240, 263.
- Simplicity, through complexity, IV. 290; greatness of, I. 165; II. 291; V. 186; VI. 289, 294; VII. 119; X. 55, 176.
- Sims, rendition of, XI. 290.
- Sin, II. 249; III. 78; IV. 137.
- Sinai, theatrical, V. 229.
- Sincerity, basis of talent as of character, XII. 31, 63; basis of recognition, VI. 193; gives lasting effect, II. 153; VI. 226 f; the luxury of, II. 202; more excellent than flattery,
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- II. 292; German, IV. 281; V. 116; gives force to eloquence, VIII. 130; great men sincere, VI. 212; VIII. 229; IX. 7; X. 256; XI. 288; XII. 31, 63; in defence of right, VII. 259; every sincere man is right, XII. 53.
- Sing-Sing in parlor, VII. 14.
- Sistine Chapel, VII. 131; XII. 226.
- Sitfast acres, IX. 36.
- Sixteen, sweet seriousness of, VI. 287.
- Sixty, man worth nothing until, VII. 321.
- Size and worth, VI. 189; IX. 235.
- Skates, wings or fetters, VI. 15.
- Skating, III. 59; VI. 32; VIII. 31.
- Skepticism, self-defence against crude sentiment, II. 31, 305; III. 65, 75, 270, 278; IV. 155 ff, 171 ff, 180; X. 218, 244 f; not to be feared, IV. 183; VI. 201 ff, 210, 214 f; X. 213, 223; is belief in luck, VIII. 138, 332; X. 279.
- Skill, comes of doing, VII. 321.
- Skull. See Phrenology.
- Sky, III. 172; do not leave the sky out of your landscape, VI. 196, 304; VII. 171; VIII. 72, 138; IX. 6, 190, 334.
- Skyey sentences, IV. 208.
- Sky-language, XII. 19.
- Slaughter-house, VI. 7; thinking, VIII. 332.
- Slave-drivers, theoretic, III. 53.
- Slavery, XI. 97-147, 179-214, 215-244, 297-311, 313-326, abolition, I. 280; XI. 247; American churches on, X. 114; influence on American government, XI. 258; Bible and, XI. 234; checking, XI. 303; compromises, I. 274; XI. 134, 303; conspiracy, XI. 297; greatest calamity, XI. 186; Cuba, I. 232; described, XI. 102 f; a destitution, XI. 297; disappearance, VIII. 142; bad economy, VII. 141; XI. 301; Edinburgh Review on, XI. 137; effects, XI. 259 f; in England, XI. 107; enigma of the time, XI. 391; evils, IX. 205; XI. 353, 125, 259, 300; freedom by religion, I. 280; XII. 342; we must get rid of slavery or else of freedom, XI. 147, 247; industrious, XI. 207; proof of infidelity, VI. 210; makes life a fever, XI. 247; mill for converting men into monkeys, XI. 227; resistance to it a nursery of orators, VII. 95; XI. 416; proslavery scholars, X. 247; selfishness, I. 280; VII. 162; suppression of, worth a generation, XI. 345; a good university, XI. 416; Webster and, XI. 181-205, 226; white, XI. 201; woman and, XI. 416; inconsistent with principles on which world is built, XI. 240.
- Slaves, buying, XI. 208; must be able to defend themselves, XI. 143; most men are, VI. 23; prices, X. 48; imprisoned spirits are, XI. 217.
- Slave-trade, I. 269; III. 94; XI. 102, 107 ff, 140; XII. 415.
- Sleep, a bar between day and day, V. 70; VIII. 273; those only can sleep who do not care to sleep, VII. 182; of children, XII. 99; takes off costume of circumstance, X. 9; divine communications in, VI. 197; enchantress, X. 3; lingers about our eyes, III. 45; the condition of health, VIII. 280; memory of, X. 5; XII. 107; life a sleep-walking, I. 107; marble, IX. 164; witchcraft, X. 3. See, also, Dreams.
- SLEEPY HOLLOW, ADDRESS AT CONSECRATION OF, XI. 427-437; sky is a Sleepy Hollow, XI. 434.
- Sleezy hours, VI. 82.
- Sloven continent, V. 288; plenty, XI. 526.
- Smartness, American love of, XI. 224; XII. 57.
- Smile, the forced smile in company, II. 55.
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- Smith, Adam, quoted, X. 430; XI. 335.
- Smith, Captain John, VIII. 165; quoted, XII. 189, 199.
- Smith, Sir Lionel, XI. 117, 120.
- Smith, Sydney, quoted, V. 102, 154, 197; VI. 247; VIII. 280.
- Snakes, blue vault shrivels like snake skin, X. 191; peril of, II. 315; doctrine of, VI. 91; VII. 177; IX. 77; as type of spine, IV. 108.
- Snow, a cloak, VIII. 144; property like, I. 37; shroud, IX. 233; and sunshine, IX. 220.
- Snow-ball, of memory, XII. 98.
- Snow-drift, II. 19; IX. 19.
- Snow-flakes, III. 172; IX. 206, 347.
- SNOW-STORM, THE, IX. 41; of illusions, VI. 325.
- Snuffle in religion, VI. 241.
- SOCIAL AIMS, VIII. 77-107.
- Social, barriers, VIII. 90; goods, VI. 163; machine, VI. 159; order, I. 304, 305; X. 190; pests, VI. 173; power, conditions of, V. 4; relations, III. 274; science, VIII. 208; X. 210; soul, II. 207; structure, I. 248; usages, II. 151; VII. 117.
- Social Circle, Concord, Mass., X. 381. See Notes.
- Socialism, I. 380; VI. 66, 97; X. 345 f.
- Societies, III. 130; X. 266. See Associations.
- Society, VII. 10-15; IX. 276; admission to, III. 143; never advances, II. 84; advantages, I. 311; III. 112; VII. 225; X. 141; aims, VI. 247; babyish, II. 75; VI. 92, 163; X. 280; bases, VII. 98; VIII. 106; caste in, III. 130; giant's castle to youth, III. 152; changes, X. 327; Channing's attempts at, X. 340; chemistry of, VII. 14; chooses for us, II. 75; inner circle of, III. 147; clothed with, VII. 10; and common sense, XII. 118; composition of, III. 204; in conspiracy against manhood of its members, II. 49, 203; constituents, I. 358; conventional, III. 139; for conversation, VII. 226; best cordial, VII. 225; intolerant of criticism, IV. 172; part of the idea of culture, X. 32; people descend to meet, II. 199, 278; VII. 13; a disappointment, II. 199; divides man, I. 83; dress, VIII. 87; empty, II. 311; favorites, III. 141; fine, VI. 247; fine traits unfit for, VII. 7; fit, found everywhere, VIII. 319; no fixity, III. 199; French definition of, III. 121; subject to fits of frenzy, X. 280; frivolous, III. 99; what is good, III. 121; threatened with granulation, X. 118; is a hospital, III. 268; a hospital committee, I. 319; ideal, VIII. 90; idolatrous, XII. 117; an illusion, I. 347; III. 199; VI. 312; infested with rude people, VI. 172; influenced by one man, III. 265, 280; swift in its instincts, VI. 186; welcomes intellect, III. 140; affinity its law, I. 123; VII. 14; life's value doubled by, VIII. 90; manners of, VI. 184; manners associate us, VI. 171; a masquerade, VI. 223; is in meeting best people, VII. 12; secret melancholy, III. 269; mercuries of, III. 133; moral power controls, I. 250; X. 65; moral sentiment its basis, I. 126; work of necessity, I. 304, 305, 313; III. 120; VII. 227, 244; need of literary class, IV. 269; needs noblemen, I. 387; need of one sane man, IV. 265; made up of partialities, XI. 422; a Pestalozzian school, IV. 31; poet's fabulous picture of, III. 175; poverty of invention, II. 365; a prison, III. 257; progressive, XI. 414; relations, II. 276-278; renovation, III. 261; retreat from, I. 334, 347, 348; X. 142; foolish routine, I. 175; rulers, III. 124; its sanity the balance of a thousand
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- insanities, III. 237; a school, IV. 31; X. 141; self-indulgence in, I. 246; shunned in order to be found, I. 175, 347; spoiled by too much pains, III. 112; stimulating, VII. 11; secret of success in, III. 141; harnessed in the team of, I. 250; on one's own terms, II. 214; timing and placing, VIII. 83; timorous, II. 75; troop of thinkers, VI. 58; trifles, I. 143; our inexperience of true, VII. 125; truth-lover in, VII. 241; does not love its unmakers, VI. 313; use of, I. 175; VII. 11; values inoffensive people, X. 345; vulgar, II. 143; VII. 13; a wave, II. 87; sacrificed to smooth working, I. 318.
- SOCIETY AND SOLITUDE, VII. 1-16.
- Socrates, II. 282; III. 30, 126; IV. 42 f, 59, 66, 70-71, 75, 83, 97, 140, 169, 288; VI. 252, 261; VII. 322; X. 308; XII. 63; misunderstood, II. 31, 58, 256; quoted, IV. 140, 157; VI. 267; VII. 64, 189, 302; XI. 448, 472; XII. 351.
- Soil, actions smack of, IX. 35; rights in, I. 308, 309.
- Solar system, IV. 184; not anxious about its credit, VI. 202; has its parallel in mental sphere, VIII. 39, 223.
- Soldiers, VI. 72; VII. 261 ff; X. 38; XI. 237; Concord's, XI. 358-379.
- Solidarity, English, V. 99; of men, VI. 226; VIII. 301; Nature's, VII. 143; VIII. 198; X. 83; in trade, VI. 101.
- Solidity, I. 331.
- Soliform eye, IV. 83.
- Solitariest man, X. 60.
- Solitariness, VII. 4, 9; XII. 396.
- Solitude, I. 173-175; VI. 155 ff; VII. 4, 9; IX. 129, 130, 332, 396; age tends to, X. 327; art of, X. 142; in cities, I. 7; consent to, I. 278; ripens despots, III. 238; fragrant, IX. 9; insulation not, I. 174; lessons of, IV. 216; VI. 156; VIII. 286, 310; X. 141; XI. 235; of nature not so essential as solitude of habit, I. 7; VI. 156, 268; VIII. 288; necessity of, I. 65, 173; VI. 259; VII. 6; populous, I. 137; VI. 269; VII. 169, 175; proud, VII. 13; Pythagoras oil, VI. 156; VIII. 286; revelations in, III. 85; VII. 15; the scholar's, I. 173, 174; secret of, XII. 320; and society, I. 175, 342; II. 54; VII. 15; of soul without God, X. 221; trespass not on, X. 143; voices heard in, II. 49; XII. 103.
- Solomon, in Persian poetry, VIII. 240, 249; IX. 304.
- Solstices, of health and spirits, VI. 147, 218; X. 219.
- SOLUTION, IX. 220-223.
- Somers, Lord, quoted, V. 261.
- Somnambulism, X. 25.
- SONG OF NATURE, IX. 244-247.
- Songs, essentials of, VII. 182; VIII. 59 f; of pine, IX. 51; power of, IX. 121, 122, 367; of Merlin, IX. 218.
- Sons of poor men, VII. 119.
- Sophocles, quoted, III. 72; X. 313; XI. 193.
- Sordor, I. 76.
- Sorrow, IX. 355; XII. 405, 410; religion of, I. 220. See, also, Grief.
- Soul, natural history of, XII. 3-64; published in act, VI. 169; the active, I. 90; admirable, not in our experience, IV. 54; adult in the infant man, II. 279; independent of age, II. 279; never ages, VIII. 338; all things known to, I. 223; II. 124; III. 243; balanced, IV. 55; becomes, II. 69; biography, VI. 282; and body, see Body; bursts boundaries, II. 304; not saved in bundles, VI. 214; X. 102; child of, III. 188; content in a friend, II. 193; contrasted with the church, I. 144; circumscribes all things, II. 271; X. 27; classes of, IV. 142; concealment
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- of what does not concern it, III. 243; counterpoise to all souls, II. 344; XI. 235; critic and beggar, VII. 307; knows no deformity, II. 131; dictator, VIII. 297; diseases, II. 132; divine, I. 115, 223; relations to Divine Spirit, II. 65; door, II. 182; dressed by Deity in certain incommunicable powers, II. 145; IV. 28; VII. 10; duration, II. 283, 284; VI. 239; ebb, II. 32; ejaculations, VII. 220; its emphasis always right, II. 145; in English broadcloth, V. 254; contains the events that shall befall it, I. 159; VI. 40; X. 9; the eyes indicate its age, VI. 177; VII. 126; no express-rider, VII. 311; no flatterer, II. 295; its food, I. 216; dependence of form on, III. 3; greatest is plain and true, II. 290; growth not gradual but total, II. 274, 320; gymnasium of, IV. 17; it is in a hope that she feels her wings, I. 215; bound to life by illusions, VII. 172; identity in all individuals, I. 108; immorality, see Immortality; imprisoned, XI. 217; incarnation, II. 276; has known all, IV. 96; laws, I. 122; a life, II. 120; is light, II. 66; lofty, I. 265; man an infinite, I. 136; marriage of, XII. 19; natural history, I. 210, 223; II. 222; nature of, II. 124, 270; and Nature, see under Nature; grows by obedience, IX. 360; X. 84 f; oracle, VIII. 297; not an organ or faculty, II. 270; each walks its own path, XII. 42; not now preached, I. 135; has presentiment of all power, I. 164; private and divine, X. 238; progress, II. 188, 274; promise, II. 169; does not answer questions of the understanding, II. 282; receptive, I. 210; its large relations, VI. 282; remedial, I. 150; does not repeat itself, II. 83, 84, 351; respects itself, II. 196; revelations, II. 273, 280, 281; a river from unseen regions, II. 268; not self-fed, XII. 309; its sleep, VIII. 227; social, II. 207; sown as wheat, II. 322; IX. 283; attainment of due sphericity, III. 80; stability, II. 318; superior to its knowledge, II. 289; XII. 321; surrendered, I. 266; in telegraphic communication with source of events, VIII. 228; X. 242; tide in, XI. 160; knows nothing of time, II. 274; no traveller, II. 81; to be trusted, II. 188; discerner of truth, II. 279; not twin-born, III. 78; universal, I. 27, 148, 223; II. 278; III. 14, 78; IV. 50; VII. 40; VIII. 26; X. 99, 238; the painted vicissitudes of, VIII. 26; wanderings, II. 181; the whole of which other things are shining parts, II. 269; wider than space, I. 224; wiser than the world, I. 144, 145; answers not by words, II. 282; world, mirror of, I. 151. See Over-Soul.
- Sound, analyzed, IX. 179.
- Source, must be higher than tap, XI. 511.
- Soûth Wind. See Wind.
- Southern people, VII. 68; IX. 168; XI. 304.
- Southey, Robert, V. 8.
- Souvenir, a token of love, XII. 104.
- Space, I. 38; II. 228; IX. 279.
- Spartan, civilization, I. 317; VII. 26; XI. 122; conversation, VII. 64, 250; domestic life, II. 24; fife, II. 60; generals, VII. 79; justice, III. 203; religion, VI. 5; saying, IV. 136.
- Spasms of Nature, VI. 77; X. 191; XI. 238.
- Specialty, each must have his, VI. 134; VII. 6.
- Speculation, and practice, I. 4, 284, 285; III. 267; IV. 52, 266 f; no succedaneum for life, XII. 402.
- Speech, III. 40, 189; cordial speech
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- is music, IX. 219; lessens us, II. 342; VI. 224; VII. 4, 38, 97; VIII. 92, 95, 115; X. 169; XII. 382; of rustics, IX. 66; and silence, II. 343; III. 245; VII. 301; of teamsters and blacksmiths, IV. 168. See Language, Style, Words.
- Speed, of thought, XII. 49, 50.
- Spence, Joseph, quoted, IV. 152.
- Spence, William, quoted, V. 150.
- Spencer, Earl, book contest, VII. 210.
- Spending, rules for, VI. 111. f, 126, 223.
- Spenser, Edmund, V. 234; VII. 47; VIII. 49; quoted, III. 14; IV. 59; V. 242; VIII. 151.
- Spheral, III. 241; VI. 311.
- SPHINX, THE, IX. 19-25; I. 34; II. 4, 32; VII. 235; XII. 411.
- Spine, the unit of animal structure, IV. 108.
- Spinoza, I. 162.
- Spiral tendency, IV. 112; VI. 281; IX. 24.
- SPIRIT, INFORMING, IX. 282.
- Spirit, I. 61-65; all-knowing, I. 148; all things from same, I. 124; ascent of, X. 233; creator, I. 27; defined, I. 25; eternal, I. 70; VII. 39, 57; X. 97; every one builds its house, I. 76; VI. 9, 286; is expressed in matter, XII. 5; inundation of, I. 172; a fact the end or last issue of, I. 34; II. 276; III. 167; X. 220; latent, III. 279; man founded in, III. 72; and matter, X. 213; moanings, X. 9; unnamed, III. 72, 282; moulds Nature, I. 76; remedial force, I. 71; self-evolving power, IV. 86; VII. 161; solicitations, I. 222; speaks to each soul, X. 230; superincumbent, I. 182; III. 282; supreme in all, I. 127; taciturn, IV. 139; teachings apprehended only by the same spirit, I. 64; XI. 234; material theories of, do not degrade, II. 306; universal, I. 44; IV. 50; VI. 213; vanishing, X. 220; voice of, I. 209.
- Spirit, Holy. See Holy Ghost.
- Spirit of times, VI. 3.
- Spiritism, X. 13.
- Spirits, animal, VII. 12 f; in prison, XI. 217.
- Spiritual, III. 53; true meaning is real, VI. 215; X. 72.
- SPIRITUAL LAWS, II. 129-166; IX. 275.
- Spiritual life, unexampled in history, I. 338.
- Spiritualism, false, IV. 139; V. 124; VI. 209; VII. 290; X. 12, 21, 26, 245.
- Spontaneity, the essence of life, I. 166; always right, II. 64, 133, 138, 328; III. 68; VII. 182; VIII. 75, 202; XI. 425; XII. 33.
- Sportiveness of great, II. 256.
- Sports, freemasonry of, VI. 144.
- Spotted life, II. 297; X. 366.
- Sprague, Charles, quoted, XI. 62.
- Sprain, of foot and mind, XI. 502 f; Nature's, XII. 49.
- Spring, VII. 299; IX. 142, 240, 241; chemistry, IX. 181; eagerness, IX. 167, 168; in mind at sixty, IX. 19; no orator like, IX. 180; tardy, IX. 169; woods, IX. 9. See May-Day and April.
- Spurzheim, X. 337.
- Squeals of laughter, VIII. 87.
- Squinting, Greek statues incapable of, II. 24.
- Squirrels, IX. 75, 163.
- Stability, of the soul, II. 318; VIII. 335.
- Staël, Madame de, I. 175; III. 135; IV. 288; V. 119; VI. 149; VII. 238; VIII. 93; quoted, I. 43; V. 119, 232; VIII. 185.
- Stagnation, Chinese, I. 322; of life, III. 51.
- Stairs, II. 349; III. 45; V. 238; IX. 121.
- Stamina, want of, XI. 220.
- ...
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- Stars, beguiling, III. 174; every one is star of Bethlehem, IX. 333; X. 90; black, VI. 265; blessing, II. 39; cataloguing stars of mind, I. 100, 101; discontented, I. 212; dropped from angels' shoon, IX. 293; of flowers, I. 18; fugitive, VI. 307; IX. 287; of God, IX. 340; why grand, XII. 387; inspiration, I. 7; new doctrines like stars whose light has not yet reached us, II. 147, 343, 344; one light from all, I. 108; loved by, IX. 81; compare with man's life, I. 267; of mind, I. 100, 101; morning, IX. 385; patient, IX. 340; and planets, II. 197; of possibility, I. 223; punctual, IX. 233; awaken reverence, I. 7; packed into rockets, XII. 9; rose, his faith was earlier up, IX. 273, 314; science-baffling, II. 63; shower of, III. 111; VII. 129; silent song of, I. 125; all sky and no, XII. 45; smile, I. 7; spiritual, IX. 190; stoop down, III. 176; strangers to, IX. 140; taunt by mystery, IX. 17; of thought, II. 215, 323; VII. 250; IX. 327; made by thought, VIII. 39; IX. 317; hitch wagon to, VII. 28 f; with some men we walk among, VIII. 83; wink, VII. 168; woo us, I. 212.
- State, not aboriginal, III. 199; aim of, XII. 48; based on opinion, VI. 34; basis, III. 197, 219 ff; X. 112; XI. 44, 352, 390; building, IX. 271; corrupt, III. 208; guidance of, XI. 543; object, III. 216; X. 91, 326; a question, IV. 157; wise man is, III. 216.
- States of mind, rotation of, IV. 176.
- Statesmen, American, XI. 139, 242; republican, III. 197.
- Statistics, IV. 109; VI. 17.
- Statue, II. 179, 180, 357, 365; manners of, VIII. 85; of punk, VI. 143; has no tongue, VI. 169; VII. 130.
- Statute, is a currency, III. 200; liberty of interpretation of, XI. 225; every immoral, is void, XI. 261.
- Stay at home in mind, VIII. 99.
- Steadfastness, X. 102.
- Stealing, XI. 213, 237; who does not steal, III. 79.
- Steam, I. 13; V. 95, 160 ff, 168; VI. 33, 84, 86; VII. 159; IX. 16; X. 12, 20, 153.
- Steamboat, II. 368.
- STEARNS, GEORGE L., X. 499-507.
- Steele, Richard, quoted, VIII. 93.
- Steel-filings, men like, III. 228.
- Steering and drifting, X. 196.
- Steffens, Heinrich, quoted, VIII. 211.
- Stephenson, George, VI. 86, 122.
- Stepping, poet a god stepping from peak to peak, VIII. 10.
- Sterling, John, love of Montaigne, IV. 163; quoted, IV. 21.
- Stick to your own, VI. 277; VIII. 303.
- Stilling, Jung, III. 104; VI. 6.
- Stilts, VII. 183.
- Stimulants used by bards, III. 27.
- Stirling, James H., quoted, VIII. 131.
- Stockholder in sin, II. 249.
- Stoical plenum, I. 164.
- Stoicism, III. 186; IV. 160; X. 209, 308, 319; XII. 194; genesis of, I. 339; puts the gods on their defence, XII. 194; every Stoic a Stoic, II. 85.
- Stomach, a stomach evidence, IV. 176; VIII. 333; Mithridatic, XII. 409; stoutness, or, VI. 60; XI. 174.
- Stonehenge, V. 273, 276, 279.
- Stones, conscious, IX. 7; rocking-stones, XI. 392; broken cannot be put together into unity, XII. 44.
- Stories, love for, VII. 70, 212, 233; genesis of, VIII. 181, 186.
- Stowe, Harriet Beecher, VII. 286.
- Strafford, Earl of, rule as to reading, VIII. 184.
- Straight lines, no, VII. 181.
- ...
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- Strangers, II. 192 f, 340; III. 63; VI. 85; IX. 16.
- Strawberries, lose flavor in garden-beds, II. 240.
- Stream, of power and wisdom, II. 139; of human affairs, XI. 139; XII. 16.
- Streets, I. 50; VI. 248, 312; X. 140; XII. 93; language of, force, VIII. 124.
- Strength, II. 68, 117; VI. 58, 190; joy indicates, VI. 264; VII. 283; X. 69; depends on moral element, X. 192; XII. 54, 61, 412; we are strong by borrowing the might of the elements, VII. 28 f.
- Strikes, IV. 232.
- Study, victims of, IV. 155; VIII. 341.
- Stukeley, on Stonehenge, V. 281 f.
- Stupidity, a saving, III. 239; V. 138.
- Sturleson, Snorro, V. 57; VII. 206.
- Style, betrays, VIII. 33, 125; low, X. 168; XII. 284-299; Shakspeare's use of, XII. 293 f.
- Styx of experience, X. 251, 496.
- Subject, and object, III. 77, 79; your subject must appear the flower of the world, VIII. 34.
- Subjectiveness, III. 76; is intellectual selfishness, XII. 312.
- Sublime, meaning of, VI. 29, 226.
- Suburbs of Nature, I. 111.
- SUCCESS, VII. 281-312; III. 70, 71; conditions, IV. 130; VI. 54, 71, 101, 117, 131, 141, 276; VII. 184; VIII. 231, 343; X. 15, 19; XI. 320; is the doing, I. 181; base estimate of, II. 95; III. 85; VI. 81; made up of failures, X. 58; forever good, IX. 32; idolatry of, VII. 289; perils of, I. 183, 233; IX. 380; treads on every right step, I. 103, 181; II. 197; true and false, VII. 308; self-trust the first secret of, VII. 292; is in the work, not in what is said of it, VI. 225.
- Succession, necessity of, III. 43, 55, 82; IV. 176; VI. 319.
- Suction, content in, VIII. 177.
- Suffering, religion of, I. 220; III. 87; shallowness, III. 48; X. 195; XII. 415.
- Suffrage, universal, III. 209; VIII. 231; X. 35; for women, VIII. 208; XI. 420.
- Suggestiveness, everything a suggestion, II. 305; VIII. 180; XII. 43, 109.
- Suicide, skepticism is, VIII. 138; X. 246.
- Summer, I. 18, 119; of the spirit, I. 76, 77.
- SUMMONS, THE, IX. 384.
- SUMNER, CHARLES, ASSAULT UPON, XI. 245-252.
- Sumptuary laws, VI. 105.
- Sumter, Fort, XI. 343.
- Sun, causes ignorance of Apollo, X. 307; borrows its beams, VI. 318; duration, VIII. 335; image in eclipse, X. 10; everlasting, IX. 392; seen by few, I. 8; forgotten, IX. 32; telling hour by, II. 85; insipid, VI. 255; a lamp-wick, X. 222; lick away, VII. 74; sprang from man, I. 71; II. 224; IX. 139; man would pluck down, I. 309; paints, XI. 209; radius-vector, VIII. 23; put out of reach, XII. 393; set, but not his hope, IX. 273, 314; snubbing, VIII. 303; sowing for seed, I. 256; IX. 310; system made by, XII. 17; made by thought, VIII. 39; not troubled at waste of rays, II. 216; better method than the wind, I. 253.
- Sunday, core of civilization, VII. 132; X. 107, 117, 235; Sunday objections, IV. 172; X. 366; XI. 228. See, also, Sabbath.
- Sunday-schools, dead weight of, II. 136; III. 64.
- SUNRISE, IX. 345; I. 17.
- Sunset, I. 17, 214; III. 173, 178, 193; VI. 78; VII. 300; quoted, VIII. 188.
- Sunshine, III. 29; VI. 264.
- ...
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- Superficialness, of our lives and our thinking, I. 176, 196; X. 37, 245; XII. 402.
- Superfluities, beauty the purgation of, III. 260; VI. 294.
- Superiority, each has some, III. 281; V. 49; VII. 283; X. 34, 47, 194; in what it consists, XII. 63.
- Superiors, each man prefers the society of, III. 275; IV. 3; VII. 11, 242; VIII. 320; X. 35, 51, 101, 405.
- SUPERLATIVE, THE, X. 161-179; III. 139.
- Supernatural, X. 198.
- Superstition, VI. 144; VIII. 74; XI. 139; XII. 192, 387, 407; consequences of displacing, II. 29, 95; VI. 207; X. 26, 201, 206.
- Supper, good basis for club, VII. 247.
- Supplementary, man supplementary to each department of nature, VIII. 305.
- Supply, demand and, VI. 105.
- Surfaces, we live amid, III. 59, 242; VI. 271, 288; VII. 183, 297; IX. 139, 269; X. 134, 224; XII. 219.
- Surmises, have value, I. 70.
- Surprises, life a series of, II. 320; III. 67; VIII. 289; IX. 225, 269.
- SURSUM CORDA, IX. 86.
- Suspicion, V. 123; we suspect what we ourselves are, VI. 224; XII. 410.
- SUUM CUIQUE, IX. 357.
- Swainish people, VIII. 97.
- Swamp, I. 169; X. 188.
- Swearing, XII. 288.
- SWEDENBORG, EMANUEL, IV. 91-146; IX. 222; angels, VII. 6; VIII. 233; "Animal Kingdom," IV. 111; external biography, IV. 98 ff; his books to be used with caution, IV. 111. f; and Charles XII., VII. 267; needed no sanction from church, III. 279; "Conjugal Love," IV. 127; on discernment, II. 279; doctrines, IV. 105; on English centrality, V. 43; fame, XI. 391; Fourier, coincidence with, X. 349; on false speaking, II. 157; on gravity as symbol of faith, VIII. 16; separate heaven of the English, V. 129, 242; view of heaven, IV. 141; that each man makes his own heaven, VIII. 327; Hebraism, IV. 134; VIII. 34f; influence, X. 330; hatred of intellect, X. 363; knowledge and practice, I. 222; philosophy of life, I. 112; on miracles, X. 12; moral insight, IV. 124; and Plato, IV. 40, 88; on poetry, VIII. 20; preaching, IX. 297; proprium, VIII. 307; reform in philosophy, VIII. 66; on love of rule, X. 121; retrospective, IV. 143; sandy diffuseness, IV. 123; second sight, VIII. 327; sect, XI. 416; sexes, XI. 415; service, IV. 145; on solitude, VII. 6; solidarity of souls, VIII. 198; theory of symbolism, IV. 117 ff; theological tendency, IV. 120 ff; translates things into thoughts, III. 36; VIII. 20; literary value, I. 112; system of world, IV. 133.
- Swift, Jonathan, IV. 150; V. 234; VIII. 317; XII. 97, 248.
- Swing, going to heaven in a, X. 342.
- Symbolism, I. 26, 28, 29, 393; II. 222; III. 13, 72; IV. 68, 115 f, 121, 217; VI. 304; VII. 90, 212; VIII. 10, 30, 34, 70, 248; X. 132; XI. 19; XII. 19, 300; a good symbol the best evidence, VIII. 13. See, also, Emblems.
- Symmetry, the whole society needed to give, III. 57, 186, 227; VI. 131; VIII. 8, 45; XII. 18; in moving objects, VI. 292.
- Sympathy, base, II. 78, 260; III. 77, 137; VI. 133, 265, 269; secret of social success, III. 141; in things, II. 107; IV. 13, 179; VII. 4, II, 13, 15, 300; VIII. 160, 293; X. 157, 234; XI. 145; XII. 22, 31.
- Synesius, Bishop, VII. 202.
- Synthesis, IV. 55.
- ...
Page 595

- System, need of, VI. 116; tyrannical, VI. 123.
- Table, golden, X. 60; manners, VIII. 85, 98; men social at, VII. 247; rappers, X. 26; talk, VII. 208.
- Tacitus, quoted, V. 50, 69, 85, 88.
- Tact, VIII. 98.
- Tactics, Napoleon's, I. 180.
- Talent, Talents, aristocracy based on, X. 40; a call, II. 140; at the expense of character, II. 321; VI. 35; X. 279; sinks with character, VI. 217, 257; charm, VII. 231; communicable, VIII. 229; of no use to cold and defective natures, III. 50; defined, XII. 47; demonstration of, XII. 56; dreaded, VI. 35; drowned in, X. 279; each has some, III. 217; expiation, III. 218; expression pays tax on, III. 281; and genius, I. 164, 217; IV. 170; X. 276, 279, 284; your gift better than another's, II. 83; for government, I. 385; integrity dwarfs, VI. 277; and central intelligence, VII. 295; literary talent a youthful effervescence, VII. 319; mischievous, VI. 136; as many as qualities of nature, X. 74; moral, X. 95; enriches the community of nations, VI. 104; partiality, IV. 212; perception outruns, VII. 301; popular idea, II. 231; poverty and solitude bring out, VI. 259; practical bias, VIII. 307; for private ends, X. 84; respect for, IV. 265, 280; sacrifice to, XII. 56; scholar needs, X. 283; and sensibility, VII. 295; must be subject to true sentiment of man, XII. 119, 123; sincerity basis of, XII. 31, 63; special, III. 57; speed, XII. 49; supplementary, X. 358; for talent's sake, VIII. 230; temptations, I. 283; no excuse for transgressions, II. 232; veils wisdom, IV. 282; value, VI. 80; VII. 184; young admire, VI. 227.
- Taliessin, exile, IX. 376; quoted, VIII. 58.
- Talismans, IX. 32, 64; X. 20, 126; XI. 144.
- Talk and talkers, VII. 74, 226, 233; talking for victory, VIII. 97.
- Talleyrand, VII. 288; quoted, IV. 268; V. 287; VI. 269; VIII. 85.
- Talma, VI. 170.
- Tamerlane, VIII. 172, 251.
- Tantalus, II. 32; VII. 163.
- Tariff, of moral values, II. 105, 122; IV. 21; to give preference to worse wares, VI. 225; XI. 80, 301.
- Tasks, as duties, II. 74; III. 284; VI. 321; VII. 293; life-preservers, VI. 232, 275; we are to know our own, XI. 217.
- Tasso, II. 232.
- Taste, a sensual appreciation of beauty, I. 23; II. 224; III. 3, 138; VIII. 150; XI. 411; XII. 218.
- Taxes, the debts most unwillingly paid, III. 215; XI. 302, 322; English, V. 155; VI. 253; taxation of women's property, XI. 424.
- Taylor, Edward T. ("Father,"), VIII. 114, 318; X. 231, 375; quoted, III. 107.
- Taylor, Jeremy, IX. 8; X. 111. 203, 227; XII. 194.
- Taylor, Thomas, V. 295; VII. 202; VIII. 50.
- Tea, sentiment in a chest of, IV. 153; VIII. 281; IX. 212.
- Teachers and teaching, II. 152, 287, 343; milestones of progress, IV. 34; VI. 147; X. 101, 148; XI. 236. See Education.
- Teeth, significance, VI. 182.
- Telegraph, electric, V. 161; VII. 28, 161, 254; VIII. 137, 143; IX. 16, 191, 200; XI. 183.
- Telescope, VI. 98; partial action of each mind a, III. 80; V. 76; X. 20.
- Temper, useful defect of, II. 117; neutralizing acid, X. 235.
- ...
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- Temperament, the wires on which the beads are strung, III. 43, 50-55; V. 51, 134; VI. 9, 54, 77, 245; VII. 61, 265 f; VIII. 79; IX. 356; X. 43, 73; XII. 409; resists the impression of pains, XII. 415; woman's, XI. 406-418.
- Temperance, mean and heroic, II. 251, 254; III. 270; V. 167; X. 163; question of, I. 270.
- Temperate zone, VII. 26; X. 176; of our being, III. 62.
- Temple, IX. 8; a thought like a, II. 277; IV. 129; in the heart, VI. 204, 209; house a, IX. 354.
- Temptation, we gain the strength we resist, II. 118, 133.
- Ten Commandments, vegetable and animal functions echo, I. 41; VII. 23; X. 119; keep order, X. 211; XI. 194.
- Ten Thousand, Xenophon's, III. 101.
- Tenacity, badge of great mind, V. 99; X. 58.
- Tendencies, not deeds but, I. 215, 247; VI. 36; X. 64.
- Tenderness, II. 204.
- Tennyson, Alfred, V. 256 f, 295; XII. 370 ff; quoted, II. 263; XII. 342.
- Tense, the strong present, III. 64.
- Tents of life, II. 125, 188, 223; IX. 339; XI. 413.
- TERMINUS, IX. 251.
- Terror, shuts the eyes of mind and heart, VII. 258; XII. 409. See, also, Fear.
- TEST, THE, IX. 220.
- Tests of men, VI. 261; VII. 307.
- Teutonic traits, V. 116.
- Thackeray, William M., V. 229, 246, 271.
- Thames River, V. 41.
- Thanks humiliating, III. 163.
- Theatres, IV. 191; VII. 215; VIII. 25.
- Theban Phalanx, X. 59, 327.
- Thebes, XII. 29.
- Theism, argument for, VII. 160; purification of the human mind, IV. 5; X. 117.
- Theology, X. 28, 108, 113, 207, 227; men are better than their theology, I. 144; II. 95; VI. 214; XI. 478; theological problems the soul's mumps and measles, II. 132; the rhetoric of morals, X. 108.
- Theory, imperfect often valuable, I. 66; test of, I. 4; and practice, X. 152, 268, 355; XII. 50; two theories of life, XII. 56.
- There and then, preposterous, II. 11.
- Thermometer, nature a thermometer of the divine sentiment, III. 178; of civilization, XI. 166; of fashion, XI. 528.
- Thermopylae, I. 20; VI. 250; VII. 256, 272.
- Thersites, IV. 28.
- Theseus, III. 90.
- Thief, steals from himself, II. 114, 116.
- THINE EYES STILL SHINED, IX. 99.
- Things, I. 38; III. 243; education to, III. 257; have laws, III. 205; ride mankind, IX. 78.
- Thinkers and thinking, I. 174, 283; II. 163, 328, 331; III. 75, 84; V. 222; VI. 25, 116; VIII. 15, 202; X. 252; beware when God lets loose a thinker, II. 308; hardest task, II. 331; slaughter-house type, VIII. 332.
- Third party in conversation, II. 277.
- Third person plural, age of the, XI. 538.
- Thomson's Seasons, VIII. 22.
- Thor, II. 72; V. 89, 162; VI. 137, 320.
- THOREAU, HENRY D., X. 449-485; VIII. 290; IX. 44; appearance, X. 461; common sense, X. 462; his life, X. 451; naturalist, X. 466; protestant, X. 454; poetry, X. 474; XII. 354; a reader, XI. 500; wisdom,
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- X. 464; quoted, X. 47, 87, 356; XII. 107.
- Thoreau, Mrs., X. 410.
- THOUGHT, IX. 380.
- Thought, Thoughts, abiding, I. 359; and action, I. 95, 272; II. 163; VII. 37; XI. 315; giving actuality to, VI. 93; affinity, XII. 23; the age in, I. 264; pent air-ball, VI. 288; all things from, X. 272; clothes itself with material apparatus, I. 21; VIII. 17, 273; XI. 164; arts and institutions from, XII. 80; ascent, VIII. 24; disposes the attitudes of the body, VIII. 82; must fit audience, VIII. 293; come in by avenues never left open, II. 286; X. 133; undisciplined will has bad thoughts, VI. 322; we read better thoughts than author wrote, VIII. 194; believe your own, VII. 292; VIII. 106; makes buildings and cities, IX. 7, 18; capital, X. 77; and character, VI. 26; every thought commanded by a higher, II. 303; made clearer by unfolding, VIII. 91, 292; communication, II. 335; conditions, VII. 229, 250; consecutiveness, VIII. 272; XII. 52; control, II. 328; XII. 47; gives courage, VIII. 329; currents, VIII. 6; decay of, VIII. 233; X. 246; dominion in proportion to depth, II. 153; VII. 38; X. 105; devout, I. 74; diseases, IV. 180; mastery by serving them at a distance, VIII. 339; rush of, in dreams, XII. 108; ends universal and eternal, III. 71; VII. 9; ethics of, XII. 79; and fate, VI. 20; not finality, VI. 320; makes fit expression, I. 134, 187; III. 10; VI. 191; VIII. 18, 20, 52; X. 234; XII. 41; few, VIII. 179; makes fit for use, III. 17; must be formulated, XII. 45; makes free, VI. 25; XII. 46; and friendship, I. 187; fugitive, VIII. 273; game of, IV. 149; glow when sun is cold, IX. 380; of God, VII. 277; VIII. 15; X. 88; growth, XII. 18, 26; man a guest in his, X. 194; come hand in hand, IX. 123; taken by the right handle, II. 239; from heart, VIII. 228; XI. 223; not hidden, I. 187; hospitality to, I. 291; VI. 196, 269; individual is partial, VII. 249; inexhaustible, I. 173; mighty influence of, I. 262; inspired, III. 32; X. 133; institutions founded on, II. 161; X. 88; insulated, VII. 330; interference with, II. 280; intoxication, VIII. 297; keys of, I. 95, 103; the key to every man, I. 103; II. 303; and manual labor, I. 241; lateral, not vertical, I. 196; has large leisures, X. 55; deepens life, XII. 15; revises life, II. 161; as living characters, VII. 219; XII. 109; makes man and sun and stars, VIII. 39; measure of man, VII. 123; marriage with music, VIII. 47; masters of, II. 346; and matter, see under Matter; each has its proper melody, VIII. 47; memory and, XII. 99; makes men, XII. 121; method, II. 331, 334; air of mind, VII. 225; miracle, II. 335; VIII. 272; unity with morals, X. 184; and Nature, see under Nature; needs of, X. 281; sign of, is newness, XII. 71; lift Olympus, I. 172; go in pairs, VII. 230; at first possess us, then we them, XII. 43; power, VI. 43; X. 78, 234, 252; XI. 164; practical, XII. 46; prisons, II. 339; III. 33; production, conditions of, II. 336; VI. 85; the more profound, the more burdensome, VII. 38; X. 250; XI. 151; all have property in, II. 277; IV. 198; prosperity has its root in, I. 244; VII. 297; VIII. 272; provocation, VII. 229; pure, poison, VII. 225; let us into realities, VIII. 272; renews itself daily, I. 173; results,
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- X. 74; retrospective, XII. 21; works revolution, X. 249, 327; penurious rill, XII. 51; like a river, X. 249; a river from invisible world, XI. 501; has its own rules, XII. 85; saliency, XII. 59; in savage, VIII. 270; self-publishing, XI. 310, 487; imbosomed in sentiment, X. 185; service of, is reasonable, I. 157; selfish for selfish, XII. 315; wears no silks, VI. 324; sky-language, XII. 19; no solitary, XII. 21; beyond soul's reach, VIII. 275; source, II. 268; vast spaces in, XII. 342; fugitive sparkles, XII. 53; speak your own, II. 45 f; VIII. 93; speed of, XII. 49, 50; stock in, X. 77; succession illusory, VI. 319; must be tempered with affection and practice, VII. 225; a sword, X. 134; thread on which all things are strung, IV. 170; XII. 42; out of time, II. 273; twilights of, X. 19; unequal, VIII. 269; value, XII. 40; volatile, XI. 502; vortices, VIII. 7; waited on, I. 241; walk and speak, I. 262; wages for which days are sold, IX. 328; other wants come from want of, I. 244; whipped by, XII. 334; and will, I. 22, 67; II. 328; IX. 331; XII. 41, 46; independent of our will, XII. 77; always clothes itself with words, VIII. 34; XII. 95; rule world, III. 217; VIII. 19, 228; X. 88; writer's grasp, VIII. 33.
- Threat, refreshment of, I. 149; more formidable than the stroke, VII. 265.
- THRENODY, IX. 148-158.
- Thrift, II. 183; true, VI. 126; low, VII. 111. See, also, Economy, Frugality.
- Thucydides, X. 302; quoted, VII. 73; X. 310.
- Thunder, I. 196; coax, IX. 196; disarm, IX. 379; clouds are Jove's festoons, IX. 272.
- Tides, made to do our work, VII. 28, 42; of thought, X. 132, 219; XI. 160.
- Ties, human, II. 204, 213; moral, VI. 278.
- Timaeus, IV. 42, 87.
- Time, for affairs and for thought, II. 317; III. 41, 85; IV. 21; animals have no value for, X. 155; chemist, IX. 138; child of eternity, I. 287; VII. 183; coined into days, IX. 13; consoler, XII. 414; not counted, IX. 249; deceptions of, III. 85; dissipates the angularity of facts, II. 9; finder, VII. 330; of force to be husbanded, VIII. 291; fugitive, II. 273; keeps God's word, IX. 382; Hindoo proverb on, XI. 309; an illusion, VII. 317; immortality not question of, VIII. 347; inverse measure of intellect, II. 272; killing, X. 133; laws, II. 228; measure spiritual, not mechanical, VII. 178; omniscient, VII. 330; Nature's measure of, III. 41; pictures of, IX. 270; poetry shows no mark of, I. 92; poison, VII. 319; value of present, VII. 173; problem of, VIII. 225; prolific, X. 132; reformer, V. 111; always time to do right, VIII. 31; rights things, XII. 383; river of, III. 4; slit and peddled, II. 225; IV. 22; and space, I. 39, 57, 73; II. 272; VIII. 225; IX. 53; physiological colors which the eye makes, II. 67; painful kingdom, II. 171; should be tried, XII. 413; inverse measure of force of soul, II. 272; and thought surveyors, IX. 245; a toy, VI. 318; is the distribution of wholes into series, VI. 319; has work to do, IX. 358.
- Timeliness, II. 228; VI. 86; VIII. 83.
- TIMES, THE, LECTURE ON, I. 257-291; I. 109; VI. 3, 39.
- Timidity, VII. 257; mark of wrong, II. 112.
- ...
Page 599

- Timoleon, II. 133; XII. 263.
- Tin-pans, Homer and Milton may be, VIII. 68.
- Tissinet, and Indians, VIII. 145.
- Tisso, Prince, VI. 285.
- Tithonus, VII. 320.
- Titles, English, V. 197.
- TITMOUSE, THE, IX. 233-236; I. 168.
- Tobacco, III. 27; VI. 318; VII. 31, 319; IX. 28; X. 250; XI. 124.
- TO-DAY, IX. 382; all-importance of insight into, I. 111, 163; King in disguise, I. 267; III. 47, 60; VII. 173; VIII. 273; IX. 295; X. 397; XI. 536, 539; XII. 110. See, also, Day, Present, Time.
- Toil, VIII. 311; IX. 64, 323; XI. 542. See, also, Labor, Work.
- To-morrow, power of, II. 228, 305, 320; VIII. 284; IX. 219; X. 397.
- Tone, VIII. 96.
- Tongue, IV. 46; VI. 51; VII. 73; VIII. 226; IX. 284, 351; XII. 245, 307.
- Tonics, best, VII. 225; VIII. 274.
- Tooke, Horne, quoted, VI. 278; VIII. 313.
- Tools, VI. 32, 79, 89, 141; VII. 157, 163; X. 147; XII. 97; run away with the man, I. 209; VII. 164.
- Torch, man a, X. 275; world all torches, IX. 367.
- Torrid zone, animated, IX. 38.
- Toussaint L'Ouverture, III. 94; X. 49; XI. 144.
- Town-incrusted sphere, IX. 72.
- Town-meetings, VII. 260; VIII. 102, 116; XI. 46, 263, 527.
- Towns, have their explanation each in some man, VI. 42; advantages of, VI. 148; IX. 18, 49, 64; XI. 42, 46, 526; local government in, XI. 495. See, also, Cities, Country.
- Toys, instructive, III. 186; VI. 40, 313, 318; VII. 125, 172; VIII. 149.
- Trade, American, VIII. 142; custom of, does not excuse, II. 140; educative VI. 106, 109; energy in, VI. 65; puts men in false relations to each other, III. 256; the greatest meliorator, VII. 166; IX. 18, 124; X. 129; XI. 123, 156, 531; a constant teaching of laws of matter and mind, X. 129; not intrinsically unfit, III. 92; V. 85; selfish, I. 230, 319, 378; III. 256; IV. 151; its value in history, I. 377; world made for, IX. 212.
- Tradition, I. 141; IV. 196; V. 54; X. 116, 199, 208, 217; XI. 286; XII. 6, 42.
- Tragedy, transitoriness the essence of, III. 56; IV. 183; VII. 9, 56; IX. 132.
- TRAGIC, THE, XII. 405-417.
- Trances, II. 282; IV. 97. See, also, under Swedenborg.
- Tranquillity, mark of greatness, I. 42; VII. 117, 125, 311; VIII. 88; X. 64, 156; XII. 411, 414.
- Transcendency in poetry, VIII. 70-75.
- Transcendentalism, I. 261, 340; II. 315; X. 343. See Notes.
- TRANSCENDENTALIST, THE, I. 327-359; lover of Beauty, I. 354; belief, I. 335; like child, I. 346; critic, I. 344; not good citizen, I. 347; doubts, I. 352; novice, I. 357; withdrawing of, I. 341.
- Transference of forces, X. 71.
- Transfiguration, Raphael's II. 362; of things, VIII. 24.
- Transformations, III. 36; V. 62; VIII. 5.
- TRANSITION, IX. 342; period of, VI. 207; X. 113, 217, 327; power resides in, II. 69, 180; III. 33, 54; IV. 55; VI. 71, 292; VII. 181; VIII. 289; XII. 59. See, Ezra Ripley, Notes on.
- TRANSLATIONS, IX. 298-305; benefit of, VII. 203.
- Translator, philosopher a, II. 345.
- Transmigration of souls, II. 32; IV. 96, 124, 145; VIII. 324; X. 7.
- Transmission of qualities, X. 33.
- ...
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- Transparency of body, VI. 177, 286; XI. 144.
- Transportation, creates wealth, VI. 87.
- Transubstantiation, contemporary insight is, VIII. 35.
- Travel, and nomadic instinct, XII. 135.
- Travellers, II. 290; V. 132; VIII. 295.
- Travelling, I. 169; benefits, II. 80; III. 27; IV. 3; V. 4; VI. 145, 269; X. 172.
- Trees, III. 170, 181; VIII. 151; arboretum a museum, XI. 433; XII. 174; are chemists, XII. 146; elm agrees with me, VIII. 13; fed by air, XII. 80; growth, VII. 147; IX. 171, 342; XII. 25, 32, 54; highwaymen, XII. 178; make landscape, XI. 431; oak, I. 300; Thoreau's arm like, X. 456; thrifty, grow in spite of blight, VI. 60. See, also, Forests, Groves, Woods.
- Trimmers, V. 123.
- Trinity, XI. 17.
- Trinity of beauty, goodness and truth, I. 24, 63, 354; III. 6; VII. 57.
- Trismegisti, II. 345.
- Trolls, V. 76, 135.
- Tropes, III. 30; VI. 324; VII. 90; VIII. 12, 15. See, also, Symbolism.
- Tropics, II. 226; VIII. 153.
- True, the heartlessness of, I. 355.
- Trust, I. 105; II. 293, 297; VI. 192, 277; X. 193; thyself, II. 47; trust men and they will be true to you, II. 237.
- Truth, abstract, I. 4; II. 326, 331; absolute, VI. 205; must be acted upon, I. 222; IV. 290; adorer of, VI. 306; is in air, VI. 44; not all in your keeping, IV. 157; applied to government, III. 213; apprehension of, I. 4, 66, 172; II. 281; XII. 32; basis of aristocracy, X. 39; the only armor, VI. 230; sweeter than art, IX. 238; unity with beauty and goodness, I. 55, 354; VI. 310; XII. 219, 330; the summit of being, III. 95; tyrannizes over the body, II. 156; centre and circumference, VIII. 221; root of character, VI. 322; conditions of right perception, I. 126, 222; VI. 30, 116; needs no confirmation from events, III. 98; men of world value it for its convenience, X. 170; must contend with, to understand, II. 117; defence of, XI. 183; reception of, balanced by denial, I. 302; all men unwillingly deprived of, III. 273; the search for, derided, I. 185; glad to die for, IX. 296; X. 96, 195; discernment of, I. 222; II. 279; distorted, II. 339; distrust of, XII. 55; draws to truth, VIII. 222; seems less to reside in eloquent, II. 343; English, V. 116-126; essence, XII. 38; conveys a hint of eternity, VII. 97, 307; expands us to its dimensions, IV. 185; VI. 25; does not involve ability to express it, III. 189; expression of, comes from clear perception, VIII. 33; learning not to fear it, X. 213; firm ground, X. 176; preferred to flattery, III. 273; takes flesh, X. 132; a fly-away, I. 171; allowed with friends, II. 202; VI. 192; badge of gentleman, V. 118; German reference to, IV. 281; give me, IX. 139; not divorced from goodness, I. 221; III. 212; IV. 130; answers to gravitation, VIII. 221; alone makes great, II. 160 X. 282; handsomer than affectation of love, II. 51; keeps horizon line, X. 141; humility the avenue to, X. 185; immortal, II. 327; laws of imparting, X. 99; not hurt by our fall from it, X. 196; not to be labelled with any one's name, II. 278; lantern for other facts, II. 332; lie in, VIII. 289; life in union with, gives poetic speech, VIII. 68; love of, III. 274; magnetism of, XI. 393; makes
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- man out of clod, X. 194; XI. 188; every man a lover of, III. 277; in masquerade, XII. 193; no monopoly, II. 278; III. 189; VIII. 192, 312; X. 97; and Nature, seal and print, IV. 117; Nature helps, I. 123; VI. 219; in new dress, VIII. 13; new supersedes old, II. 311; not obsolete, VII. 57; offered to all, II. 342; all things its organs, II. 155; learned from ourselves, I. 288; may be spoken in poetry, not in prose, VIII. 52; policy enough, I. 183; power, VI. 230; power in proportion to, XII. 121; prayer, a study of, I. 74; in preaching, I. 139; a preserver, VIII. 177, 340; must prevail, XI. 162; not shut up in proposition, III. 245; realm of in no one mind, VIII. 294; expresses relation that holds true throughout Nature, I. 44; X. 187; not received at second-hand, I. 127; the attempt to report, II. 329; screens against, III. 135; the rich can speak, VII. 141; search for, endless, II. 320, 342; III. 245, 247; X. 132; service, IX. 118; XI. 173; all on the side of, VI. 201; X. 269; sides to, I. 44; too simple for us, X. 109, 237; speaking, I. 123; II. 72, 261; VI. 162, 193; XI. 291; XII. 46; spirit woos us, I. 222; starlit deserts, I. 186; a statement for every one, VI. 201; VII. 91; summit of being, III. 95; tart, XI. 289; translation, XI. 223; uncontainable and ever enlarging, XII. 78; unhurt by treachery, X. 195; unity with right, VI. 324; universal, II. 139; X. 94; unspoken, but felt, VI. 228; wholesome, IV. 63; worship, II. 341.
- Tuba, VIII. 242, 255.
- Tuitions, II. 64.
- Turgot, quoted, I. 56.
- Turks, VI. 5.
- Turner, J. M. W., described, V. 135.
- Turner, Sharon, quoted, V. 290.
- Turtles, the thoughts of a turtle are turtles, XII. 54.
- Twilight of experience, XII. 309.
- Two cannot go abreast, II. 265.
- Two-Face, III. 245.
- Two shoes, VII. 105.
- Tyburn of Jews, III. 114.
- Tyler, John, VII. 8.
- Types, II. 101; VIII. 187; XII. 40; the material the type of spiritual, VIII. 13.
- Tyranny, of despots, I. 376; of genius, II. 355; III. 37, 239; of the present, III. 170; VIII. 6.
- Ugliness, III. 18; VI. 300; VIII. 172.
- Ulysses, VII. 72; X. 42.
- Umbrellas, V. 105, 254; VI. 152.
- UNA, IX. 210.
- Unattainable, the, II. 301.
- Unbarrelable, truth, I. 171.
- Unbelief, our torment, I. 282; IV. 181; ages of, mean, X. 206, 213, 220.
- Uncles and aunts, XII. 395.
- Uncontinented deep, IX. 72.
- Understanding, I. 36, 295; VI. 57; VII. 227; its activity makes sentiments sleep, X. 221. See, also, Reason.
- Understanding others, II. 146, 306; III. 111, 248; IV. 46; works to short ends, XII. 122 f.
- Understatement, rhetoric of, X. 169.
- Undertaker's secrets, X. 21.
- Undulation, principle of, I. 98; II. 332.
- Unfriendliness, II. 240.
- Ungrateful space, II. 216.
- Unhandselled savage, I. 99, 100.
- Unhappiness, unproductive, II. 354.
- Uniformity, neat and safe, X. 138.
- Unifying instinct, I. 85.
- Union, has no basis but the good pleasure of the majority, I. 390; IX. 206; XI. 132, 205, 229, 259, 269, 306, 527; perfect only when
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- uniters are isolated, III. 267. See, also, United States.
- Unitarianism, I. 339; IX. 140; X. 112; XI. 18; Coleridge on, V. 10; the pale negations of, X. 117, 204, 403.
- United States, civil war in, V. 20; VII. 261; VIII. 116, 144, 207; X. 258; XI. 295-345, 322 f, 349-379; constitution, XI. 232, 540; democracy, VI. 62; XI. 526; disunion, XI. 261; eloquence, VIII. 132; freedom, IX. 199; government, XI. 271, 529; prosperity, VIII. 207.
- Units of society, I. 83, 115; IV. 114.
- UNITY, IX. 279; of men, I. 82, 106; II. 268; III. 78, 232, 280; VI. 45; of man with Nature, I. 68, 71, 86, 124, 197; III. 194; IX. 34, 51; XII. 318; of man with God, I. 10, 64, 122, 131, 194; II. 292; of man and history, II. 3-43; of laws, natural and moral, VI. 219; of mind, II. 277; XII. 313, 316; of Nature, I. 43, 67, 73, 201; III. 180-183; IV. 48; V. 237; VI. 25; VIII. 7, 18, 223; IX. 24, 54, 137; X. 86; XII. 20; of society, II. 87; of thought and morals in all animated nature, X. 184; of the world, VI. 47, 306; XII. 64.
- Universal, alone interests, XII. 4; is quality of beauty, VI. 303; in hero, I. 165; versus individual, I. 162, 205; X. 94; mind in all men, X. 93; in Nature, I. 212; VIII. 23; gives worth to particular, II. 5.
- Universalist, every man a, III. 245.
- Universality, III. 242; IV. 106, 110; V. 240, 244; XII. 55.
- Universals, science of, I. 204; III. 244.
- Universe, alive, II. 102; we need not assist, III. 284; beauty its creator, I. 24; III. 7; beckons to work, I. 351; nest of boxes, VIII. 333; X. 226; bride of soul, III. 77; its children, III. 6; wears our color, III. 79; conversation gives glimpses of, VI. 272; end, VI. 93; our expectations of, III. 61-62; immensity, I. 39; property of every individual, I. 20; law, X. 22; man's part in, I. 3; III. 26; X. 131; of nature and soul, I. 4; Newton on, VIII. 224; represented in each particle, II. 97, 101; paths in, XII. 42; moral sentiment converts into a personality, IV. 95; police and sincerity of, VI. 221; a pound, III. 96; prayer to, I. 346; prophetic, VIII. 223; protects itself by publicity, VI. 224; its simplicity not that of a machine, II. 137; the externization of the soul, III. 14; holds man to his task, VI. 5; exists in transit, XII. 59; unhurt, II. 131. 139; and unit are round, IX. 14,
- Universities, III. 259; V. 199-213; VI. 156; VII. 96; XI. 242.
- Unjust, happiness of, XI. 239.
- Unknown, the fear of remaining, II. 157; search for the, IV. 64.
- Unpopularity, penalty, II. 261.
- Unprincipled men, boasted performances of, X. 256.
- Unproductive classes, VI. 265.
- Unpunctuality, discomforts, II. 228.
- Unrelated, no man is, VIII. 301.
- Unsaid, soul known by what is left unsaid, II. 278.
- Unseen, we reason from seen to unseen, II. 146; VIII. 338; X. 327.
- Unsettled, hope for him who is, II. 318.
- Uranus, fable, I. 296.
- URIEL, IX. 13.
- Usage, drowsiness of, III. 258.
- Use, the health and virtue of all beings, I. 41; VI. 123, 243, 289; VII. 263; IX. 219; X. 84; XI. 542. See below.
- Useful, the, not detached from the beautiful, II. 366; III. 163; VI. 21, 159, 291; VIII. 319; XI. 237.
- Usual, to be wondered at, III. 285.
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- Utility, II. 222 f; III. 5; English passion for, V. 83, 247; X. 56, 244.
- Utterance, difference in the power of, VII. 38; VIII. 247.
- Vagabond, intellect is, II. 82; VIII. 70, 278.
- Valor, VII. 256; is power of self-recovery, II. 309.
- Valuations, in Nature none false, III. 101.
- Value, I. 41; VI. 106; of a man, VIII. 99.
- VAN BUREN, MARTIN, LETTER TO, XI. 87-96.
- Vane, Sir Harry, I. 21.
- Vane, always east, VI. 154.
- Vanity, danger from, III. 107; expensive, VI. 114.
- Van Mons, IV. 9; XII. 173; quoted, XII. 76.
- Variety, cardinal fact of, IV. 47, 51.
- Varnhagen von Ense, quoted, X. 105, 110, 112.
- Varnish, IV. 85; of the dew, I. 159; of manners, VI. 169, 188; of Nature, VII. 171; of philanthropy, II. 51.
- Vasari, quoted, VII. 310; XII. 185, 226, 228, 237, 241.
- Vast, the, X. 134; XII. 318.
- Vastation, of souls, IV. 131.
- Vastitudes of time and space, VIII. 225.
- Vatican, II. 359.
- Vaticination, parturient, XII. 62; entitled to respect, I. 70.
- Vault of heaven like snake skin, X. 191.
- Vauvenargues, quoted, X. 92.
- Vedas, VIII. 214; IX. 292; X. 71; quoted, IV. 48 f; VII. 317.
- Vegetation, VIII. 152 f; occult relation of man and, I. 10; II. 184; XII. 24.
- Vehicles of truth, content to be, I. 391; VIII. 99.
- Vehicular, language only, III. 34.
- Venelas, cloak, II. 35; VII. 123.
- Veneration, never dies out, I. 126; VII. 129; X. 221; we venerate our own unrealized being, I. 120.
- Venetian traveller in England, quoted, V. 113, 124, 145.
- Venice, V. 40.
- Venus, VI. 292; IX. 103; in art, II. 366.
- Veracity, VIII. 29; necessity for poet, VIII. 39.
- Versailles courtiers, I. 203.
- Verse and verse-making, IV. 215; VIII. 40, 53, 54, 56, 122, 243; IX. 220, 230. See, also, Poetry.
- Vesicles, power of growth, VI. 14.
- Vespucci, Amerigo, V. 152.
- "Vestiges of Creation," XI. 391.
- Vestry of verbs and texts in Swedenborg, IV. 122.
- Viasa (Vyasa), I. 58.
- Vice, betrays itself, II. 58, 115, 159; good patriots, VII. 31; popular allowance of, VI. 211; VIII. 317; X. 114; people wish to be saved from mischief of their vices, not from vices, III. 81; pride eradicates, VI. 114; we ascribe our own to others, III. 89; the virtues of society the vices of the saint, II. 295; VI. 251, 258; sacrifice of public to private interest is, X. 92.
- Victoria, Queen, V. 112, 192.
- Victory, III. 85, 90, 114; V. 139, 221; VI. 226, 237, 301; VII. 287, 288; VIII. 97, 184, 226; IX. 209; X. 127; XI. 149, 235, 310.
- Vienna, III. 191; V. 146, 267.
- View, difference of point of, II. 316; VIII. 99.
- Vigor, lesson of, III. 73; IV. 247; VI. 246; contagious, VI. 246.
- Viguier, Pauline de, VI. 296.
- Villa d' Este, I. 367.
- Village, the aesthetic, XII. 397.
- Villagers, we are, III. 35; VI. 6; VII. 124.
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- Violence, is absence of power, X. 92; in education, X. 154.
- VIOLET, THE, IX. 97.
- Violin, Bible like an old, VIII. 182.
- Virgil, II. 149; quoted, VI. 41; VII. 331.
- Virginia, XI. 101; University of, address at, X. 261-289.
- Virtue, not an aggregate, II. 275; not mere amiability, VI. 163; animal, III. 114; attainment, X. 83; a barrier, I. 231; IV. 180; X. 478 f; opens mind to beauty, I. 120; XII. 240; changes in meaning, I. 337; II. 314; X. 187; Christianity loses some energy of, II. 85; end of creation, I. 121; defined, I. 121; II. 160, 271; VIII. 229; X. 197 f; moral deformity is good passion out of place, VI. 258; devils respect, II. 159; like diamonds, best plain-set, VII. 115; distrust in, VI. 210; earth and sea conspire with, VII. 51; economist, VI. 113; an equipoise, XI. 392; Euripides on, II. 255; as exceptions, II. 52; none final, II. 316; fool of, VI. 325; and form, XI. 8; essential to freedom, X. 86; genius in, VIII. 275; geographical, I. 280; loved for its grace, IV. 215; greatness, the perception that virtue is enough, II. 255; is health, X. 43; XI. 392; is height, II. 70; Imperial guard, I. 149; incommunicable, IV. 28; inspiration, IV. 70; golden key, I. 64; the highest always against law, VI. 238; a luxury, VI. 91; manifest and occult, X. 23; no merit, II. 133; minor, II. 235; Milton's, XII. 262; muniments of, VI. 222; natural, II. 275; has air of necessity, X. 501; occasional, X. 365 f; and order, I. 323; not to be paraded, II. 133; the past works in the present action, II. 60; no penalty to, II. 122; not a penance, II. 53; not piecemeal, III. 263; source of power, II. 115; subordinate powers sleep in presence of, III. 54; prizes, X. 59; procession, II. 314; essence of religion, I. 121; X. 220; reward, II. 212; coincidence with science, IV. 83; fashion is virtue gone to seed, III. 128; self of every man, XI. 186; separates from the state, III. 280; X. 477; not a struggle, II. 133, 275; secures its own success, VII. 99; alone is sweet society, IX. 397; not taught, IV. 70; subject to no tax, II. 122; totters, I. 355; we do not wear out virtue, II. 63; winning, X. 277; why work in same way, II. 136.
- Vishnu, IV. 50, 178; VI. 20; VII. 172; VIII. 15; quoted, IV. 139.
- Vishnu Purana, IV. 49; VII. 218; quoted, X. 120.
- Vishnu Sarma, VII. 218; quoted, VI. 235.
- Visibility, dismay at, VII. 5.
- Vision, where there is no vision the people perish, I. 185, 191; II. 69; III. 28; X. 252; the visions of good men are good, VI. 322.
- VISIT, THE, IX. 12.
- Visits, III. 134; limit to, VIII. 91.
- Vitruvius, I. 43; quoted, III. 30; VIII. 185.
- Vivian Grey, XII. 377.
- Vocabulary, books as, VII. 211; of great poets, II. 336; III. 17; VIII. 49.
- Vocation, II. 140; VII. 117, 124; finding one's, XII. 83. See, also, Employments, Occupation.
- Voice, betrays, VI. 180; VIII. 120; English, V. 112; difference in, VIII. 83; index of state of mind, VIII. 120; the sweetest music, I. 263; II. 365; VIII. 119 ff; reader with bad voice, VIII. 120 f; see-saw in, VI. 45; a hoarse voice a kind of warning, IV. 144.
- Volitant stabilities, IV. 161..
- Voltaire, V. 127; VIII. 192, 318, X.
- ...
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- 110; quoted, IV. 27; VI. 29, 257; XII. 55.
- VOLUNTARIES, IX. 205-209.
- Vortical motion in thoughts, VIII. 7.
- Votary, religion cannot rise above state of, VI. 205.
- Voting, I. 253, 348; III. 279; VI. 14, 31, 249; VIII. 173; you cannot vote down gravitation or morals, XI. 236; female suffrage, XI. 419-423; immoral, XI. 522.
- Vows, every man should assume his own vows, I. 243.
- Vulgar, the, III. 115; VI. 231; X. 62; XII. 237.
- Wacic, the Caliph, quoted, XII. 351.
- Wages, I. 374; VI. 231; IX. 328.
- Wagon, hitch to star, VII. 28.
- Waiting, much of life seems, I. 353; II. 235.
- WALDEINSAMKEIT, IX. 249.
- WALDEN, IX. 370; VIII. 281; IX. 166, 230 f, 342.
- WALK, THE, IX. 366.
- Walking, the art of, II. 137; VIII. 151; a fine art, XII. 158; best in us goes to walk, XII. 157, 158; companions for, XII. 176; conditions for, XII. 142 ff; is mental gymnastics, XII. 141; Nature invites to, XII. 136; pleasure in, XII. 177.
- WALKS, CONCORD, XII. 169-179.
- Wall Street, I. 230; VI. 91.
- Waller, Edmund, VIII. 55.
- Walls of the soul, I. 168; V. 18.
- Walpole, Horace, quoted, VI. 297; X. 165.
- Walter, John, V. 264.
- Wandering, IX. 166 f, 311; XII. 135.
- Wandering Jew, VIII. 339; fable of, XI. 436.
- Want and Have, II. 91; VI. 117, 165; VII. 121; IX. 270.
- Wants, elegant to have few and serve them one's self, I. 247; IX. 219; man born to have wants and to satisfy them, VI. 88, 91, 266; VII. 11, 57, 112, 114, 162, 327.
- WAR, XI. 149-176; art of, II. 86; attractive because it shows readiness to imperil life, II. 250, 322; VII. 256; X. 38; XI. 155, 171; childish, XI. 155; forwards the culture of man, I. 323; VI. 36, 109, 165 f, 254; VIII. 104; X. 37 f, 188. 248, 257, 422; XI. 59, 152, 323, 342, 353, 514; decline of, XI. 156 ff, 175; English in, V. 85, 93, 175; foul game, V. 191; gunpowder in, XI. 513; improvements, X. 189; man born to, II. 249; suits a semi-civilized condition, XI. 304; the solvent of society, XI. 341; Napoleon on, IV. 229, 235; XI. 343; nothing new in, IV. 247; opposition to, XI. 168; preparation for peace, VI. 71; science in, IX. 223; everything useful the seat of, III. 100; antagonized by trade, V. 120, 161; XI. 156 f.
- Warren, John C., X. 340.
- Washerwoman's maxim, VI. 255.
- Washington, George, not found in narrative of his exploits, III. 89, 229; Jacobin tired of, IV. 27; Jerseys good enough for, II. 258; Landor on, V. 7; and Lincoln, XI. 336; style of breeding, VIII. 102; safe from the meanness of politics, II. 263.
- Watches, men like, VI. 177; VII. 234, 288; VIII. 52.
- WATER, IX. 344; "never baulk," XII. 407; drinking, II. 254; III. 29; finds its level, II. 146; meeting of, II. 212; point of interest where land and water meet, I. 205; mixing, II. 207; relieves monotony in landscape, VIII. 45; powers, VII. 146; IX. 47, 344; X. 70; never speaks of itself, XII. 316.
- WATER-FALL, IX. 369.
- Waterville College, address at, X. 239-258.
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- Watt, James, V. 77, 93, 98, 158, 238; VI. 18, 33, 57, 87; VII. 52; X. 12, 178; quoted, VIII. 269.
- Watts, Isaac, X. 383.
- Wave, charm of motion, VI. 292; the healing, IX. 325; of mutation, VI. 305; IX. 287; at Nahant, IX. 345; wealth, strength and illusion in, IX. 243.
- Weak, every man seems to himself weak, II. 238.
- WEALTH, VI. 83-127; IX. 285; in America, V. 153; VIII. 100; and aristocracy, I. 261; without rich heart, a beggar, III. 154; ends, II. 235; III. 190; in England, V. 98, 153, 155, 181; health, the first wealth, VI. 56; VII. 113; hunger for, III. 190; sign of knowledge, II. 114; means, not end, III. 191; X. 125; index of merit, III. 161; objections, IV. 253; VII. 114; parasitical, X. 271; power not to be divorced from, XII. 200; respect for, not without right, VIII. 100; scholar needs little, VIII. 297; servitude, XII. 217; tendency to draw on spiritual class, X. 243; stands on a few staples, XI. 512; source of, VI. 85; tainted, I. 234; need of, for domestic well-being, VII. 113; a vine, IX. 270.
- Weather, we cannot give up care of, II. 226.
- Weather-cock of party, XI. 514.
- Weatherfend the roof, IX. 183.
- Web, of life, VI. 82, 321; VII. 171, 173; X. 197; of nature, VIII. 26; of party, XI. 263.
- WEBSTER, DANIEL, IX. 398; XI. 201-205, 219-228; III. 230; IV. 15, 199; VI. 13, 63, 135; VIII. 25, 117, 183, 219, 318; X. 447 f, 490; XI. 181, 233, 240, 247, 250, 528; XII. 48, 97; quoted, VII. 75; XI. 193, 198.
- Wedgewood and Flaxman, XI. 511.
- Weeds, VI. 115.
- Weight, personal, V. 103; VI. 14.
- Weimar, Grand Duke of, and Goethe, VIII. 317; quoted, II. 229.
- WELL, INSCRIPTION FOR A, IX. 376.
- Well-doing, talent of, VI. 196.
- Well dressed, tranquillity in being, VIII. 88.
- Well read, we expect a great man to be, VIII. 178.
- Wellington, Duke of, V. 4, 68, 85, 109, 120, 123, 184, 307; VI. 151; VII. 271, 323; VIII. 184; X. 167, 496; quoted, V. 111, 118, 131, 222; VII. 258, 316.
- Welsh poetry, Triads, quoted, VI. 21, 303; VII. 63; VIII. 58.
- West, the, I. 370; X. 179; XI. 534.
- WEST INDIES, EMANCIPATION IN THE BRITISH, XI. 97-147; I. 231.
- West Point, VI. 77; X. 251.
- West Roxbury Association, X. 359 ff.
- Wheat, steam-pipe screwed to the wheat crop, VI. 86.
- Wheel-insect, IV. 290.
- Wheels, the creation on, VIII. 4.
- Whigs, VI. 63; XI. 231 f; in embryo, VI. 12.
- Whim, VIII. 289; X. 27; as motto, II. 51, 317.
- Whimseys, IV. 265; V. 123; VII. 320.
- Whiskey, tax on, VII. 31.
- Whistling, IV. 99, 184; VIII. 72.
- Whitefield, George, VII. 334; XI. 66, 86.
- White Hills, I. 308; VI. 95; X. 401; horn in, III. 175.
- Whitewashed by unmeaning names, V. 179.
- Whitman, Walt, XII. 285 f.
- Whittier, J. G., quoted, XI. 216.
- Whole, circumambient, XII. 336.
- Wholeness, in Nature is wholeness in thought, VII. 93; VIII. 158; IX. 4 ff; X. 197.
- Wickedness, successful, II. 94; VI. 21, 66.
- Wicliffe, John, V. 216, 220; VIII. 214.
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- Wieland, Christoph M., quoted, XII. 325.
- Wife, IV. 129.
- Wilberforce, William, V. 4; XI. 108, 141.
- Wilkinson, James J. G., IV. 111; V. 250.
- Will, acts of, rare, XI. 521; and action, III. 97; affection essential to, VI. 28; and art, VII. 39; beauty the mark of, I. 19; education of, the end of our existence, I. 39; VI. 54; VII. 275; elemental, VIII. 333, 342; the presence of God to men, XII. 46; the one serious and formidable thing in nature, VI. 30, 232; free agency, II. 139; IV. 177; VI. 21, 36, 48, 288; XI. 236; and genius, VIII. 201; heart, throne of, IX. 284; and inspiration, VI. 30; moral sentiment the kingdom of, IV. 94; liberation from sheaths of organization, VI. 36; male power, X. 157; constitutes man, IV. 125; V. 12; X. 91; XI. 407; not to be manufactured, VI. 28; miraculous, XII. 46; moral nature vitiated by interference of, II. 133, 272, 328; VIII. 229; nothing impossible to, VI. 248; predominance of nature over, II. 134; all possible to, IV. 176; measure of power, V. 305; VI. 27; VIII. 283; X. 157; XI. 231; XII. 46; leans on principle, VII. 30; follows perception, XII. 37; of pure runs down into impure, III. 95; rudder of ship of humanity, XI. 407; selecting, VI. 84; added to thought, IX. 331; XII. 41, 46; more than talent, X. 50 f; weakness begins when individual would be something of himself, II. 271; wishing is not willing, XII. 46; realized in world, I. 40.
- Willard, Major Samuel, XI. 32, 57 f.
- William, the Conquerer, V. 73, 160; VI. 253.
- William of Orange, VI. 149, 233.
- William of Wykeham, V. 290.
- Williams, Helen M., quoted, VIII. 26.
- Willis, N. P., quoted, IV. 145.
- Willows, VIII. 152.
- Wilson, John, VIII. 197.
- Wilton Hall, V. 190, 284.
- Winchester Cathedral, V. 289.
- Winckelmann, VI. 286; VII. 202; quoted, VI. 181.
- Wind, cosmical west, VIII. 211; Welsh invocation of, VIII. 58; on lake, VIII. 288; IX. 321; myriad-handed, IX. 42; north, IX. 42; order of, VI. 321; scholastic bag of, III. 257; sense of, VI. 284; service of, I. 13.
- Wind, South, III. 172; IX. 39, 46, 93, 102, 148, 255, 337, 361; long memories in, IX. 361.
- Wind-harps, III. 172. See, also, Harp.
- Winds, the "Maruts," XII. 148.
- Windows, of diligence, I. 19; painter, II. 20; of soul, VI. 179; watcher of, II. 175.
- Wine, bards love, III. 27; bring me, IX. 125; in cup of life, VI. 41; cup shakes, X. 162; decanting, farming like, VI. 119; and eloquence, IV. 153; false, VIII. 70; friends are frozen wine, IX. 352; Hafiz on, VIII. 245, 246; hidden, IX. 177; inspiration, VIII. 281; for a certain style of living, XI. 524; of life, IX. 387; Luther on, IV. 153; which is music, IX. 126; no resource but to take wine with him, V. 230; what wine and roses say, IX. 29; sidereal, IX. 138; feels bloom of vine, IX. 166; waters fell as, IX. 34.
- Wings, affections are, VIII. 228; beauty plants, III. 23; VI. 305; of time, IX. 270.
- Winkelried, Arnold, I. 20.
- Winter scenery, I. 18.
- Winthrop, Governor John, XI. 41, 45.
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- Wisdom, return for action, I. 97; II. 227; the difference of persons not in wisdom but in art, II. 333; and beauty, IV. 69; cheerfulness of, VI. 264; VII. 306; contagion of, IV. 13, 25; involves courage, X. 86; mask with delight, IX. 324; defined, XII. 46; each has enough, XII. 29; does not go with ease, XII; 185; in private economy, II. 234; like electricity, VII. 250; XII. 27; infused into every form, III. 196; genius sheds, I. 108; from God only, IV. 70; not without goodness, I. 221; health, condition of, VII. 306; of humanity, II. 277, 288; in life, III. 59; and love, IV. 219; does not concern itself with particular men, VIII. 312; the mark of, is to see the miraculous, I. 74; III. 68; no monopoly, II. 278; to know our own, III. 81; in pine-woods, III. 29; seeks not linear rectitude, I. 302; contrasted with shrewdness, II. 118; sign, VII. 306; from well-doing, XI. 237; of world, II. 288; woman knows all, XI. 406.
- Wise, Gov. Henry A., VII. 271; XI. 269.
- Wise man, angles with himself only, VII. 114; makes all wise, IV. 25; VI. 269; not always wise, VI. 92; VII. 250; XII. 27; discriminates, I. 38; end of nature, III. 216; few dare to be, I. 142; and foolish, I. 38; III. 285; cannot be found, III. 213; has no personal friends, III. 216; does not decide for future, XI. 169; Luther said God could not do without, III. 187; takes much for granted, X. 56 f; intelligence with others, II. 146; VIII. 227; at home everywhere, II. 81; IX. 46; leaves out the many, III. 100; all literature writes his character, II. 7; has no needs, III. 216; shuns novelty, X. 174; presence, III. 216; their service to mankind, XI. 502; is state, III. 216; wants to find his weak points, II. 118.
- Wiser than we know, II. 96, 280.
- Wishes, are granted, VI. 46 f; VII. 327; X. 94; XII. 46; and will, VI. 29; VII. 254.
- Wit, adamant soft to, IX. 69; shaft of Apollo, VIII. 163; architecture of, I. 172; charter, VIII. 218; cheap, VI. 230; detectors of, I. 358; difference of impressionability, VII. 297; English, V. 124; epilepsies of, II. 199; and folly, II. 98; like Greek fire, VIII. 163; humor better than, XI. 467; ice-cream instead of, I. 244; irresistible, VIII. 163; does not make us laugh, VIII. 98; law of water true of wit, XI. 514; libraries overload, II. 85; a magnet for, VIII. 320; men of, unavailable, XII. 7; and mobs, VIII. 147; mother, X. 157; too much, XII. 402; peacock, IX. 56; penetrating, XII. 384; the finest has its sediment, VI. 248; use of, IX. 219; makes its own welcome, VIII. 163.
- Witan, quoted, VIII. 323; XI. 30.
- Witchcraft, of affection, II. 174; of curls, VII. 105.
- Wolff, Frederick A., X. 330.
- Woman, XI. 403-426; III. 149-152; as author, VII. 286; civilizer, II. 259; III. 150; VI. 149, 296; VII. 23; VIII. 93; XI. 409; clergy addressed as, I. 71; conscience of people, XI. 260; lawgiver in conversation, VII. 226; VIII. 92 f; XI. 408; English, V. 66, 108; fascination, VI. 315; of fashion, VI. 171; figure, VI. 299; Fourier's opinion of, X. 354; in the home, III. 150; XI. 411; element of illusion, VI. 315; impressionable, VI. 44; XI. 405; influence, VI. 171, 296; inspiration, II. 151, 259; III. 151; XI. 405; love and marriage, II. 183; VII. 124; moral, VI. 306; more
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- personal than man, XI. 418; political status, III. 150; VI. 293; VIII. 208; XI. 416; a poet, VI. 296; rights, III. 150; a solvent, III. 151; superior, speech of, VIII. 93; force of will, VII. 266.
- Wonder, XII. 327, 388; poetry the daughter of, IV. 206; seed of science, VII. 158; IX. 44; X. 27.
- Wood, Antony, V. 69, 79, 154, 201; VII. 243; X. 186; XII. 257.
- Wood-bell's peal, IX. 230.
- Wood-chucks, men instead of, III. 183.
- Wood-craft, III. 177.
- Wood-gods, him wood-gods feed with honey wild, IX. 321; lay of, IX. 52.
- Wood-life, contrite, II. 58.
- WOOD-NOTES, IX. 43-59.
- Woods, aboriginal, I. 169; city boy in, VII. 298; egotism vanishes in, I. 10; not forgotten, I. 32; freedom of, VIII. 151; glad, IX. 249; gods talk in breath of, IX. 311; joy in, XII. 173, 175; tempered light, III. 170; man a child in, I. 9; October, IX. 362; peace, XII. 237; plantations of God, I. 9; inspire reason and faith, I. 10; self-similar, IX. 186; secret of, imparted to throbbing heart, IX. 368; put in song, IX. 229; value of, XII. 147; seem to wait, II. 18; walks in XII. 147; Walden, IX. 249, 370. See, also, Forests, Trees.
- Woolman, John, XI. 108.
- Words, are actions, III. 8; air forged into, I. 40; IX. 338; air-sown, IX. 222; awkward, II. 225; would bleed, IV. 186; brutes have no, I. 45; bullets, IV. 168; disputes in, III. 280; finite, I. 44; III. 21; strokes of genius, III. 22; VIII. 195; from heart, enrich, III. 104; golden, IV. 126; inflation from too much use, X. 169; Landor's use of, XII. 348; loaded with life, I. 95; lists of, suggestive, III. 17; meanings fluxional, II. 320; VI. 304; VIII. 17, 33 f; metallic force of primitive words, VIII. 57; misuse of, XII. 291-293; objects are words, XII. 5; that are persuasions, IX. 150; perversion of, I. 30; fossil poetry, III. 22; power, VII. 63; religions and states founded on, VIII. 38; sincere, never lost, II. 158; to match sky, IX. 230; spoken, not recalled, II. 116; of street, forceful, XII. 287 f; study of, III. 257; symbolism a second nature growing out of first, I. 25; III. 22; thought always clothed in, XII. 95; timely, II. 228; transparent, VII. 190; necessary because of distance of thought between speaker and hearer, II. 311; unconscious, VII. 38; new uses of, a source of inspiration, VIII. 294; let us not be victims of, VII. 15; that are not words, but things, VII. 226.
- Wordsworth, William, II. 247; V. 18-24, 294-298; XII. 319, 365-369; American appreciation of, XII. 197; anecdote, VII. 325; appropriator of thoughts, VIII. 193; habit of brag, V. 150, 295; conscientious, V. 256; VIII. 202; and De Quincey, VIII. 192; XII. 142; great design, VIII. 33; XII. 367, 372; disparagement, V. 297; exceptional genius, V. 257; Lamb to, VIII. 198; Landor on, V. 257, 297; XII. 338, 346; example of right living, V. 296; XI. 154 f; "ode," VIII. 346; Pan's recording voice, IX. 240; agent of reform in philosophy, VIII. 66; visit to, V. 19-24, 294; quoted, I. 131; II. 116, 132, 147; V. 20, 110, 217, 294, 297; VI. 303; VII. 179, 299, 309, 325; VIII. 27, 69, 185, 226, 296; X. 95, 226, 249, 323; XI. 88; XII. 260, 267.
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- Work, contentment in, XII. 82 f; dignity of, I. 14, 179, 181, 240, 350; II. 141, 164; III. 189, 283; V. 196; VI. 87, 91 f, 112, 224 ff, 232; VII. 23, 137, 177, 291-294, 321; VIII. 210, 341, 342; X. 129; XI. 331, 480, 542; XII. 30, 382. See, also, Labor.
- Workman, foreign, way to conquer, VI. 225.
- WORKS AND DAYS, VII. 155-185.
- World, enlarged by our finding affinities, VII. 302; all outside, III. 64; anthropomorphized, VIII. 24; bankrupt, XII. 386; a battle-ground, X. 87; is beauty, I. 15, 23, 112, 119; IX. 69; XII. 216; like man's body, I. 64; build your own, I. 76; final cause of, I. 12, 47; Plato's copyright on, IV. 77; of corn and money, IV. 93; for cricket-ball, III. 49; a divine dream, I. 62, 303; for man's education, VIII. 334; emblematic, I. 32; II. 9; empty, II. 147; belongs to energetic, VIII. 144; X. 85; enigmatical, VII. 180; always equal to itself, IV. 107; VII. 174, 306; VIII. 213; in equilibrium, XII. 414; not finished, but fluid, I. 105; it is for good, X. 91; a growth, X. 187; in the hand, IV. 159; heedless, IX. 8; greasy hotel, XI. 189; stands on ideas, X. 88; illustration of the mind, I. 120; immensity, II. 356; belted with laws, X. 85, 128; congruity with man, I. 68, 120; II. 4, 8, 352; III. 183, 196; X. 131 f; for man, IX. 28 f; mathematical, II. 102; VI. 81; other me, I. 95; metamorphosed by scholar, I. 87; mill, VI. 81; in miniature, in every event, II. 340, 355; miracle of soul, II. 297; mirror of man, X. 191; his who has money, VI. 95; moral import, VI. 85, 117 ff; man the mould into which it is poured, I. 335; new, I. 167; as noun and verb, III. 20; but one, X. 199; picture-book of human life, VIII. 9; plastic, I. 105; plenum, III. 243; a poem, IV. 120, 125; property of each if he will, I. 20, 104; VII. 171, 306; to be realized, III. 85; rough and surly, VI. 6; secret of, X. 238; sit on and steer, I. 320; shadow of the soul, I. 95, 334; III. 21; Swedenborg's system of, IV. 133; a symbol, X. 464; teacher, X. 127; like telegraph system, VI. 44; temple, III. 17; rests on thoughts, X. 88; tool-chest, VI. 90; not yet subdued by thought, I. 168; for use, VI. 90; X. 73, 84, 125; not used up, IV. 247; product of one will, I. 123.
- World (social), accepts man's measure of himself, II. 151; man of, VI. 150, 183.
- WORLD-SOUL, THE, IX. 15-19, 65.
- WORSHIP, VI. 199-242; IX. 279; decay of, I. 143; X. 104, 206; learned from Nature, I. 61; of material qualities, II. 161; and moral sentiment, I. 125; finds expression in good works, XI. 480, 490.
- Worth, absolute and relative, I. 147, 249; II. 61, 147; a man passes for that he is worth, II. 157; IV. 129; X. 49; apologies for real worth, III. 218.
- Wotton, Sir Henry, IV. 203; quoted, V. 112, 178; X. 441.
- Would, or should, in our statements, VIII. 30.
- Wrath, English, V. 140; splendid, XI. 222; wild, X. 276.
- Wren, Sir Christopher, quoted, VI. 36; XI. 410.
- Writer, affection inspires, II. 191; VII. 10; best part of, is that which does not belong to him, II. 108; V. 5; from his heart, II. 153; materials, IV. 261; need of him, IV. 269; VII. 11; signs of originality, I. 30, 70;
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- VIII. 33; the people, not the college, his teacher, VII. 11; popular power, X. 54; once sacred, IV. 269; secondary, might be spared, VII. 194; secret, II. 332; self-trust, III. 189; a skater who must go where skates carry him, VIII. 31; skill, not wisdom, his characteristic, II. 333; conditions of success, II. 306; V. 4; VII. 182; VIII. 281; surroundings, VIII. 291; talent does not make, IV. 281; young writer leaves out the one thing he has to say, VIII. 308.
- Writing, must be affirmative, XII. 78; greatest of arts, XII. 283, 303; from aspiration, II. 221; comes by grace of God, III. 69; XII. 78; against gravitation, VIII. 131; X. 257; weakens memory, XII. 99; new audience reached by, XII. 283; under nom-de-plume, VIII. 196; must be addressed to one's self, II. 153.
- Wrong, I. 25; seen only in some gross form, I. 279; measure of, I. 336; the pains we take to do wrong, X. 148; penalty, II. 110; prosperity built on, X. 189; a remedy for every wrong, VIII. 333; the years are always pulling down a wrong, XI. 354.
- Xanthos, marbles at, V. 91. See Sir Charles Fellowes.
- Xanthus, I. 349.
- XENOPHANES, IX. 137; VI. 324; quoted, I. 43.
- Xenophon, III. 101; VII. 200, 248; VIII. 238; quoted, II. 25.
- Yacht-race, it is the man that wins, V. 53.
- Yama, legend of, VIII. 349.
- Yankee, XII. 395; enterprise, II. 235; VI. 57.
- Year, all sorts of weather make up, IX. 75; each moment has its own beauty, I. 18; specious panorama, IX. 137; inhaled as a vapor, I. 158.
- Years, blue glory, VII. 173; menials, II. 161; single moments confess, IX. 12; X. 253; of routine and sin, I. 147; teach much which the days never know, III. 69; usurped by petty experiences, II. 226.
- Yeast, inspiration like, VIII. 271; reformers against, III. 252.
- Yellow-breeched philosopher, IX. 40.
- Yezdam prophet, XII. 398.
- Ygdrasil tree, X. 201.
- Yoganidra, IV. 178; VI. 313.
- Yoke of opinions, VI. 156.
- You, another, X. 138.
- YOUNG AMERICAN, THE, I. 361-395.
- Young, Edward, X. 402; quoted, II. 317; VI. 202.
- Young, ideas always find us, IX. 89.
- Young, may take a leap in the dark, X. 16; despise life, III. 61; old head on young shoulders, VII. 316.
- Young men, legacy of ages to, I. 311; aims, IV. 158; X. 250 f, 268, 276 f; not to be helpless angels, X. 251; Carlyle and, X. 491; view of the manly character, VIII. 304; tendency to country life, I. 366; educated above their work, XII. 398; whose performance is not extraordinary, II. 258; III. 51; XII. 398; revere genius, III. 5; lose heart, II. 75; make themselves at home, VII. 15; impediments, I. 230; innovators, I. 306; young and old men, II. 170; X. 136; need patience, I. 115; society an illusion to, III. 199; start in life, XII. 398; work not wanting, XII. 403; their year a heap of beginnings, VII. 328.
- Young Men's Republican Club, resolutions, VII. 321.
- Youth, actions, pictures in the air, I. 96; aid of, I. 346; love of beauty prolongs, II. 272; characterized,
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- X. 140 f; the day too short, VII. 228; dreams, III. 201; VI. 265; fault soonest mended, IX. 383; follies, VI. 257; glory, II. 181; health of, admirable, VII. 297; VIII. 276; hero-worship of, IV. 3; feeling of incompetency, IV. 184; love, II. 169; passions, VII. 325; perpetual, I. 9; X. 136; everywhere in place, VII. 319; must prize, VIII. 276; promise of, I. 344; receptivity, II. 319; a reconnoitring, VII. 8; excess of sensibility, VII. 328; sensual, X. 150; becomes skeptical, X. 279; suffers from powers untried, VII. 326; wisdom in, IX. 383.
- Yunani sage, III. 109.
- Zealot, burlesque attaches to, I. 355; III. 188.
- Zero, result of most lives, X. 224.
- Zertusht. See Zoroaster.
- Zodiac, II. 5; IX. 176.
- Zoroaster, III. 109; quoted, I. 213; II. 79; V. 241; VI. 23, 73, 258; VIII. 19.
- Zymosis, VIII. 131.