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new problems of London improve-
ment, 392 et seq.; the Post Office
site, 392-4; St. Paul's Bridge,
392, 396; Southwark and Lambeth
Bridges, 394-6; Thames traffic,
397-8; street schemes, 398; the
post of First Commissioner of
Works, 398-9; other necessary
improvements, 399

Ashley, Prof., cited, 64

Asquith, Mr., on Land Taxes, 238,
244, 246; and the 1893 Home
Rule Bill, 498

Austen, Jane, 180, 186-8
Austen-Leigh, W. and R. A., Jane
Austen: Her Life and Letters,
180, 186-8

Bebel, August, 435, 437, 444, 445
Beer, M., Geschichte des Sozialismus
in England, 435, 436
Beerbohm, Max, cited, 350

Benson, A. C., Joyous Gard, 180,
182-4

Bernardin de St. Pierre, 125
Bernhard, Professor L., Unerwünschte

Folgen der Deutschen Sozialpolitik,
22, 26, 29

Blunt, Mr. Wilfrid, cited, 465, 469,
470

Bourdon, Georges, L'Enigme Alle-
mande, 215, 217, 218-9, 222
Bradlaugh, Charles, 466
Brereton, C., Studies in Foreign
Education, 1, 16

British and Foreign School Society, 6
Browne, Prof. E. G., The Persian
Revolution, 368

Buchanan, George, 180
Bury, Prof., quoted, 103
Butcher, Prof., cited, 106, 313

Carducci, cited, 334

Carlyle, cited, 292; view of Cromwell,
296

Carnarvon, Lord, 472
Cervantes, cited, 120

Chamberlain, J., and the election of

1885, 472 et seq. passim
Chapelain, Jean, 316 et seq. passim
Chatterton-Hill, G., The Philosophy
of Friedrich Nietzsche, 163
Child labour, 6, 9-12, 16
Chirol, Valentine, The Middle Eastern
Question, 368, 370

Churchill, Lord Randolph, 475, 476
Clifford, Mrs. W. K., Love-Letters of
a Worldly Woman, 180, 193-4
Collie, Sir J., Malingering and Feigned
Sickness, 22, 26, 30, 32, 35

Common People of the Early Roman
Empire, 82; the inscriptions of
Pompei, 83, 95, 97, 100; the
Salyricon of Petronius, 83 et seq.
passim; life in the last years
of the Republic, 86; guilds during
the Republic, 87; the Collegia
under Augustus, Nero and Trajan,
87; the trades guilds, 87; strikes,
88; wages and prices, 88-9;
Roman religion, 89-92; morals,
92 et seq.; the evidence of the
historians, 92, 94; slavery, 93-4;
slave-auctions, 94; a picture of
Platonic affection, 95-6; language,
96-7; attitude to art and litera-
ture, 97-100; lessons for modern
society, 101

Cory, Wm., cited, 111

Cox, Harold, The Lloyd Georgian
Land Taxes, 236; The Home
Rule Issue, 480
Cramer, Dr., cited, 25

Cree, T. S., Business Men and
Modern Economics, 64; Evils
of Collective Bargaining in Trades
Unions, 64; A Criticism of the
Theory of Trades Unions, 64
Cromer, The Earl of. Translation
and Paraphrase, 102

Cromwell, Oliver, 278, 281; charges
of desecration against, 285; his
troop, 290 et seq.; dualism in his
letters, 293

Current Literature, Walter de la
Mare, 181

Curzon, Lord, cited, 385

D'Annunzio, The Novels of, 334;
Gabriele D'Annunzio, 334; essen-
tially a Latin poet, 335; apprecia-
tion of, in England, 335; poet and
novelist, 335; a dilettante, 336;
characteristics, 336; the Italian
language a vital element of his art,
337, 354 sensuous beauty of his
art, 337; Henry James' criticism
of, 338-9; a visivo-sensuale '
340; the poems of the 'Canto
Novo,' 340; attempted portrayal
of his own personality, 340, 343,
351; the Superman period in, 341,
348-51; as a paysagiste, 341, 342;
absence of the dramatic quality in,
342, 347, 35, 353; composition
piecemeal, 342, 'Il Piacere,' 343-5;
his characters abstractions, 344,
346, 353: Il Trionfo della Morte,'
345-7; restricted periods of time
in, 347 conclusive endings dis-
pensed with, 347; Le Vergini delle

Rocce,' 347-8; 'Il Fuoco,' 349, 352;
conception of the Superman in,
349-51; his female characters,
351; Forse che si, forse che no,'
352; power of description in,
353; maleficent ugliness in, 353:
limitation as an artist, 353;
journalistic display, 354; appre-
ciation of, 354

Daudet, Alphonse, Lettres de mon
Moulin, etc., 137, 144

de Balzac, Jean Louis Guez, 327
et seq.

de Boisrobert, l'Abbé, 321 et seq.
passim

de la Mare,

Literature, 181

Walter,

Current

de Maupassant, Guy, 137, 147-50
Democracy, The Problem of, and the
Swise Solution, 257; requirements
of democratic government, 257,
258; the Swiss Confederation,
258; the Federal constitution,
259; the Executive, renewable
gradually, 259; comparison with
British and American cabinets,
259; the President, 259; the
Sovereignty of the State, 259; the
Legislature, 259; the Council of
States, 260; the National Council,
260; the votation populaire, 260;
the 'Referendum,' 260; the
'Initiative,' 261; comparison of
working of Swiss system with
British Parliamentary practice,
261 et seq.;
the effect of the
Party system, 261-2; absence of
political crises in Switzerland,
262, 272; elimination of Party
feeling, 263; the working of the
Referendum, 264 et seq.; Referen-
dum and the Party system, 267;
objections to the Referendum con-
sidered, 266 et seq.; character of
the Federal Assembly, 268; direct
democracy and capacity for office,
268; objection on ground of
expense, 269; objections arising
from difference in electorate, 270;
the Referendum in practice, 271;
Swiss political institutions and
stability of government, 272;
Proportional Representation and
the Swiss people, 274; composi-
tion of the Federal Council, 275;
the common Anglo-Saxon attitude
to the Swiss Confederation, 276;
the unity of Switzerland due to
the application of direct democracy
to Government, 276, 277
de Montmorency, J. E. G., Education
and the Future of England, I

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Edgehill Battle, 278

Education and the Future of England,
I; the social problem and our
education system, 2; history of
English education, 2 et seq.;
education in the Elizabethan age,
3-5; system of apprenticeship,
4, 6; the university and the
educational system, 5: break-
down of Elizabethan system, 5;
child labourers, 6, 9-12, 16; the
Sunday School Society, 6; the
monitorial schools, 6; the Factory
Act of 1802..6, 7, 19; the growth
of population, 7; compulsory edu-
cation, 7; secondary and higher
education, 7-8, 12, 15, 19; the
Education Act, 1902..8; failure of
English education due to neglect
of the essential minimum, 8;
effects of unskilled child labour,
9, II; numbers of children
engaged in labour, 9-10, 16;
number receiving no education,
10-11; local authorities and the
Employment of Children Act, 11-12;
error as to two types of education,
12, 14, 16; social reform and the
'slum' mind, 13; the elementary
school present results, 13-14;
the age of compulsion, 14; fun-
damental distinction between
primary and secondary education,
14-15; secondary education for
all the only solution, 15, 19; the
supply of teachers, 15; the out-
look, 16 et seq.; the status of the
teaching profession, 16; re-
awakening of voluntary effort, 17;
effects of evening schools, 18;
continuation education, 8, 10, 18-
9; the principle to be dwelt upon,
19; the half-time system, 19
Egypt, British policy in, cited, 471
Elliot, Hugh S., The Triumph of
Scientific Materialism, 417

Evolution of the Ironsides, The. See
Ironsides

Executive, the, and the House of
Commons, 468

Feeding of necessitous children, 23,
38

Fiction, progress of, 358
Fitch, Sir Joshua, cited, 7
Fitzmaurice-Kelly, Dr., cited, 102
Flaubert, cited, 141, 145, 183
Fleet, George, The Urban Housing
Problem, 400

Förster-Nietzsche, Frau, The Young
Nietzsche, 163

France, Anatole, L'Étui de Nacre,

137, 145-7

Frederick the Great, 217, 218, 299,
303, 312

French Academy, The Foundation of,

313; an Academy of Letters in
England, 313; Italian Academies,
314; earlier French Academies,
314; the French Academy: its
inception, 315; the original
members, 316, 319; Valentin
Conrart, 315, 316, 321; Godeau,
315; Chapelain, 316-7, 325;
Jean Ogier (Gombauld), 317-8;
Sérisay, 318, 325; de Malleville,
318, 320, 325; the two Haberts,
319; Nicolas Faret, 320, 322, 324;
Jean Desmarets de Saint-Sorlin,
320-1, 322, 324; l'Abbe de Bois-
robert, 321-3, 329; Louis Giry,
323; Richelieu, 323, 324, 326,
332; the idea of an Academy
of Letters first conceived by
Boisrobert, 323, 324; the attitude
of the members to Richelieu's
proposition, 324-5; submission of
the members, 326; Richelieu's
interest in the scheme, 326, 330;
formation of the Academy, 326
et seq.; augmentation of members
326, 327, 328; accusations against
the infant Academy, 327; Jean
de Balzac, 327, 328, 329; objects of
the Academy, 328, 331-2; Voiture,
327, 329; Gomberville,
329; Racan, 327, 329-30;
scure names, 330; Bautru, 331;
the Dictionary, 332; the Letters
Patent, 332

327,
ob-

French and German Army Bills, The,

215; the year of armaments, 215;
Europe since the Treaty of Frank-
furt, 216; preparation for war, its
vital part in war, 216 et seq.:
Moltke, 216-7; preparation for
war a Prussian tradition, 217; the

the

keynote of German education, 218;
doubts as to Germany's militarism,
218; Prince Lichnowski, quoted,
219; British policy, 219, 222;
the wars of 1866 and 1870..220;
Germany's geographical position,
220; the armed strength of the
Great Powers of the Continent,
220-1, 222-3; the peace establish-
ments, 221; conditions in the
Near East and the Mediterranean,
221-2; the Triple Alliance, 222-6;
the Agadir incident, 224;
trend of the more important Army
Bills in Germany, 223-4; the Bill
of 1913...225, 226; the French view
of German intentions, 226; origin
of the Three Years' Service
Bill, 227; the term of service in
France, 228-9; the birth-rate and
estimated future contingents, 229-
30; the Two Years' Service, 229,
230, 231; the cavalry, 230, 232-3;
the infantry, 231, 232; non-
commissioned officers, 231; the
German unter offizier,' 231; the
French officer, 231; the weak-
ness of French covering troops,
233-4; reversion to the three
years' service, 234-5

Friedlaender, L., Roman Life and
Manners under the Early Empire,
82, 91, 92

Furness, Lord, cited, 79

Garguilo, Alfredo, Gabriele D'Annun-
zio, 334, 339-43 passim, 348, 350
Garrod, Herbert Baring: Essays and
Memoir, 1, 16

Gaselee, Stephen, Common People of
the Early Roman Empire, 82
Gautier, Théophile, Nouvelles, 137,
139-41, 142

George, Henry, cited, 247, 252
German Army Bills. See French and

German Army Bills, under heading
French.

German Insurance Laws. See National
Insurance and National Character
Germany, Social Democracy in, 435
See Social Democracy

Gladstone, W. E. G., and the 1885
election, 472 et seq. passim, 488;
second Home Rule Bill, 480,
481, 482, 488; merits as a trans-
lator, 107, 108; cited, 103, 464,
468, 469

Gonner, E. C. K., Common Land
and Enclosure, 42, 44
Government of India: Department
of Education (No. 301 C.D.), 1, 16

Greek Prose Romances, 115;
attitude to novel-reading in the
last years of the Roman Republic,
115; composition of prose fiction
in the Greek States, 116; poetry
and the national spirit, 117;
Greek life under the Roman
domination, 117; development
of prose literature, 118, 128;
the impulse not European, 118;
the Egyptian conception of
women, 118; forms of fiction of
the period, 118; Milesian Tales,
119 et seq.; Parthenius' collection
of love stories, 119;
Conon's
tales, 119, 120; Apuleius' version
of the Golden Ass, 120, 122, 123;
the Luciad, 121-2; Lucian and
the Luciad, 122; the Meta-
morphoses' of Lucius, 123;
'Daphnis and Chloe,' 123; the
version of Amyot, 123, 125;
Theocritus and pastoral verse,
124; Daphnis and Chloe,' in-
fluence in modern fiction, 125;
narratives of imaginary travels
and adventures, 125; travels of
Diogenes, 125-6, 127, 128;
Lucian's burlesque, 126; early
romancers' difficulty of creating
an audience, 126; the Baby-
lonica' of Iamblichus, 125, 127;
'Habrocomas and Anthia,' 128;
Heliodorus, 128 et seq., 132, 135,
136; Theagenes and Chariclea,'
128, 130; Achilles Tatius 'Clito-
phon and Leucippe,' 131-2, 133;
decline of Greek prose fiction,
133, 135, 136; 'Chaereas and
Callirrhoe,' 133-4; spiritual ro-
mances, 134; Baarlam and
Josaphat,' 134; 'Hysmene and
Hysmenias,' 135; 'Drosilla and
Charicles,' 136; versified romances,
136

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Hammond, J. L. and B., The Village
Labourer, 1760-1832..42, 48
Hanna, Senator, 198

Headlam, W., A Book of Greek Verse,
102, IIO

Healy, T., cited and quoted, 471 et seq.
passim

Hewlett, Maurice, Lore of Proserpine,
180, 192-3

Hoche, Professor A., Geisteskrankheit

und Kultur, 22, 25; Notwendige
Reformen der Unfallversicherungs-
gesetze, 22

Home Rule, 1885...472-9 passim
Home Rule Issue, The, 480; Glad-

stone's second Home Rule Bill,
480, 481, 485, 498; the Liberal
Party and the present Bill, 481;
the professed objects of the Liberal
Party, 481, 482; the essential
purpose of the Bill, 481, 482; the
intention of the authors of the
Bill, 482; difference between
the proposed new Irish Constitution
and Colonial self-government,
482-3; the new Irish exchequer,
483; the Colonial analogy worth-
less, 484; the federal analogy,
484; the Bill a compromise, 485-6;
the financial aspect, 486 et seq.;
Irish taxation, 486-8; principle
in Mr. Gladstone's Bills, 488;
recent progress of Ireland, 488-9;
Ireland, liability of, in the common
expenditure, 489; the collection
of revenues, 490; reserved' and
'transferred services, 490, 491;

the cost of Home Rule,' 492;
defence of the financial proposals,
492-3; proposal as to customs
duties, 493; complicated pro-
visions as to taxation, 494-5;
reasons why the Bill should not
become law, 495; the opposition
of Ulster, 495-7, 500; the lack of
authority from the country, 498;
the proposal to invoke the
Royal prerogative, 498-9; Lord
Loreburn's suggestion, 499; a re-
ferendum suggested, 501; other
schemes of government for Ireland,
501; characteristics of the present
Bill, 494-5, 501-2

House of Commons and the Execu-
tive, 468

Housing Problem. See Urban Housing
Problem, also Agricultural Labour
and Rural Housing

Ireland at the end of the last century,
464, 472

Ironsides, The Evolution of the, 278;
the army of the Parliament in
1642...278, 282 et seq.; the King's
attempt to arrest the Five Mem-
bers, 279; manœuvres of King
and Parliament for possession of
the military forces, 279, 280;
military forces in 1642...279; the
popular idea of Cromwell, 281;
the advantages of Parliament,
282; lack of discrimination by
Parliament in composition of the
army, 282; Cromwell's description
of the army of 1642 278, 282;
the letters of Nehemiah Wharton,

283 et seq.; the case of Colonel
Bridgeman, 283; the spiritual
welfare of the army: an orgy of
sermons, 284; freebooting and
desecration by the Parliamentary
soldiers, 284 et seq.; conduct from
the military point of view, 287;
the troops' insistent clamour for
money, 288; some honourable
exceptions, 289; Cromwell's troop,
290; the Souldiers Pocket Bible,
290-4, 297; the Souldiers Cate-
chisme, 294; the Self-denying
Ordinance and the New Model, 295;
Cromwell's programme for the
Ironsides, 295-6; the Ironsides
the deciding factor in the struggle,
296; the Bible the source of the
Ironsides' inspiration, 297
Irving, Sir Henry, an anecdote, 461

James, Henry, A Small Boy and
Others, 180, 190-2

James, Henry, Study of D'Annunzio,
338-9, 342, 343, 346, 349, 354
Johnson, A. H., The Disappearance
of the Small Landowner, 42
Joubert's aphorisms, cited, 361

Kennedy, B. H., Between Whiles,

102, III

Labouchere, Henry, 458; early life,

458 diplomatic service, 458-9;
anecdotes, 459, 461; the art of
conversation, 459; meets Bis-
marck, 460; championship of
Greville Murray, 460; Parlia-
mentary career, 460, 464, 465, 473;
opens the New Queen's Theatre,
461; the votaries of high art,'
462; connexion with the Daily
News,' 463; letters from Paris,
1870-71..463; the 'World,' 463;
the founding of Truth,' 463; his
comment on Gladstone's Home
Rule speech, 464: his politics,
462, 467; the Executive and the
House, 467-9; Labouchere's atti-
tude to foreign affairs, 469, 471;
as to policy in Egypt, 469–71;
comparison with Sir Charles Dilke,
471; his idea of a Radical England
under Mr. Chamberlain, 471, 473
et seq.; the Pigott forgeries, 472,
479; the 1885 election, 473 et seq.;
retirement, 464; characteristics,
458, 460, 462, 464, 465, 466, 471,
479; habit of jesting, 466, 471
Lamb, Charles, 106

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Levy, Dr. Oscar, The Works of
Friedrich Nietzsche, 163; Fried-
rich Nietzsche's Gesammelte Briefe,
163
Lichnowski, Prince, quoted, 219
Lichtenberger, H., The Gospel of
Superman, 163

Livesey, Sir George, cited, 79
Lloyd, H. D., and Hobson, J. H., The
Swiss Democracy, 257, 264, 267
Lloyd Georgian Land Taxes, The,
236; the 'People's Budget
(1909), 236; financial results of
the land taxes, 236; the Chan-
cellor's expectations of revenue,
237; Budget statement (1909),
237; consideration of the figures,
239 et seq.; mineral rights duty,
239, 241; estimated yield of
Land Value Duties, 240; com-
parison of estimate and results,
240 et seq.; final result of four
years working, 242; cost of
valuation as capital expenditure,
242; estimated cost of the Land
Valuation Office for the current
year, 242; prospective net loss on
taxes for the current year, 242;
prospects of the three land value
duties, 243; undeveloped land
duty, 243; reversion duty, 243:
increment duty, 243-4; future
cost of assessing and collection,
244; the new valuation and the
death duties, 242, 244; reorganis-
ation of the Estate Duty Office,
245;

grave injustice inflicted
upon individuals, 246; increment
duty assessment: cost to land-
owners and yield to revenue, 246;
increment duty levied where no
increase in value: the Lumsden
case, 247-9; methods of the
Land Values Department, 247-
52; undeveloped land duty in
practice, 251; duty charged upon
a hole in the ground, 252; unsound
principles of the taxes, 252 et
seq.; theory of prairie value,
252-3; impossibility of the Henry
Georgite idea, 255; local rating
of site values, 254-6

London Society (Architectural Im-
provement), 383, 385, 389-91
Longinus, On the Sublime, cited,
105, 106

Loreburn, Lord, 499

Louis, Paul, Le Travail dans le
Monde Romain, 8a

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