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Retardation of Development in
America, 32, 123, 126, 130, 151,
174, 201, 275-276, 357, 416, 446,
483, 484, 489, 522-529. See Den-
sity, Inexperience.

Reversion, Social, in America, 504.
Revolution, the American, 104-116;
63, 67, 71, 73, 75, 76, 79, 81, 103,
117, 121, 130, 134, 152, 160, 169,
172, 175, 180, 185, 204, 240-242,
247, 253, 258, 260, 268, 346, 382,
437, 481, 484, 485, 524-525.
Revolution, the Constitutional, in
England, 140, 144, 148. See Re-
form Bill.

Revolution, the French, 61, 63, 115-
116, 140, 310, 345, 467, 471; its
abstract philosophy, 63-64, 109,
467; its rationalism, 66, 161, 417,
423. See Revolutionary Spirit.
Revolution of 1688, the, 13, 21, 29,
523.

Revolutionary Spirit, its view of
Human Nature, 102, 145-146, 186,
300, 332, 339, 443, 467, 500, 528-
529; its contrasting manifestations,
in England and France, 68, 145;
in Europe and America, 290-293,
310. See Transcendentalism, Uni-
tarianism.

Rhetoric in New England, 248, 253-

257, 259, 270, 404.
Rhodes, James Ford, his "History
of the United States," 351.
Richardson, Samuel, 66, 68, 160.
Richmond, Virginia, 204, 205, 341.
Right and Rights, English and
American Ideal of, 8, 14, 64, 115-
116, 467, 521, 524, 525, 529; Di-
vergence
of, see Disunion,
American Revolution; French
ideal of, 63, 109-110; see Revolu-
tionary spirit.

Ripley, George, 229, 286, 302, 303,
305, 308, 455.

Roe, Edward Payson, 461.
Rogers, Samuel, 67, 69.
Romanticism, 431-432; in America,
162-163, 174-175, 177, 179, 195,

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San Francisco, 233, 451.
Satire in America, 90-91, 101, 113,

119, 122-126, 130, 193, 196, 400-
403, 411, 420-421, 459, 508, 512-
513.

Saturday Club of Boston, 376-377,
437-439, 444.

Scholarship in New England, 245,

260-276, 277, 290, 291, 295, 326,
338, 347, 371, 393-397, 443, 528.
Science, English, 25, 148; in Amer-

ica, see Cotton Mather, Franklin.
Scott, Sir Walter, 67, 134, 145, 146,

147, 148, 183, 184, 185, 189, 190,
191, 192, 193, 198, 220, 230, 290,
481, 488, 529; his “ Waverley Nov-
els," 146, 154, 174, 184, 526; his

66

'Lady of the Lake," 389.
"Scribner's Magazine," 453, 454,
459.

"Scriptures" in New England, 303,
314, 318, 331, 372, 445.

Sea, American Books about the.
See Cooper, Dana, Melville.
Seabury, Samuel, 110, 111.
Secession, 105, 255. See Civil War
in America, Disunion.

Second Church of Boston, 44, 71,
288, 311-313, 326.

Sedgmoor, Battle of, 59.

Sentimentality in Literature, 200-
201. See Romanticism.
Sewall, Samuel, 31, 32, 33, 246, 341 ;

his Diary, 234, 236, 263.
Seward, William Henry, 222.
Shakspere, 4, 5, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 26,

27, 32, 37, 41, 42, 50, 55, 65, 68, 69,
136, 184, 217, 248, 253, 302, 315,
445, 458, 469, 523.

Shelley, Percy Bysshe, 146, 147,
160, 161, 165, 174, 193, 291, 526,
527.

Shepard, Thomas, 52.

Short Stories as a Form of Litera-

ture, 168, 174, 176-177, 191, 211-
214, 226, 237, 430-434, 461, 477,
486, 506, 515-518. See Fiction.
Sibley, John Langdon, his "Harvard
Graduates," 47.

Sidney, Sir Philip, 26.

Simms, William Gilmore, 480, 486,
487-489, 491, 492.

Slavery, Negro, 151, 340-346, 482.
See Antislavery Movement.
Smith, Captain John, 35, 484.
Smith Professorship at Harvard
College, 264-265, 266, 296, 379-
381, 393, 406. See Longfellow, J.
R. Lowell, George Ticknor.
Smollett, Tobias, 66, 68.
Socialism in New England. See
Brook Farm.

Social Relations of American Men
of Letters, Abroad, 170, 225, 264,
350, 396; at Home, 181, 188, 206,
228, 338, 376, 408-410, 465, 511-
512. See Distinction.

Society, Structure of American, in
New England, 71-73, 75, 92-94,
193, 224, 234-244, 248, 258, 266,
288, 326, 371, 378, 410, 436-441,
481; in the South, 206, 481-483,
487-488.

South, the, 151, 152, 341, 356-357,
480-499, 504, 513, 514. See North
and South.

South Carolina, 234, 351, 489; Nul-
lification in, 198, 487, 491. See
Charleston.

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Spenser, 4, 5, 26, 27.

Spontaneity. See National Traits.
"Springfield Republican," the, 459.
Stedman, Edmund Clarence, his
"Poets of America," 385, 415,
416, 417.

Stedman and Hutchinson's "Library
of American Literature," 35 ".,
123, 157, 195, 208, 220, 341, 460,
461, 481, 492, 508.

Stedman and Woodberry's edition
of Poe, 207, 208, 212.
Steele, Sir Richard, 65, 167.
Stelligeri, 414 n.
Stephens, Alexander
483-484.

Hamilton,

Stevenson, Robert Louis, 147, 176,
229, 527.

Stoddard, Richard Henry, 222.
Stoddard, Solomon, 83, 86.
Stowe, Harriet Beecher, 352-356;
366, 371; her " Old Town Folks,"
237; her "Uncle Tom's Cabin,"
388.

Struggle for existence, 16, 17, 18, 33,
53.

Stuart, Gilbert, 64, 241-243, 248,
345.

Style, Literary, in America, 38, 41,

53, 95, 101, 162, 166, 173, 175, 177,
183, 193, 197, 199, 201, 211, 216,
226, 250-253, 257, 267, 269-270,
272, 274, 276, 323-324, 335-336,
354, 363, 390, 397, 404, 428, 459,
471, 473-478, 492, 495, 498, 507.
See Dialect, Extracts.
Sumner, Charles, 170, 258, 348, 350-
351, 352, 371, 387, 438, 483.

Surrey, Earl of, 38.

Survival of the fittest, 17.
Swift, Jonathan, 65, 112, 136, 172.

"TATLER," the, 66, 79, 118.

"Taxation without Represen-
tation," 107.

Taylor, Bayard, 222, 229, 455-458.
Taylor, Father, 373.

Taylor, Jeremy, 20, 23.

Teaching, Professional, by Men of
Letters, 380, 395, 397. See Long-
fellow, Lowell, Ticknor.
Temple, Sir William, 25, 40.
Tennyson, 147, 209, 526, 528.
Thackeray, William Makepeace,
147, 176, 206, 415, 526, 528.
Theocracy, in England, 17; in New
England, 42, 44-46, 48, 70, 83, 95,
235. See Calvinism, Puritanism.
Theological literature in America,

36, 41, 43, 78, 80, 83-91, 110, 119,
121, 122, 123, 136, 180, 190, 209,
228, 246, 247, 263, 274, 292, 325,
437, 523, 525; in England, 37,
119.

Thoreau, Henry David, 332-337 ;
302, 328, 338, 339, 371, 376, 398,
489.

Ticknor, Francis Orrery, 489-490,
499.

Ticknor, George, 264-267; 170, 268,
270, 271, 280, 296, 371, 379–381,
393, 395, 406, 418, 437.
Timrod, Henry, 486, 491, 492-495,
497, 499.

Town Histories in New England,
264.

Tories, see Loyalists.
Trafalgar, Battle of, 62, 139.
Transcendentalism in New England,

290-310; 245, 311, 324, 330, 333,
338-340, 346, 347, 359, 371, 372,
379, 384 386, 416, 418, 429, 432,
441, 485, 528. See Revolutionary
Spirit.

Translations of American books,
183, 207.

Translations in Elizabethan litera-
ture, 5, 20, 22, 27, 484; in Ameri-
ca, 198, 391, 456, 458.

Trent, W. P., 480, 487-488, 491.
"Tribune," the New York, 229,
230, 300, 308, 309, 449, 454-455,
456.
Trollope, Anthony, 176.

Trollope, Mrs., 502, 503.
Trumbull, John, 123-126; 120, 129.
Tudor, William, 262.

Twain, Mark, 101, 173, 271, 508, 513;
his "Huckleberry Finn," 342, 477,
503.

Tyler, Moses Coit, 35 m., 40; his
"Literary History of the Ameri-
can Revolution," 104, 107, 112,
134, 485.

UNION, the ideal of, 105, 151,

345.
Unitarianism in New England, 277-
289; 90, 122, 224, 245, 267, 273,
290, 291, 292, 295, 299, 303, 304,
308, 309, 311, 314, 326, 338, 341,
342, 346, 347, 353, 359, 371, 372,
379, 384, 393, 407-409, 418-419,
422, 441-442, 443, 528. See Re-
volutionary Spirit.

United States, 6, 7, 29, 127, 149-153,
169. See Constitution, Law.
Universities, the Office of, 383.
University of Pennsylvania, 79, 93.

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Ward, Nathaniel, his "Simple
Cobbler of Agawam," 508.
Ware, Henry, 282.
Ware, Henry, Jr., 311.
Warren, Joseph, 247, 260.
Washington, George, 64, 76, 92, 117,
120, 151, 268, 357, 485; Weems's
Life of, 159.

Washington, City of, 233, 451, 466.
Waterloo, Battle of, 61, 140, 145, 146,
525-526.

Wealth in New England, 71-73, 242,
248-249, 378, 440; in New York,
463; in the West, 441.

Webster, Daniel, 247-253, 255, 257,
280, 291, 354, 371, 437, 439, 485,
491; Whittier's poems on, 367-369.
Welde, Thomas, 37.

Wesley, John, 66, 74.

West, the, 500-513; 30, 152, 441, 514.
West Church of Boston, 442.

West Point Military Academy, 205.
Whigs of Massachusetts, 249, 255,
257.

Whipple, Edwin Percy, 438.
Whitcomb's "Chronological Out-
lines of American Literature," 35,
36, 78, 461.

White, Richard Grant, 458-459.
Whitefield, George, 74, 75, 97-99.
Whitman, Walt, 464, 465-479.
Whittier, John Greenleaf, 358-369,
388-389; 197, 237, 371, 376, 425,
426, 430, 438, 460, 465, 481, 489,
493, 495, 509, 528.

Wigglesworth, Michael, 36, 39, 78.
Wilkins, Mary Eleanor, 237.
William III., 7, 13, 25, 32, 33, 45, 53,

55, 59, 60, 79, 357-

William IV., 139, 140, 141, 143,
147.

Williams College, 193, 461.
Williams, Roger, 27, 32, 50, 77.
Willis, Nathaniel Parker, 222–230;
207, 208, 280, 288, 449.
Wills, George Stockton, 480.
Winslow, Edward, 26, 32.

Winsor, Justin, his "Memorial His-
tory of Boston,” 287.

Winthrop, John, 26, 31, 32, 50, 77,
357; his History, 31, 263.
Winthrop, Professor John, 261.
Winthrop, Robert Charles, 258, 280,
439.

Wirt, William, 485.
Wister, Owen, 504.

Witchcraft at Salem, 33, 45-46.
Woodworth, Samuel, 195.
Woolman, John, 80-81, 299.
Wordsworth, William, 67, 69, 145,
146, 162, 174, 201, 228, 291, 399,
526, 527.

World's Fair of 1893, 505-506.

YALE COLLEGE, 75, 78, 79, 83,
120, 121, 122, 123, 124, 126, 129,
181, 224, 225, 352, 407, 486.
Yellow Fever in New York, 163-164.
"Youth's Companion," the, 224.

Books by BARRETT WENDELL

WILLIAM

SHAKSPERE

A Study in Elizabethan Literature

12mo, $1.75

CRITICAL

OPINIONS

ARTHUR T. QUILLER-COUCH (“Q”) in “THE SPEAKER "

It seems to me to contain more sensible — luminously sensible talk about Shakespeare than was ever packed into equal space. Mr. Wendell not only keeps his head-and that is the great feat in Shakespearian criticism- but sees with a clear eye, seizes on the relevant as if by instinct, and by virtue of this and an excellent method has produced out of old materials common to every student a book which is new without being false or violent, and suggestive, yet without a taste of extravagance or affectation.

THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY

The whole mass of lifeless facts, familiar to those much read in Shakespearian literature, Wendell seizes hold of imaginatively, and so reconstructs, not Shakespeare's method, but Shakespeare himself. The attempt has been made before, but never with such learning, such skill, such sympathy. The result of Mr. Wendell's attempt will be to most readers extraordinarily suggestive.

DR. W. J. ROLFE in "THE CRITIC"

This book is a notable contribution to Shakespearian literature. I commend it to all teachers, students, and critical readers of Shakespeare as a discussion which they cannot afford to overlook.

CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS, Publishers

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