INDEX
- Aberystwyth College, [6], [9], [10].
- Addison’s Essays, [10].
- Aldeburgh Girls’ School, [160].
- Allen, James, Girls’ School, [96], [191].
- Aske’s School, Hatcham, [101].
- Astell, Mary, [8], [9], [10].
- Bangor College, [141], [145].
- Beale, Miss, at Queen’s College, [30];
- Bedford College, [27], [28], [29], [121], [128], [129], [130], [131].
- —— endowment, [81], [90], [92], [93], [95].
- —— High School, [93], [94], [95], [135].
- —— Modern School, [93], [94], [95].
- Birmingham endowments, [80], [90], [91].
- Blue-stocking Club, [11].
- Board of Education Bill, [240].
- Boarding-houses, [152], [153], [166].
- Boarding-schools, [149], [150], [161], [162].
- Bodichon, Madame, [39], [40], [84], [107].
- Bostock, Miss, [28], [84].
- Bryce, Mr., [47], [84].
- Buss, Miss, at Queen’s College, [30];
- Buss, Frances Mary, Schools, [87], [88].
- Cambridge Examinations, Junior and Senior, [33], [34], [40], [41], [51], [109], [167].
- —— —— Higher Local, [34], [51].
- —— position of women at, [113], [114], [126].
- —— Triposes opened to women, [110], [111], [112].
- Camden School, [87], [191].
- Cardiff College, [141], [145].
- Careers open to women, [162], [163], [246].
- Chapone, Mrs., [11].
- Charitable Trusts Acts, [83].
- Charity Commission, [83], [100], [102], [174].
- Cheltenham Ladies’ College, [30], [31], [32], [33], [34], [35], [36], [37], [53], [94], [135], [153].
- Christ’s Hospital Girls’ School, [80], [97].
- Church Schools’ Company, [58], [59].
- City of London Girls’ School, [102].
- Clergy Daughters’ Schools, [17], [18].
- Clough, Miss, [38], [49], [81], [109], [116], [247].
- Cobbe, Miss, her reminiscences of school, [15], [16].
- Co-education at University of Wales, [176];
- College Hall, London, [134].
- County Councils, educational work of, [172], [177], [237].
- Curriculum of Girls’ Schools, [67], [71], [72], [75], [162].
- Davies, Miss Emily, an educational pioneer, [38];
- Day Schools, [149], [150].
- —— —— at Polytechnics, [184], [185], [186], [187], [188].
- Defoe on Women’s Education, [9], [10].
- Degrees for Women, attempts to obtain, at Cambridge, [110], [113];
- at Oxford, [120].
- Domestic Economy Schools, [178], [179], [180], [181].
- —— —— evening classes, [181], [182].
- Dual Schools. See Wales.
- Edgeworth, Maria, [13], [14], [15].
- Education Bill of 1896, [239];
- Colonel Lockwood’s, [240].
- —— Company, [157].
- —— Department, [196].
- Elementary Education Act, [100], [225].
- Elizabeth. See Queen Elizabeth.
- Elizabethan England, [7], [8].
- Endowed Schools before the Conquest, [78].
- Endowed Schools for girls, [85], [91], [97], [100];
- three grades of, [99].
- —— —— assisted by grants of Technical Education money, [191].
- Endowments, of Convents, [5];
- Euphues, [7].
- Evening Continuation Schools, [211].
- —— —— —— Code, [212], [213], [214].
- Ex-standard classes, [199].
- Fitch, Mr., [44], [46], [84].
- Games for girls, [152], [153], [155], [156], [164].
- Girls’ Public Day School Company, [56], [57], [66].
- Girton College, [106], [107], [108], [110], [114], [115].
- Governesses’ Benevolent Institution, [21].
- Grammar Schools, [6], [8], [80].
- Grey, Mrs. William, [54], [56].
- High Schools, [59];
- difference between English and American, [60];
- general features of, [61];
- organisation, [62];
- buildings, [63];
- curriculum, [72];
- methods of teaching in, [73];
- results on the pupils, [73], [76], [77];
- training of the teachers, [73];
- after careers of the girls, [77];
- hours of work in, [152];
- their relation to elementary schools, [241].
- Higher Grade Schools, [199], [200], [201], [203];
- Hilda, abbess of Whitby, [3].
- Hitchin Ladies’ College, [105], [106].
- Holloway College, [102], [121], [131], [132], [133].
- Intermediate Schools. See Welsh Intermediate Schools.
- King Edward’s Schools. See Birmingham endowments.
- King’s College, Ladies’ Department, [135].
- Lady Margaret Hall, [117], [120], [121], [123].
- Lecture-system, [25], [72], [73].
- Local Customs and Taxation Act, [169], [217], [235].
- Lockwood, Colonel. See Education Bill.
- Makins, Mrs., [9].
- Manchester High School, [89].
- Manual training, [74], [158], [171].
- Mary Datchelor School, [101].
- Maurice, F. D., [22], [23].
- Modern Schools for girls, [189].
- Montagu, Mrs., [11].
- Montagu, Lady Mary Wortley, [11].
- More, Hannah, [11], [12], [13], [163].
- National Union for the improvement of Women’s Education, [54], [55], [56].
- Newnham College, [108], [109], [110], [114], [115], [116].
- Norman Conquest, effect on Education, [3].
- North London Collegiate School, [33], [53], [64], [68], [87], [135].
- North of England Council, [48], [49], [50], [108].
- Nunneries, education given in, [3], [5].
- Organised Science Schools, [187], [201], [202], [204].
- Owens College, Manchester, [136].
- Oxford Association for the Education of Women, [116], [117], [118], [119], [120], [123].
- Oxford Halls for Women, [116], [117].
- Oxford Home Students, [123], [124].
- —— Local Examinations, [40], [50].
- —— Position of Women at, [118], [119], [120], [124], [126].
- —— University Examinations, [132].
- —— and Cambridge Joint Board, [51], [68], [69];
- People’s Palace, [174].
- Pfeiffer Charity, [102].
- Physical training, [75], [76], [158], [159], [160].
- Polytechnics, [176], [183], [184], [194].
- —— Battersea, [178], [182];
- Private Schools, [163], [164], [166], [167], [168], [242].
- Queen Anne, [10].
- —— Elizabeth, [6].
- —— Victoria, [18], [19], [21].
- Queen’s College, [20], [22], [23], [24], [25], [26], [245].
- Reading School, [79].
- Reformation, its effect on Women, [5], [6].
- Reid, Mrs., [27], [28].
- Renaissance, [6].
- Revised Code, [197].
- Revival of Girls’ Education, [1], [19], [248].
- Roedean School, [197].
- Scholarships at Cambridge, [116];
- at Oxford, [123].
- —— of Technical Education Boards, [178], [191], [192], [193].
- —— in Welsh Schools, [223].
- School Boards, [197], [198].
- Schoolmistresses’ Associations, [48], [49].
- Schools’ Inquiry Commission, [42], [43], [44], [45], [46], [47], [52], [82].
- Secondary Education Commission, [101], [198], [209], [226], [234], [235], [237], [239].
- Sidgwick, Henry, [108], [109].
- —— Mrs., [109], [116].
- Sinclair, Catherine, [16], [17].
- Skinners’ School at Stamford Hill, [96], [101].
- Social Science Congress, at Glasgow, [40], [84];
- at Leeds, [54].
- Somerville College, [117], [120], [121], [123].
- South Kensington Department of Science and Art, [200], [201], [202], [203], [208], [209], [210], [213], [214].
- St. Hilda’s, Cheltenham, [36].
- —— Oxford, [117], [122], [123].
- St. Hugh’s Hall, [117], [122], [123].
- St. Leonard’s School, St. Andrews, [94], [153], [154], [155], [156].
- St. Paul’s School, [79].
- State the, its relation to Education, [195], [196].
- Stuart Court, its influence, [8].
- Technical Education Acts, [170], [171], [235].
- —— —— Boards, [190], [237];
- Universities, rise of, [4];
- University College, Liverpool, [136], [137].
- University College, London, [26], [134].
- —— Colleges, provincial, [135].
- —— —— of Wales, [140], [141], [143], [144].
- —— Extension, beginnings of, [49], [50].
- —— for Women, [106], [133].
- —— of London, examinations for Women, [35];
- Victoria. See Queen Victoria.
- —— University, [136].
- Wales, University of, [139], [140], [141], [142], [143].
- Welsh Intermediate Education Act, [170], [217], [235].
- —— —— Schools, two kinds of, [223];
- Welsh, Miss, [116].
- Westfield College, [102], [130], [131].
- Whisky-money, [170], [217].
- Winchester College, [78], [79].
- Women teachers, [244].
- Wotton, [6].
- Wycombe Abbey School, [157], [158].
- Yorkshire Board of Education, Ladies’ Honorary Council of, [48], [88].
- —— College, Leeds, [136], [138].
Printed by T. and A. Constable, Printers to Her Majesty at the Edinburgh University Press
[1]. G. Hill, Women in English Life.
[2]. L. Eckenstein, Women under Monasticism.
[3]. Sir Th. Overbury.
[4]. Mary Astell. An Essay in Defence of the Female Sex.
[5]. Defoe. Essay on Projects.
[6]. Mrs. Makins. An Essay to Revive the Ancient Education of Gentlewomen, 1673.
[7]. Mary Astell. A Serious Proposal.
[8]. Hannah More. Strictures on Female Education.
[9]. The Complete Governess. A Course of Mental Instruction for Ladies.
[10]. Autobiography of Frances Power Cobbe.
[11]. Examiner.
[12]. Mr. Hammond’s Report.
[13]. A. F. Leach.
[14]. Emily Davies, Higher Education of Women.
[15]. Special Reports on Educational Subjects, 1896–97.
[16]. See Handbook to Courses Open to Women in British, Continental, and Canadian Universities, by Isabel Maddison, B.Sc., Ph.D.
[17]. In character, not of course in size
[18]. Report of Royal Commission on Secondary Education, vol. i. p. 98.
[19]. Report, vol. i. p. 75.
[20]. Report, vol. i. p. 1.
[21]. Report, vol. i. p. 274.
[22]. Preface to Return of the Pupils in Public and Private Schools in England, and of the Teaching Staff in such Schools on June 1, 1897.
New One=Volume Novels.
Crown 8vo, cloth, 6s. each.
By Eden Phillpotts.
Children of the Mist.
By Constance Smith.
Prisoners of Hope.
By Marguerite Bryant.
A Woman’s Privilege.
By Roma White.
The Island of Seven Shadows.
By Esther Miller.
The St. Cadix Case.
By Francis Gribble.
Sunlight and Limelight.
By Basil Thomson.
The Indiscretions of Lady Asenath.
By A. E. W. Mason.
Lawrence Clavering.
By Fred T. Jane.
The Lordship, the Passen, and We.
By Lady Helen Craven.
Katharine Cromer.
By C. M. Campbell.
Deilie Jock.
The Isthmian Library.
Illustrated, post 8vo, cloth, 5s. a Volume.
VOL. I.
By B. Fletcher Robinson.
Rugby Football.
With Chapters by Frank Mitchell, R. H. Cattell, C. J. N. Fleming, Gregor MacGregor, C. B. Nicholl, and H. B. Tristram.
VOL. II.
By A. C. Pemberton, Mrs. Harcourt Williamson, C. P. Sisley, and Gilbert Floyd.
The Complete Cyclist.
VOL. III.
By Garden Smith.
The World of Golf.
With Chapters by Van Tassel Sutphen, Miss Pascoe, &c.
VOL. IV.
By R. C. Lehmann.
Rowing.
With Chapters by Guy Nickalls and C. M. Pitman.
VOL. V.
By R. Allanson Winn.
Boxing.
VOL. VI.
Ice Sports.
VOL. VII.
By Montagu S. Monier Williams.
Figure Skating.
VOL. VIII.
By W. B. Thomas.
Athletics.
With Chapters by R. R. Conway, A. C. M. Croome, G. S. Robertson, C. N. Jackson, and W. M. Fletcher.
Other Volumes are in preparation and will be duly announced.
Works on History, Travel, &c.
By Harold Spender and H. Llewellyn Smith.
Through the High Pyrenees.
With Maps and numerous Illustrations from Sketches and Photographs. Demy 8vo, cloth, 16s.
By Judge O’Connor Morris.
Ireland—‘98 to ‘98.
A History of Irish Politics and Irish Movements during the Last Hundred Years. Demy 8vo, cloth, price 10s. 6d.
“This work can be unreservedly recommended. Judge O’Connor Morris has a thorough mastery of his subject; and his deductions are as a rule candid, impartial, and convincing.”—Literature.
“No one who has given attention to Irish affairs, will read his book without interest, nor, we think, without profit.”—Glasgow Herald.
By Ella C. Sykes.
Through Persia on a Side Saddle.
With a Map and numerous Illustrations from Photographs. Demy 8vo, cloth, 16s.
“A very bright, picturesque, and entertaining narrative of travel in comparatively untrodden ways.”—Daily News.
“Written with shrewdness and humour and a touch of pleasant fancy.”—Standard.
“One of the most delightful books of modern travel in Iran.”—Scotsman.
By F. H. S. Merewether.
Through the Famine Districts of India.
Being an Account by Reuter’s Special Correspondent of his Experiences in Travelling through the Famine Districts of India. Profusely Illustrated. Demy 8vo, cloth, 16s.
By Professor W. S. Lawton.
The Successors of Homer.
Being an Account of the Greek Poets who followed from Homer down to the time of Aeschylus. Crown 8vo, cloth, gilt top, price 5s.
Eighteenth Century Letters.
Edited by R. Brimley Johnson, with Introductions by eminent scholars. Illustrated with Photogravure Portraits of the writers. Crown 8vo, half-parchment, gilt top, price 6s. each volume.
SWIFT, ADDISON, STEELE. With an Introduction by Stanley Lane Poole.
JOHNSON AND CHESTERFIELD. With an Introduction by George Birkbeck Hill, D.C.L.
Other Volumes are in preparation, and will be duly announced.
RECENT POPULAR 6s. NOVELS.
By J. C. Snaith, Author of “Mistress Dorothy Marvin.”
Fierceheart the Soldier.
Crown 8vo, cloth, [6]s.
“Mr. Snaith has given us a romance that for terse, pregnant phrasing, exceptional character, and recurring and vivid depiction of dramatic situation, is the best thing of its kind we remember to have seen for a long time.”—Observer.
By Max Pemberton.
Christine of the Hills.
Crown 8vo, cloth, [6]s.
“Assuredly he has never written anything more fresh, more simple, more alluring or more artistically perfect.”—Daily Mail.
By Eden Phillpotts.
Lying Prophets.
Third Edition. Crown 8vo, cloth, [6]s.
“An excellent novel.... A piece of serious and admirable work.... Not unworthy of a place with George Eliot’s ‘Adam Bede’ and ‘Mill on the Floss.’”—Pall Mall Gazette.
By Isabel Clarke.
The Episode of Alethea.
Crown 8vo, cloth, [6]s.
“The author deals with admirable taste and tact with the situation.... The story is one of high merit from beginning to end.”—Scotsman.
By Esther Miller.
The Sport of the Gods.
Crown 8vo, cloth, [6]s.
“It is very well told.... The novel is exciting, and preserves its interest to the end.... Excellent story.”—Athenæum.
By the late Mrs. J. K. Spender, Author of “Thirteen Doctors,” etc.
The Wooing of Doris.
Crown 8vo, cloth, [6]s.
“Has much to commend it to novel-readers. A clever plot; well-drawn characters—such are the leading features of a novel by which the reputation of its much-regretted writer is fully sustained to the last.”—World.
By J. C. Snaith.
Mistress Dorothy Marvin.
A Romance of the Glorious Revolution.
Illustrated by S. Cowell. Crown 8vo, cloth, [6]s.
“The author has succeeded in making his story intensely interesting.... One of the very best adventure stories we have had for a long time past.”—Speaker.
“‘Mistress Dorothy Marvin,’ most delightful and winsome of women, and one of the freshest and most unhackneyed heroines whose acquaintance we have had the pleasure of making for a very considerable period.... Mr. Snaith has a great gift of observation, and his book is a remarkable picture of the age it is intended to depict.”—World.
By Stanley Weyman.
My Lady Rotha.
A Romance of the Thirty Tears’ War.
Illustrated by John Williamson. Crown 8vo, cloth, [6]s.
“No one who begins it will lay it down before the end, it is so extremely well carried on from adventure to adventure.”—Saturday Review.
By Frank Barrett, Author of “The Admirable Lady Biddy Fane.”
A Set of Rogues.
A Romance of the Seventeenth Century.
Illustrated by S. Cowell. Crown 8vo, cloth, [6]s.
“He has related the adventures of a set of rogues ... with so pleasant a tongue and in such attractive fashion that it is impossible for mere flesh and blood to resist them. His set of rogues have won our entire sympathy, and his narrative our hearty approval.”—Pall Mall Gazette.
“Another capital story.... Strongly recommended. Stirring tale this, without a dull chapter in it, and just enough human sentiment in it to soften down the roguery.... Let the honest reader procure the book.”—Punch.
By E. F. Benson, Author of “Dodo.”
Limitations.
Crown 8vo, cloth, [6]s.
“Mr. Benson has written an interesting and truly human book. His range is much wider than it was; his character-drawing has gained in depth, delicacy, and precision; while the sparkling dialogue which we enjoyed in ‘Dodo’ has lost none of its old brilliancy.”—Daily Telegraph.
By Francis Gribble.
The Lower Life.
Crown 8vo, cloth, [6]s.
“A very remarkable novel, well thought out, well sustained, and inspired from first to last.”—National Observer.
By G. B. Burgin.
Tomalyn’s Quest.
Crown 8vo, cloth, [6]s.
“Mr. Burgin has just scored a second shining success with ‘Tomalyn’s Quest,’ a tale of the keenest interest.”—Daily Telegraph.
By W. L. Alden.
The Mystery of Elias G. Roebuck.
Crown 8vo, cloth, [6]s.
“Mr. Alden has the true gift of humour.... It is impossible to read the collection of short stories without genuine enjoyment.”—Times.
By C. R. Coleridge and Helen Shipton.
Ravenstone.
Crown 8vo, cloth, [6]s.
“The love interest of ‘Ravenstone’ is twofold, and is admirably sustained throughout this bright, vigorous, and refreshing story.”—Daily Telegraph.
By X. L., Author of “Aut Diabolus aut Nihil.”
The Limb.
Crown 8vo, cloth, [6]s.
Mr. Gladstone writes: “Pray accept my thanks.... I was so imprudent as to open it at once, and since that act have found great difficulty in laying it down.”
“‘The Limb’ is unquestionably one of the most fascinating books of the season.”—Birmingham Daily Gazette.
By Roma White.
A Stolen Mask.
Crown 8vo, cloth, [6]s.
“A capital story, and Mrs. Roma White tells it with a delicate humour and a spontaneous brilliancy as rare as they are delightful. ‘A Stolen Mask’ is a novel that stands high above the average, and can be strongly recommended. It is a long time since we have come across anything so thoroughly fresh and bright.”—Pall Mall Gazette.
By Francis Gribble.
The Things that Matter.
Crown 8vo, cloth, [6]s.
“Is an extremely psychological study.”—Times.
“It is a very amusing novel, full of bright satire directed against the new woman and similar objects.”—Speaker.
By G. B. Burgin.
The Judge of the Four Corners.
Crown 8vo, cloth, [6]s.
“A delightfully humorous sketch, full of the purest fun, and irresistibly laughable.”—Saturday Review.
By Eden Phillpotts.
My Laughing Philosopher.
Illustrated by George Hutchinson. Crown 8vo, cloth, [6]s.
“We commend to the notice of any one wanting a good laugh ‘My Laughing Philosopher,’ whose varied character-sketches amply prove Mr. Eden Phillpotts to be endowed with those two excellent gifts of humour and imagination.”—Spectator.
“The book will be welcome to every one who likes a book from which a man can get a good laugh.”—Scotsman.
By Leslie Keith, Author of “The Chilcotes,” “‘Lisbeth,” etc.
For Love of Prue.
Crown 8vo, cloth, [6]s.
“Plot and Incident in this present story are alike remarkable ... altogether we heartily commend ‘For Love of Prue’ as a sensible, humorous, and thoroughly wholesome book.”—Speaker.
By Dorothea Gerard.
Lot 13.
Crown 8vo, cloth, [6]s.
“A bright, buoyant, and bustling story, with plenty of local colour derived from the scenery and the society, black and white, of a West Indian plantation.”—Times.
SCARLET NOVELS.
A SERIES OF POPULAR NOVELS BY WELL-KNOWN AUTHORS.
Crown 8vo, uniform scarlet cloth, 3s. 6d. each Volume.
ANTHONY HOPE’S SOCIETY NOVELS.
Comedies of Courtship.
“He is undeniably gay in the best sense of the word, now and then almost rollicking. An admirable example of what we mean by gaiety in fictional literature.”—Daily Telegraph.
Half a Hero.
“The book is delightful to read, and an excellent piece of work.”—Standard.
Mr. Witt’s Widow.
“A brilliant little tale.... Exhibits unborrowed ingenuity, plausibility, and fertility in surprises.”—Times.
By Max Pemberton.
A Gentleman’s Gentleman.
“This is very much the best book that Mr. Max Pemberton has so far given us.”—Daily Chronicle.
By Richard Pryce.
The Burden of a Woman.
“The conception and execution of this interesting story are excellent. A book to read and remember with pleasure.”—Lady’s Pictorial.
By C. R. Coleridge.
Amethyst.
“Extremely amusing, interesting, and brightly written.”—Guardian.
By F. Frankfort Moore.
Two in the Bush and Others Elsewhere.
“Carry the reader on from page to page till criticism is forgotten in enjoyment.”—Daily Graphic.
By Roma White.
Punchinello’s Romance.
“We give Roma White the warmest of welcomes into the world of fiction.... Admirably and irresistibly comic, without anything in the nature of force or even of apparent exaggeration, ready at the least moment to run into equally true pathos.”—Graphic.
TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES
- Silently corrected typographical errors and variations in spelling.
- Archaic, non-standard, and uncertain spellings retained as printed.