FOOTNOTESINDEX.
- Admetus, [19], [20].
- Æneas, [31], [32].
- Æneid, childhood in the, [31], [32].
- Agamemnon, belief in, not dependent on the spade, [6].
- Alice Fell, [3], [147].
- Alkestis, a scene from the, [19], [20].
- Amelia, Fielding’s, [135].
- Amor, the myth of, [36-38];
- as treated by Raphael, [99];
- in the Elizabethan lullabies, [116], [117];
- in Shakespeare, [124];
- in Thorwaldsen’s art, [201].
- Anchises, [31].
- Ancient Leaves, cited, [31], [33].
- Andersen, Hans Christian, the unique contribution of, to literature, [201];
- the distinction between his stories and fairy tales, [202];
- the basis of his fame, [207];
- the life of his creations, [208];
- their relation to human beings, [209];
- the spring in his stories, [211];
- his satires, [212];
- the deeper experience in them, [213];
- his essential childishness, [214];
- his place with novelists, [215];
- his interpretation of childhood, [216].
- Andromache, the parting of, with Hector, [11], [12];
- the scene compared with one in the Œdipus Tyrannus, [16-18];
- and contrasted with Virgil, [31].
- Angels of children, [144], [145].
- Anna the prophetess, [47].
- Anthology, the Greek, [28-30].
- Antigone, [18].
- Apocryphal Gospels, the legends of the, [57-64].
- Art, American, as it relates to children, [237], [238].
- Art, modern, the foible of, [38].
- Arthur, in King John, [120].
- Ascanius, [31], [32].
- Askbert, [68], [69].
- Astyanax, [11];
- a miniature Hector, [14].
- Atlantic Monthly, The, cited, [34].
- Austin, Alfred, cited, [38].
- Ballads relating to children, [106-108];
- characteristics of, [113].
- Barbauld, Mrs., [173];
- her relation to the literature of childhood, [175];
- Coleridge and Lamb on, [174].
- Bathsheba’s child, [42].
- Beatrice, first seen by Dante, [77].
- Better Land, The, [222].
- Bible, the truth of the, not dependent on external witness, [6];
- the university to many in modern times, [41], [42].
- Blake, William, [163-165].
- Boccaccio, [79].
- Browning, Robert, as an interpreter of Greek life, [27];
- his Pied Piper, [237].
- Bryant, William Cullen, [217].
- Bunyan, childhood in, [129-133].
- Byzantine type of the Madonna, [83], [84].
- Catullus, [33].
- Chapman’s translation of Homer, quoted, [8], [9], [10], [16];
- the quality of his defects, [9], [10].
- Chaucer’s treatment of childhood, [108-111];
- compared with the Madonna in art, [113].
- Childhood, discovered at the close of the last century, [4];
- in literature as related to literature for children, [4];
- in Greek life, how attested, [7];
- indirect reference to it in Homer, [8-11];
- the direct reference, [11], [12];
- in the Greek tragedians, [16-21];
- in Plato, [22-26];
- in the Greek Anthology, [29], [30];
- in Virgil, [31], [32];
- conception of, in Roman literature, [32], [33];
- in Catullus, [33];
- in epitaphs, [33], [34];
- in Lucretius, [34];
- in Juvenal, [35];
- in classic conception of the supernatural, [34-36];
- in the myth of Amor, [36-38];
- in Old Testament literature, [42-46];
- in New Testament literature, [48], [49];
- attitude of the Saviour toward, [49];
- as a sign of history, [52];
- in the legends of the Apocryphal Gospels, [57-64];
- of saints, [65-71];
- under the forming power of Christianity, [73];
- in Dante, [75-78];
- in the representations of the Holy Family, [83-87];
- in the art of the northern peoples, [87-92];
- in the Madonnas of Raphael, [92-98];
- in Raphael’s Amor, [98], [99];
- in his representations of children generally, [100], [101];
- in the art of Luca della Robbia, [101], [102];
- its elemental force the same in all literatures, [105];
- in ballad literature, [106-108];
- in Chaucer, [108-111];
- its character in early English literature, [112], [113];
- in Spenser, [114], [115];
- in the lighter strains of Elizabethan literature, [116], [117];
- in Shakespeare, [117-126];
- its absence in Milton, [127], [128];
- how regarded in Puritanism, [128], [129];
- in Bunyan, [129-133];
- in Pope, [133], [134];
- in Fielding, [135];
- in Gray, [135-137];
- in Goldsmith, [137-140];
- in Cowper, [140], [141];
- in the art of Reynolds and Gainsborough, [141], [142];
- in Wordsworth, [144-157];
- in De Quincey, [158-162];
- in William Blake, [163-165];
- in Dickens, [165-170];
- in Paul and Virginia, [181-183];
- in Lamartine, [184-186];
- in Michelet de Musset, and Victor Hugo, [186], [187];
- in German sentiment, [189];
- illustrated by Luther, [190], [191];
- in Richter, [191], [192];
- in Goethe, [194-196];
- in Froebel’s system, [197], [198];
- in Overbeck’s art, [199], [200];
- in Hans Christian Andersen, [201-216];
- in Emerson, Bryant, Lowell, and Holmes, [217], [218];
- in Whittier, [218], [219];
- in Longfellow, [219-222];
- mistakenly presented in sentimental verse, [222-225];
- in Hawthorne, [225-234].
- Child-Life in Poetry, [219].
- Child-Life in Prose, [219].
- Children, books for, the beginning of, [171], [172];
- the characteristics of this beginning, [173];
- their revolutionary character, [174];
- the sincerity of the early books, [175];
- the union of the didactic and artistic in, [177];
- a new branch of literature, [177], [178];
- art in connection with, [179].
- Children’s Hour, The, [220].
- Child’s Last Will, The, [106].
- Christ, the childhood of, [48];
- his scenes with children, [48], [49];
- his attitude toward childhood, [49-52];
- an efficient cause of the imagination, [55];
- legends of, in the Apocryphal Gospels, [57-64];
- his symbolic use of the child, [81];
- his infancy the subject of art, [82];
- especially in Netherlands, [89];
- his words illustrative of human history, [102].
- Christianity and French sentiment, [182].
- Christianity, living and structural, [53];
- its supersedure of ancient life, [54];
- its germinal truth, [55];
- its operative imagination, [56];
- its care of children, especially orphans, [73];
- its office of organization, [74];
- its influence on the family, [75];
- its insistence on death, [79];
- in what its power consists, [81];
- its ideals, [82];
- its type in the Madonna, [83];
- does not interfere with elemental facts, [105].
- Christmas in Germany, [189].
- Cimabue, [84].
- Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, on Mrs. Barbauld, [176];
- on Christmas in Germany, [189].
- Comus, [127].
- Confidences, Les, [184].
- Coriolanus, [118].
- Cornelius, [88].
- Courtship of Miles Standish, The, [226].
- Cowper, William, [140], [141].
- Cruel Mother, The, ballad of, [106].
- Cupid and Psyche, [36].
- Danaë, the, of Euripides, [20];
- of Simonides, [30].
- Dante, childhood in, [75-78].
- Day, Thomas, author of Sanford and Merton, [3].
- Death of children, how regarded by Dickens, [167];
- by Wordsworth, [168].
- Democracy revealed in the French Revolution, [143].
- De Quincey, Thomas, reflections of, on his childhood, [158-162].
- Deserted Village, The, [137].
- Dickens, Charles, his naturalization of the poor in literature, [165];
- his report of childhood, [166];
- the children created by, [166-170];
- compared with Wordsworth, [168], [169].
- Distant Prospect of Eton College, On a, [136].
- Dolliver Romance, The, [234].
- Doyle, Richard, [179].
- Drama, children in, [20].
- Dying Child, The, [222].
- Edgeworth, Maria, and Wordsworth, [174].
- Edward Fane’s Rosebud, [231].
- Elegy, Gray’s, [135], [136].
- Elijah, the prophet, [42];
- the incident of the boys and, [43].
- Elisha, [43].
- Elizabethan era, characteristics of, [113], [116].
- Emerson, Ralph Waldo, [217].
- English race, characteristics of the, exemplified in literature, [111-113].
- Eros, the myth of, [36-38].
- Erotion, [34].
- Essay on Man, The, [134].
- Euripides, in his view of children, [19];
- examples from, [20].
- Evangeline, [226].
- Excursion, The, [151], [152].
- Fables, Andersen’s stories distinguished from, [210], [211].
- Faery Queen, The, [114], [115].
- Fairy-tales, Andersen’s stories distinguished from, [202];
- the origin of, [203];
- fading out from modern literature, [204];
- upon the stage, [204], [205];
- the scientific fairy-tale, [206].
- Fénelon, [180].
- Fielding, Henry, in his Amelia, [135].
- Fitzgerald, Edward, [27].
- Flaxman, John, his illustration of Homer in outline, [12].
- French literature as regards childhood, [180-188].
- French Revolution, the, a sign of regeneration, [52];
- a day of judgment, [142];
- the name for an epoch, [143];
- synchronous with a revelation of childhood, [144];
- its connection with English literature, [162];
- the eruption of poverty in, [165].
- Froebel’s kindergarten system, [197], [198].
- From my Arm Chair, [220], [221].
- Gainsborough, Thomas, [141].
- Gascoigne, George, [117].
- Gentle Boy, The, [231].
- Germanic peoples, home-cultivating, [88].
- German literature and childhood, [188-198].
- Giotto, [84].
- Goethe, compared with Richter as regards memory of childhood, [194];
- his Mignon, [194];
- his indebtedness to the Vicar of Wakefield, [195];
- his Sorrows of Werther, [195];
- compared with Luther, [196].
- Goldsmith, Oliver, avant-courier of Wordsworth, [3];
- the precursor of the poets of childhood, [137];
- his position in literature, [138];
- his Vicar of Wakefield, [138-140].
- Goody Two Shoes, [3].
- Grandfather’s Chair, [226].
- Gray, Thomas, [135-137].
- Gray, Thomas, borrowing possibly from Martial, [34].
- Greece, life in ancient, how illustrated, [7];
- silence of the child in the art of, [21];
- our relation to, [21];
- modern interpretations of, [27], [28];
- compared with Rome, [31];
- compared with Judæa, [42].
- Greenaway, Kate, [179].
- Greene, Robert, [117].
- Greenwell, Dora, her poem, A Story by the Fire, an example of pernicious literature, [222-225].
- Grimm, the brothers, [207].
- Hannah, the song of, [44], [47].
- Hawthorne, Nathaniel, the most abundant of American authors in his treatment of childhood, [225];
- his use of New England history, [226];
- his rendering of Greek myths, [226], [227];
- his observation of childhood, [228], [229];
- his relation to children, [229], [230];
- his apologue in The Snow-Image, [232];
- children in his romances, [232], [233];
- his Pearl in The Scarlet Letter, [233], [234];
- his Pansie in The Dolliver Romance, [234].
- Hebrew life, in its influence on modern thought, [39-41];
- the child in, [46], [47];
- its transformation into Christianity, [47], [48], [53].
- Hector parting with Andromache, [11], [12];
- face to face with Ajax, [14];
- comforts his wife, [16], [17].
- Hemans, Felicia, [222].
- Hen and chickens, in the Bible and Shakespeare, [122].
- Herakles, [36].
- Hermes, [36].
- Hiawatha, [221].
- Hilarion, [67].
- Holmes, Oliver Wendell, [218].
- Holy Family, the child in the, [83];
- character of the early type of the, [83];
- emblematic of domesticity, [86], [87].
- Homer, authenticity of the legend of, supposed to be proved by Schliemann, [6];
- a better preserver of Greek womanhood than antiquaries, [7];
- the value of his similes, [7], [8];
- passages in illustration of his indirect reference to childhood, [8-11];
- the elemental character of, [12];
- the peril of commenting on, [13];
- the nurse in, [14];
- his view of childhood, [15];
- compared with that of the tragedians, [16-18];
- with that of Virgil, [31], [32].
- Hosea, quoted, [44].
- House of the Seven Gables, The, [232], [233].
- Hubert, [120].
- Hugh of Lincoln, [108].
- Hugo, Victor, [187].
- Iliad, the swarm of bees in the, [8];
- the passage describing the brushing away of a fly, [9];
- the ass belabored by a pack of boys, [9];
- Achilles chiding Patroclos, [10];
- Hector parting with Andromache, [11], [12];
- statuesque scenes in, [12].
- Imaginary Conversations, quoted, [153].
- Imagination, the, abnormal activity of, in early Christianity, [54];
- the direction of its new force, [56], [57].
- Intimations of Immortality, [154], [156], [157].
- Irving, Washington, [217].
- Isaiah, quoted, [45].
- Ishmael, [42].
- Ismene, [18].
- Jacob, the two wives of, [44].
- James, Henry, alluded to, [236].
- Jeffrey, Francis, [169].
- Jerusalem, the entry into, [49], [52].
- John the Baptist, [81].
- Jonson, Ben, [37].
- Jonson, Ben, Venus’ Runaway of, [116].
- Jowett, Benjamin, translation by, [22-26].
- Juvenal, [35], [227].
- Kenwulf of Wessex, [68].
- Kindergarten, the, fortified by reference to Plato, [24];
- in connection with politics, [197], [198].
- King John, [119], [120].
- Kriss Kringle, [189].
- La Farge, John, [237].
- L’Allegro, [127].
- Lamartine, Alphonse de, [184-186].
- Lamb, Charles, on Mrs. Barbauld’s work, [176], [177];
- his and his sister’s books, [177].
- Lambdin, George C., [237].
- Lamkin, the ballad of, [107], [108].
- Landor, Walter Savage, remark of, on children, [153].
- Laokoön, [21].
- Laws, Plato’s, cited, [22], [24], [25].
- Legends of the Madonna, [89].
- Leslie, C. R., on Raphael’s children, [100].
- Lindsay, Lord, quoted, [88].
- Lines on the Receipt of my Mother’s Picture, [141], [142].
- Literature for children in the United States, [235], [236];
- some of its tendencies, [239], [240];
- measures for its enrichment, [240].
- Literature, the source of knowledge, [7];
- of Christendom, the exposition of the conception of the Christ, [50];
- inaction in, [54];
- fallacy in the study of the development of, [104];
- its bounds enlarged, [163].
- Little Annie’s Ramble, [231].
- Little Daffydowndilly, [231].
- Little Girl’s Lament, The, [222].
- Little People of the Snow, [217].
- Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth, childhood in the writings of, [219-221].
- Love, the figure of, in classic and modern art, [37].
- Lowell, James Russell, [217].
- Loyola, [91].
- Luca della Robbia, the children of, [101].
- Lucretius, [34], [35].
- Lucy Gray, [3], [148].
- Luther, Martin, an exponent of German character, [190];
- his treatment of childhood, [190].
- Macbeth, [121], [123].
- Madonna, development of the, [84-87];
- treatment of by Raphael, [92-98];
- a domestic subject, [98].
- Magnificat, The, [44], [47].
- Man of Law’s Tale, The, [110].
- Marcius, [118].
- Martial, [34].
- Martin, Theodore, translation by, [33].
- Mary, the Virgin, legends concerning, in the Apocryphal Gospels, [58-60];
- her childhood, [65];
- her appearance in early art, [83];
- her motherhood, [84];
- her relation to Jesus, [85].
- May Queen, The, [222].
- Medea, The, cited, [19].
- Menaphon, [117].
- Mercurius, [36].
- Messiah, Pope’s, [133], [134].
- Michelet, [186].
- Midsummer Night’s Dream, [124].
- Millais, John Everett, [179].
- Milton, John, quoted, [46];
- the absence of childhood in, [127], [128];
- compared with Bunyan, [129];
- with Pope, [133].
- Moses, [42].
- Moth, Shakespeare’s, [118].
- Mozley, T. B., quoted, [190], [191], [235].
- Musset, Alfred de, [186].
- My Lost Youth, [221].
- Netherland family life, pictured in the life of our Lord, [89-92].
- New Testament, childhood in the, [47-52].
- Nicodemus, [50].
- Niebuhr, B. G., [28].
- Norton, Charles Eliot, translation by, [78].
- Note-Books, Hawthorne’s, [228], [229].
- Nurse, the, in Greek life, [14];
- in the Odyssey, [14], [15].
- Ode on the Morning of Christ’s Nativity, [127], [133].
- Odysseus and his nurse, [15].
- Odyssey, memorable incidents in the, [14], [15].
- Œdipus Tyrannus contrasted with the Iliad, [16-18].
- Old Testament, childhood in the, [42-46].
- Our Old Home, [230].
- Overbeck, [88], [199-201].
- Palmer, George Herbert, as a translator of Homer, [28].
- Parkman, Francis, [226].
- Pater, Walter, quoted, [79].
- Patient Griselda, [111].
- Paul and Virginia, representative of innocent childhood, [180];
- an escape from the world, [181];
- an attempt at the preservation of childhood, [183].
- Pet Lamb, The, [149].
- Pheidias, [26], [28].
- Pied Piper, The, [237].
- Pilgrim’s Progress, The, [130-133].
- Plato, references of, to childhood, [22-26];
- compared with artists, [26];
- can be read by children, [242].
- Pope, Alexander, [133];
- compared with Milton, [133], [134];
- with Shakespeare, [134].
- Prelude, The, [151].
- Princess, The, [170].
- Puritanism, the attitude of, toward childhood, [128], [129].
- Queen’s Marie, the ballad of the, [106].
- Raphael, an exponent of the idea of his time, [92];
- the Madonnas of, [92];
- in the Berlin Museum, [93];
- Casa Connestabile, [93];
- del Cardellino, [93];
- at St. Petersburg, [93];
- della Casa Tempi, [94];
- at Bridgewater, [95];
- del Passegio, [96];
- San Sisto, [97], [98];
- treatment by, of Amor, [99];
- his children, [100].
- Reaper and the Flowers, The, [220], [222].
- Renaissance, the spirit of the, in Raphael’s work, [98];
- childhood in its relation to the, [102].
- Republic, Plato’s, cited, [23].
- Resignation, [220].
- Reynolds, Sir Joshua, [141], [142].
- Richter, Jean Paul Friedrich, autobiography of, [191];
- early birth of consciousness in, [192];
- compared with Goethe, [194].
- Riverside Magazine for Young People, The, [237], [238].
- Roman literature, childhood in, [31-38].
- Rousseau, Jean Jacques, [180], [182], [184].
- Ruskin, John, [242].
- Samuel, [42].
- Sanford and Merton, [3].
- Sarah, the laugh of, [44].
- Scarlet Letter, The, [233], [234].
- Schliemann, Dr., [6].
- School, great literature in, [242].
- Sella, [217].
- Sellar, John Y., quoted, [35].
- Sentiment, French and German, as seen by the English and American, [188].
- Shadow, A, [220].
- Shakespeare, childhood in, [117];
- limitations of the exhibition, [117], [118];
- his Moth, [118];
- his Coriolanus, [118], [119];
- his King John, [119], [120];
- his Titus Andronicus, [120], [121];
- his Macbeth, [121];
- his Richard III., [122];
- random passages in, relating to childhood, [123-125];
- reasons for the scanty reference, [125], [126];
- compared with Pope, [134].
- Shunamite, the, [43].
- Simeon, [47].
- Simonides, [20];
- quoted, [30].
- Sketches of the History of Christian Art, [88].
- Smith, Goldwin, translation by, [20].
- Snow-Bound, [218].
- Snow-Image, The, [232].
- Solitude, the, of childhood, [160-162].
- Songs of Innocence, [164].
- Sophocles, the Œdipus Tyrannus of, [16].
- Sparrows, the story of the miraculous, [61], [62].
- Spectator, The, a writer in, quoted, [38].
- Spenser, Edmund, his Faery Queen, [114], [115].
- Statius, [33].
- Story by the Fire, A, an example of what a poem for a child should not be, [222-225].
- Supernaturalism in ancient literature, [35], [36].
- Suspiria de Profundis, [158-162].
- Swedenborg, a saying of, [142].
- Symonds, John Addington, translation by, [20].
- S. Bernard, [76], [77].
- S. Catherine, [65].
- S. Christina, [70].
- S. Elizabeth of Hungary, [65], [66].
- S. Francis of Assisi, [71], [72].
- S. Genevieve, [66].
- S. Gregory Nazianzen, [66].
- S. John Chrysostom, [66].
- S. Kenelm, [68-70].
- St. Pierre, Bernardin, [180-183].
- Tanagra figurines, [28].
- Tanglewood Tales, [226].
- Tennyson, Alfred, makes a heroine of the babe, [170];
- his May Queen, [222].
- Thompson, D’Arcy W., translation by, [31], [33].
- Thoreau, Henry David, [217].
- Thorwaldsen, [37], [201].
- Tirocinium, [140].
- Titus Andronicus, [120], [121].
- To a Child, [220].
- Translations, the great, of the Elizabethan era, [116].
- Twice-Told Tales, [231].
- Two Gentlemen of Verona, [124].
- Ugly Duckling, The, [213];
- compared with The Snow-Image, [232].
- Ugolino, Count, [76].
- Vicar of Wakefield, The, [3], [137-140], [142].
- Village Blacksmith, The, [221].
- Virgil, contrasted with Homer, [31], [32];
- his treatment of childhood, [32].
- Virgilia, [118], [119].
- Volumnia, [118], [119].
- We are Seven, [168-224].
- Weariness, [220], [221].
- Whittier, John Greenleaf, childhood in the writings of, [218], [219].
- Wonder-Book, Hawthorne’s, [226], [227], [232].
- Wordsworth, William, the creator of Alice Fell and Lucy Gray, [3];
- quoted, [3];
- the ridicule of his Lyrical Ballads, [145];
- his defensive Preface, [145-147];
- his apology for Alice Fell, [147], [148];
- his poem of Lucy Gray, [148], [149];
- his poem of The Pet Lamb, [149], [150];
- his treatment of incidents of childhood, [150];
- the first to treat the child as an individual, [151];
- his draft on his own experience, [152];
- his poetic interpretation of childhood, [153-156];
- his ode, Intimations of Immortality, [156], [157];
- his treatment of death, [168];
- his We are Seven contrasted with A Story of the Fire, [224], [225].
- Wreck of the Hesperus, The, [221].
- Zarephath, the widow of, [42].
- Zechariah, quoted, [45].