CONTENTS.


[ROUSSEAU].

SOCIALISM AND EDUCATION.

Jean Jacques Rousseau and Edmund Burke

Rousseau representative of his century

Birth

Education and early career; engraver, footman

Secretary, music teacher, and writer

Meets Thérèse

His first public essay in literature

Operetta and second essay

Geneva; the Hermitage; Madame d'Épinay.

The "Nouvelle Héloïse;" Comtesse d'Houdetot

"Émile;" "The Social Contract"

Books publicly burned; author flees

England; Hume; the "Confessions"

Death, career reviewed

Character of Rousseau

Essay on the Arts and Sciences

"Origin of Human Inequalities"

"The Social Contract"

"Émile"

The "New Héloïse"

The "Confessions"

Influence of Rousseau

[SIR WALTER SCOTT].

THE MODERN NOVEL.

Scott and Byron

Evanescence of literary fame

Parentage of Scott

Birth and childhood

Schooling and reading

Becomes an advocate

His friends and pleasures

Personal peculiarities

Writing of poetry; first publication

Marriage and settlement

"Scottish Minstrelsy"

"Lay of the Last Minstrel;" Ashestiel rented

The Edinburgh Review: Jeffrey, Brougham, Smith

The Ballantynes

"Marmion"

Jeffrey as a critic

Quarrels of author and publishers; Quarterly Review

Scott's poetry

Duration of poetic fame

Clerk of Sessions; Abbotsford bought

"Lord of the Isles;" "Rokeby"

Fiction; fame of great authors

"Waverley"

"Guy Mannering"

Great popularity of Scott

"The Antiquary"

"Old Mortality;" comparisons

"Rob Roy"

Scotland's debt to Scott

Prosperity; rank; correspondence

Personal habits

Life at Abbotsford

Chosen friends

Works issued in 1820-1825

Bankruptcy through failure of his publishers

Scott's noble character and action

Works issued in 1825-1831

Illness and death

Payment of his enormous debt

Vast pecuniary returns from his works

[LORD BYRON].

POETIC GENIUS.

Difficulty of depicting Byron

Descent; birth; lameness

Schooling; early reading habits

College life

Temperament and character

First publication of poems

Savage criticism by Edinburgh Review

"English Bards and Scotch Reviewers"

Byron becomes a peer

Loneliness and melancholy; determines to travel

Portugal; Spain

Malta; Greece; Turkey

Profanity of language in Byron's time

"Childe Harold"

Instant fame and popularity

Consideration of the poem

Marries Miss Milbanke; separation

Genius and marriage

"The Corsair;" "Bride of Abydos"

Evil reputation; loss of public favor

Byron leaves England forever

Switzerland; the Shelleys; new poems

Degrading life in Venice

Wonderful labors amid dissipation

The Countess Guiccioli

Two sides to Byron's character

His power and fertility

Inexcusable immorality; "Don Juan"

"Manfred" and "Cain" not irreligious but dramatic

Byron not atheistical but morbid

Many noble traits and actions

Generosity and fidelity in friendship

Eulogies by Scott and Moore

Byron's interest in the Greek Revolution

Devotes himself to that cause

Raises £10,000 and embarks for Greece

Collects troops in his own pay

His latest verses

Illness from vexation and exposure

Death and burial

The verdict

[THOMAS CARLYLE].

CRITICISM AND BIOGRAPHY.

Froude's Biography of Carlyle

Brief résumé of Carlyle's career

Parentage and birth

Slender education; school-teaching

Abandons clerical intentions to become a writer

"Elements of Geometry;" "Life of Schiller;" "Wilhelm Meister"

Marries Jane Welsh

Her character

Edinburgh and Craigenputtock

Essays: "German Literature"

Goethe's "Helena"

"Burns"

"Life of Heyne;" "Voltaire"

"Characteristics"

Wholesome and productive life at Craigenputtock

"Dr. Johnson"

Friendship with Ralph Waldo Emerson

"Sartor Resartus"

Carlyle removes to London

Begins "The French Revolution"

Manuscript accidentally destroyed

Habits of great authors in rewriting

Publication of the work; Carlyle's literary style

Better reception in America than in England

Carlyle begins lecturing

Popular eloquence in England

Carlyle and the Chartists

"Heroes and Hero Worship"

"Past and Present"

Carlyle becomes bitter

"Latter-Day Pamphlets"

"Life of Oliver Cromwell"

Carlyle's confounding right with might

Great merits of Carlyle as historian

Death of Mrs. Carlyle

Success of Carlyle established

"Frederick the Great"

Decline of the author's popularity

Public honors; private sorrow

Final illness and death

Carlyle's place in literature

[LORD MACAULAY].

ARTISTIC HISTORICAL WRITING.

Macaulay's varied talents

Descent and parentage

Birth and youth

Education

Character; his greatness intellectual rather than moral

College career

Enters the law

His early writings; poetry; essay on Milton

Social success; contemporaries

Enters politics and Parliament

Sent to India; secretary board of education

Essays in the Reviews

Limitations as a statesman

Devotion to literature

Personal characteristics

Return to London and public office

Still writing essays; "Warren Hastings," "Clive"

Special public appreciation in America

Drops out of Parliament; begins "History of England"

Prodigious labor; extent and exactness of his knowledge

Self-criticism; brilliancy of style

Some inconsistencies

Public honors

Remarkable successes; re-enters Parliament

Illness and growing weakness

Conclusion of the History; foreign and domestic honors

Resigns seat in Parliament

Social habits

Literary tastes

Final illness and death; his fame

[SHAKSPEARE; OR, THE POET].

BY RALPH WALDO EMERSON.

The debt of genius to its age and preceding time.

The era of Shakspeare favorable to dramatic entertainments.

The stage a substitute for the newspaper of his era.

The poet draws upon extant materials--the lime and mortar to his hand.

Plays which show the original rock on which his own finer stratum is laid.

In drawing upon tradition and upon earlier plays the poet's memory is taxed equally with his invention.

All originality is relative; every thinker is retrospective.

The world's literary treasure the result of many a one's labor; centuries have contributed to its existence and perfection.

Shakspeare's contemporaries, correspondents, and acquaintances.

Work of the Shakspeare Society in gathering material to throw light upon the poet's life, and to illustrate the development of the drama.

His external history meagre; Shakspeare is the only biographer of Shakspeare.

What the sonnets and the dramas reveal of the poet's mind and character.

His unique creative power, wisdom of life, and great gifts of imagination.

Equality of power in farce, tragedy, narrative, and love-songs.

Notable traits in the poet's character and disposition; his tone pure, sovereign, and cheerful.

Despite his genius, he shares the halfness and imperfection of humanity.

A seer who saw all things to convert them into entertainments, as master of the revels to mankind.

[JOHN MILTON: POET AND PATRIOT].

BY THOMAS BABINGTON MACAULAY.

His long-lost essay on Doctrines of Christianity.

As a poet, his place among the greatest masters of the art.

Unfavorable circumstances of his era, born "an age too late".

A rude era more favorable to poetry.

The poetical temperament highest in a rude state of society.

Milton distinguished by the excellence of his Latin verse.

His genius gives to it an air of nobleness and freedom.

Characteristics and magical influence of Milton's poetry.

Mechanism of his language attains exquisite perfection.

"L'Allegro" and "II Penseroso," "Comus" and "Samson Agonistes" described.

"Comus" properly more lyrical than dramatic.

Milton's preference for "Paradise Regained" over "Paradise Lost".

Contrasts between Milton and Dante.

Milton's handling of supernatural beings in his poetry.

His art of communicating his meaning through succession of associated ideas.

Other contrasts between Milton and Dante--the mysterious and the picturesque in their verse.

Milton's fiends wonderful creations, not metaphysical abstractions.

Moral qualities of Milton and Dante.

The Sonnets simple but majestic records of the poet's feelings.

Milton's public conduct that of a man of high spirit and powerful intellect.

Eloquent champion of the principles of freedom.

His public conduct to be esteemed in the light of the times, and of its great question whether the resistance of the people to Charles I. was justifiable or criminal.

Approval of the Great Rebellion and of Milton's attitude towards it.

Eulogium on Cromwell and approval of Milton's taking office (Latin Secretaryship) under him.

The Puritans and Royalists, or Roundheads and Cavaliers.

The battle Milton fought for freedom of the human mind.

High estimate of Milton's prose works.

[JOHANN WOLFGANG VON GOETHE].

GERMANY'S GREATEST WRITER.

BY FREDERIC HENRY HEDGE.

Fills highest place among the poets and prose-writers of Germany.

Influences that made the man.

Self-discipline and educational training.

Counsellor to Duke Karl August at Weimar, where he afterwards resides.

Visits Italy; makes Schiller's acquaintance; Goethe's personal appearance.

His unflagging industry; defence of the poet's personal character.

The "Märchen," its interpretation and the light it throws on Goethe's political career.

Lyrist, dramatist, novelist, and mystic seer.

His drama "Götz von Berlichingen," and "Sorrows of Werther".

Popularity of his ballads; his elegies, and "Hermann und Dorothea".

"Iphigenie auf Tauris;" his stage plays "Faust" (First Part) and "Egmont".

The prose works "Wilhelm Meister" and the "Elective Affinities".

His skill in the delineation of female character.

"Faust;" contrasts in spirit and style between the two Parts.

Import of the work, key to or analysis of the plot.

[ALFRED (LORD) TENNYSON].

THE SPIRIT OF MODERN POETRY.

BY G. MERCER ADAM.

Tennyson's supreme excellence--his transcendent art.

His work the perfection of literary form; his melody exquisite.

Representative of the age's highest thought and culture.

Keen interpreter of the deep underlying spirit of his time.

Contemplative and brooding verse, full of rhythmic beauty.

The "Idylls of the King," their deep ethical motive and underlying purpose.

His profound religious convictions and belief in the eternal verities.

Hallam Tennyson's memoir of the poet; his friends and intimates.

The poet's birth, family, and youthful characteristics.

Early publishing ventures; his volume of 1842 gave him high rank.

Personal appearance, habits, and mental traits.

"In Memoriam," its noble, artistic expression of sorrow for Arthur Hallam.

"The Princess" and its moral, in the treatment of its "Woman Question" theme.

The metrical romance "Maud," and "The Idylls of the King," an epic of chivalry.

"Enoch Arden," and the dramas "Harold," "Becket," and "Queen Mary".

Other dramatic compositions: "The Falcon," "The Cup," and "The Promise of May".

The pastoral play, "The Foresters," and later collections of poems and ballads.

The poet's high faith, and belief that "good is the final goal of ill".

His exalted place among the great literary influences of his era.

Expressive to his age of the high and hallowing Spirit of Modern Poetry.

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

VOLUME XIII.

[The Young Goethe at Frankfort]

Frontispiece

After the painting by Frank Kirchbach

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[Jean Jacques Rousseau]

After the painting by M. Q. de la Tour, Chantilly, France

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[Sir Walter Scott]

After the painting by Sir Henry Raeburn, R. A

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[Lord Byron]

After the painting by P. Krämer

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[François Marie Arouet de Voltaire]

After the painting by M. Q. de la Tour, Endoxe Marville Collection, Paris

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[Thomas Carlyle]

After a photograph from life

[Thomas Babington Macaulay]

After a photograph by Maule, London

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[William Shakspeare]

After the "Chandos Portrait," National Portrait Gallery, London

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[John Milton]

After the painting by Pieter van der Plaas

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[Milton Visits the Aged Galileo]

After the painting by T. Lessi

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[Goethe]

After the painting by C. Jaeger

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[Alfred (Lord) Tennyson]

After the painting by G. F. Watts, R. A

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[Tennyson's Elaine]

After the painting by T. E. Rosenthal

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