INDEX
[A] [B] [C] [D] [E] [F] [G] [H] [I] [J] [K] [L] [M]
[N] [O] [P] [Q] [R] [S] [T] [U] [V] [W] [Y] [Z]
- Abdallah, father of Mahomet, [286]
- Abelard, theology of, [389]
- Abu Thaleb, uncle of Mahomet, [286], [387], [294]
- Action the true end of Man, [119], [121]
- Actual, the, the true Ideal, [148], [149]
- Adamitism, [43]
- Afflictions, merciful, [145]
- Agincourt, Shakspeare’s battle of, [341]
- Alexis, Luther’s friend, his sudden death, [359]
- Ali, young, Mahomet’s kinsman and convert, [293]
- Allegory, the sportful shadow of earnest faith, [243], [267]
- Ambition, Fate’s appendage of, [78];
- Apprenticeships, [92]
- Aprons, use and significance of, [31]
- Arabia and the Arabs, [282], [310]
- Art, all true Works of, symbolic, [163]
- Balder, the white Sungod, [255], [271]
- Baphometic Fire-baptism, [128]
- Barebone’s Parliament, [456]
- Battle-field, a, [131]
- Battle, Life-, our, [65];
- Being, the boundless Phantasmagoria of, [39]
- Belief and Opinion, [146], [147]
- Belief, the true god-announcing miracle, [292], [311], [375], [401];
- war of, [430].
- See [Religion], [Scepticism].
- Benthamism, [309], [400]
- Bible of Universal History, [134], [146]
- Biography, meaning and uses of, [56];
- significance of biographic facts, [152]
- Blumine, [104];
- Bolivar’s Cavalry-uniform, [37]
- Books, miraculous influence of, [130], [149], [388], [392];
- our modern University, Church and Parliament, [390]
- Boswell, his reverence for Johnson, [410]
- Banyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress, [244]
- Burns, Gilbert, [417]
- Burns, Robert, his birth, and humble heroic parents, [415];
- Caabah, the, with its Black Stone and Sacred Well, [284], [285]
- Canopus, the worship of, [247]
- Charles I. fatally incapable of being dealt with, [439]
- Childhood, happy season of, [68];
- early influences and sports, [69]
- China, literary governors of, [397]
- Christian Faith, a good Mother’s simple version of the, [75];
- Christian Love, [143], [145]
- Church. See [Books].
- Church-Clothes, [161];
- Circumstances, influence of, [71]
- Clergy, the, with their surplices and cassock-aprons girt-on, [32], [158]
- Clothes, not a spontaneous growth of the human animal, but an artificial device, [2];
- analogy between the Costumes of the body and the Customs of the spirit, [25];
- Decoration the first purpose of Clothes, [28];
- what Clothes have done for us, and what they threaten to do, [30], [43];
- fantastic garbs of the Middle Ages, [34];
- a simple costume, [35];
- tangible and mystic influences of Clothes, [36], [45];
- animal and human Clothing contrasted, [41];
- a Court-Ceremonial minus Clothes, [45];
- necessity for Clothes, [47];
- transparent Clothes, [49];
- all Emblematic things are Clothes, [54], [203];
- Genesis of the modern Clothes-Philosopher, [61];
- Character and conditions needed, [153], [156];
- George Fox’s suit of Leather, [159];
- Church-Clothes, [161];
- Old-Clothes, [179];
- practical inferences, [203]
- Codification, [50]
- Combination, value of, [101], [221]
- Commons, British House of, [31]
- Concealment. See [Secrecy].
- Constitution, our invaluable British, [187]
- Conversion, [149]
- Courtesy, due to all men, [179]
- Courtier, a luckless, [36]
- Cromwell, [430];
- his hypochondria, [437], [442];
- early marriage and conversion, [437];
- an industrious farmer, [438];
- his victories and participation in the King’s death, [439];
- practicalness of, [440];
- his Ironsides, [440];
- his speeches, [444], [459];
- his ‘ambition’ and such-like, [446];
- a ‘Fanatic,’ but gradually became a ‘Hypocrite,’ [452];
- his dismissal of the Rump Parliament, [456];
- Protectorship and Parliamentary Futilities, [457];
- his last days, and closing sorrows, [460]
- Custom the greatest of Weavers, [194]
- Dandy, mystic significance of the, [204];
- Dante and his Book, [318];
- biography in his Book, and Portrait, [319];
- his birth, education and early career, [319], [320];
- his love for Beatrice Portinari, [320];
- unhappy marriage, [320];
- banishment, [321];
- uncourtier-like ways of, [321];
- his Divina Commedia genuinely a song, [322];
- the Unseen World, as figured in the Christianity of the Middle Ages, [329];
- the ‘uses’ of Dante, [332]
- David, the Hebrew King, [281]
- Death, nourishment even in, [81], [127]
- Della Scala, the court of, [321]
- Devil, internecine war with the, [9], [90], [128], [139];
- cannot now so much as believe in him, [127]
- Dilettantes and Pedants, [52];
- patrons of Literature, [96]
- Diodorus Siculus, [284]
- Diogenes, [159]
- Divine Right of Kings, [424]
- Doubt can only be removed by Action, [147].
- See [Unbelief].
- Drudgery contrasted with Dandyism, [210];
- ‘Communion of Drudges,’ and what may come of it, [214]
- Duelling, a picture of, [136]
- Duty, no longer a divine Messenger and Guide, but a false earthly Fantasm, [122], [123];
- Edda, the Scandinavian, [253]
- Editor’s first acquaintance with Teufelsdröckh and his Philosophy of Clothes, [4];
- efforts to make known his discovery to British readers, [7];
- admitted into the Teufelsdröckh watch-tower, [14], [25];
- first feels the pressure of his task, [37];
- his bulky Weissnichtwo Packet, [55];
- strenuous efforts to evolve some historic order out of such interminable documentary confusion, [59];
- partial success, [67], [76], [117];
- mysterious hints, [152], [177];
- astonishment and hesitation, [163];
- congratulations, [201];
- farewell, [219]
- Education, influence of early, [71];
- Eighteenth Century, the sceptical, [398], [404], [433]
- Eisleben, the birthplace of Luther, [358]
- Eliot, [433], [434]
- Elizabethan Era, the, [334]
- Emblems, all visible things, [54]
- Emigration, [173]
- Eternity, looking through Time, [15], [55], [168]
- Evil, Origin of, [143]
- Eyes and Spectacles, [51]
- Facts, engraved Hierograms, for which the fewest have the key, [153]
- Faith, the one thing needful, [122]
- Fantasy, the true Heaven-gate or Hell-gate of man, [109], [165]
- Fashionable Novels, [208]
- Fatherhood, [65]
- Faults, his, not the criterion of any man 281
- Feebleness, the true misery, [124]
- Fichte’s theory of literary men, [385]
- Fire, and vital fire, [53], [129];
- miraculous nature of, [254]
- Force, universal presence of, [53]
- Forms, necessity for, [431]
- Fortunatus’ Wishing-hat, [195], [197]
- Fox’s, George, heavenward aspirations and earthly independence, [159]
- Fraser’s Magazine, [6], [227]
- Frederick the Great, symbolic glimpse of, [61]
- Friendship, now obsolete, [89];
- Frost. See [Fire].
- Futteral and his Wife, [61]
- Future, organic filaments of the, [183]
- Genius, the world’s treatment of, [94]
- German speculative thought, [2], [9], [20], [24], [41];
- Gerund-grinding, [80]
- Ghost, an authentic, [198]
- Giotto, his portrait of Dante, [319]
- God, the unslumbering, omnipresent, eternal, [40];
- Goethe’s inspired melody, 190;
- ‘characters,’ 337;
- notablest of literary men, [386]
- Good, growth and propagation of, [75]
- Graphic, secret of being, [325]
- Gray’s misconception of Norse lore, [270]
- Great Men, [134].
- See [Man].
- Grimm the German Antiquary, and Odin, [260]
- Gullibility, blessings of, [84]
- Gunpowder, use of, [29], [136]
- Habit, how, makes dullards of us all, [42]
- Hagar, the Well of, [284], [285]
- Half-men, [139]
- Hampden, [433], [434]
- Happiness, the whim of, [144]
- Hegira, the, [295]
- Heroes, Universal History of the united biographies of, [139], [266];
- Hero-worship, the corner-stone of all Society, [189];
- Heuschrecke and his biographic documents, [7];
- History, all-inweaving tissue of, [15];
- Homer’s Iliad, [169]
- Hope, this world emphatically the place of, [122];
- false shadows of, [140]
- Horse, his own tailor, [41]
- Hutchinson and Cromwell, [433], [460]
- Iceland, the home of Norse Poets, [253]
- Ideal, the, exists only in the Actual, [148], [149]
- Idolatry, [351];
- criminal only when insincere, [353]
- Igdrasil, the Life-Tree, [257], [334]
- Imagination. See [Fantasy].
- Immortality, a glimpse of, [196]
- Imposture, statistics of, [84]
- Independence, foolish parade of, [175], [188]
- Indifference, centre of, [128]
- Infant intuitions and acquirements, [68];
- genius and dulness, [71]
- Inspiration, perennial, [147], [157], [190]
- Intellect, the summary of man’s gifts, [338], [397]
- Invention, [29], [120]
- Invisible, the, Nature the visible Garment of, [41];
- Irish, the, Poor-Slave, [213]
- Islam, [291]
- Isolation, [81]
- Jesus of Nazareth, our divinest Symbol, [168], [171]
- Job, the Book of, [284]
- Johnson’s difficulties, poverty, hypochondria, [405], [406];
- Jötuns, [254], [272]
- Julius the Second, Pope, [361]
- Kadijah, the good, Mahomet’s first Wife, [288], [292]
- King, our true, chosen for us in Heaven, [187];
- Kingdom, a man’s, [91]
- Know thyself, and what thou canst work at, [124]
- Knox’s influence on Scotland, [374];
- Koran, the, [298]
- Koreish, the, Keepers of the Caabah, [293], [294], [354]
- Kranach’s portrait of Luther, [372]
- Labour, sacredness of, [171]
- Ladrones Islands, what the natives of, thought regarding Fire, [254]
- Lamaism, Grand, [242]
- Land-owning, trade of, [96]
- Language, the Garment of Thought, [54];
- dead vocables, [80]
- Laughter, significance of, [24]
- Leo X., the elegant Pagan Pope, [363]
- Liberty and Equality, [357], [428]
- Lieschen, [17]
- Life, Human, picture of, [14], [115], [129], [141];
- Light the beginning of all Creation, [148]
- Literary Men, [383];
- in China, [397]
- Literature, chaotic condition of, [387];
- not our heaviest evil, [398]
- Logic-mortar and wordy Air-Castles, [40];
- Louis XV., ungodly age of, [123]
- Love, what we emphatically name, [102];
- Ludicrous, feeling and instances of the, [36], [136]
- Luther’s birth and parentage, [358];
- hardship and rigorous necessity;
- death of his friend Alexis, [359];
- becomes a monk;
- his religious despair;
- finds a Bible, [360];
- his deliverance from darkness;
- at Rome, [361];
- Tetzel, [362];
- burns the Pope’s Bull, [363], [364];
- at the Diet of Worms, [364];
- King of the Reformation, [368];
- ‘Duke Georges for nine days running,’ 370;
- his little daughter’s deathbed;
- his solitary Patmos, [371];
- his Portrait, [372]
- Magna Charta, [203]
- Mahomet’s birth, boyhood, and youth, [286];
- marries Kadijah, [288];
- quiet, unambitious life, [288];
- divine commission, [290];
- the good Kadijah believes him, [292];
- Seid, his slave, [293];
- his Cousin Ali, [293];
- his offences and sore struggles, [293];
- flight from Mecca; being driven to take the sword, he uses it, [295];
- the Koran, [298];
- a veritable Hero, [305];
- Seid’s death, [306];
- freedom from cant, [306];
- the infinite nature of duty, [309]
- Malthus’s over-population panic, [170]
- Man, by nature naked, [2], [42], [46];
- Mary, Queen, and Knox, [378]
- Mayflower, sailing of the, [373]
- Mecca, its rise, [285]; Mahomet’s flight from, [294], [295]
- Metaphors, the stuff of Language, [54]
- Metaphysics inexpressibly unproductive, [40], [51]
- Middle Ages, represented by Dante and Shakspeare, [329], [333]
- Milton, [124]
- Mirabeau, his ambition, [450]
- Miracles, significance of, [191], [197]
- Monmouth Street, and its ‘Ou’ clo’’ Angels of Doom, [181]
- Montrose, the Hero-Cavalier, [453], [454]
- Mother’s, a, religious influence, [75]
- Motive-Millwrights, [166]
- Mountain scenery, [115]
- Musical, all deep things, [317]
- Mystery, all-pervading domain of, [51]
- Nakedness and hypocritical Clothing, [42], [47];
- Names, significance and influence of, [65], [195]
- Napoleon and his Political Evangel, [135];
- compared with Cromwell, [461];
- a portentous mixture of Quack and Hero, [462];
- his instinct for the practical, [463];
- his democratic faith 463;
- his hatred of Anarchy, [464];
- apostatised from his old faith in Facts, and took to believing in Semblances, [464], [465];
- this Napoleonism was unjust, and could not last, [466]
- Nature, the God-written Apocalypse of,39, [49];
- Necessity, brightened into Duty, [74]
- Newspaper Editors, [33];
- Nothingness of life, [138], [139]
- Nottingham bargemen, [255], [256]
- Novalis, on Man, [248];
- Obedience, the lesson of, [74], [75]
- Odin, the first Norse ‘man of genius,’ 258;
- Olaf, King, and Thor, [275]
- Original man the sincere man, [280], [356]
- Orpheus, [197]
- Over-population, [170]
- Own, conservation of a man’s, [151]
- Paganism, Scandinavian, [241];
- not mere Allegory, [243];
- Nature-worship, [245], [266];
- Hero-worship, [248];
- creed of our fathers, [253], [272], [274];
- Impersonation of the visible workings of Nature, [254];
- contrasted with Greek Paganism, [256];
- the first Norse Thinker, [258];
- main practical Belief; indispensable to be brave, [267];
- hearty, homely, rugged Mythology, [270];
- Balder and Thor, [271];
- Consecration of Valour, [276]
- Paradise and Fig-leaves, [27];
- Parliaments superseded by Books, [392];
- Cromwell’s Parliaments, [454]
- Passivity and Activity, [74], [121]
- Past, the, inextricably linked with the Present, [129];
- Paupers, what to do with, [173]
- Peace-Era, the much-predicted, [133]
- Peasant Saint, the, [172]
- Pelham, and the Whole Duty of Dandies, [209]
- Perseverance, law of, [178]
- Person, mystery of a, [48], [101], [103], [179]
- Philosophies, Cause-and-Effect, [26]
- Phœnix Death-birth, [178], [183], [201]
- Pitt, Mr., his reply when asked for help to Burns, [396]
- Plato, the child-man of, [245]
- Poet, the, and Prophet, [313], [332], [342]
- Poetry and Prose, distinction of, [315], [323]
- Popery, [367]
- Poverty, advantages of, [334]
- Priest, the true, a kind of Prophet, [346]
- Printing, consequences of, [392]
- Private judgment, [354]
- Progress of the Species, [349]
- Property, [150]
- Prose. See [Poetry].
- Proselytising, [6], [221]
- Protestantism, the root of Modern European History, [364];
- Purgatory, noble Catholic conception of, [328]
- Puritanism, founded by Knox, [373];
- Pym, [433], [434]
- Radicalism, Speculative, [10], [20], [47], [188]
- Ragnarök, [275]
- Raleigh’s, Sir Walter, fine mantle, [36]
- Ramadhan, the month of, [290]
- Raphael, the best of Portrait-Painters, [326]
- Reformer, the true, [347]
- Religion, dead letter and living spirit of, [87];
- Reverence, early growth of, [75];
- indispensability of, [188]
- Revolution, [423];
- Richter, [24], [369]
- Right and Wrong, [309], [329]
- Rousseau, not a strong man, [411];
- Runes, [263], [264], [388]
- Sabeans, the worship of, [247], [283]
- Sæmund, an early Christian priest, [253], [254]
- St. Clement Danes, Church of, [407]
- Saints, living Communion of, [185], [190]
- Sarcasm, the panoply of, [99]
- Sartor Resartus, genesis of, [7];
- its purpose, [201]
- Saturn or Chronos, [98]
- Savage, the aboriginal, [28]
- Scarecrow, significance of the, [46]
- Sceptical goose-cackle, [51]
- Scepticism, a spiritual paralysis, [398]-[405], [433]
- Schlegel, August Wilhelm, [341]
- School education, insignificance of, [78], [80];
- Science, the Torch of, [1];
- the Scientific Head, [51]
- Scotland awakened into life by Knox, [374]
- Secrecy, benignant efficacies of, [164]
- Secret, the open, [313]
- Seid, Mahomet’s slave and friend, [293], [306]
- Self-activity, [20]
- Self-annihilation, [141]
- Shakspeare and the Elizabethan Era, [334];
- his all-sufficing intellect, [335], [338];
- his Characters, [337];
- his Dramas, a part of Nature herself, [340];
- his joyful tranquillity, and overflowing love of laughter, [340];
- his hearty Patriotism, [342];
- glimpses of the world that was in him, [342];
- a heaven-sent Light-Bringer, [343];
- a King of Saxondom, [345]
- Shame, divine, mysterious growth of, [30];
- the soil of all Virtue, [165]
- Shekinah, Man the true, [247]
- Silence, [135];
- Simon’s, Saint-, aphorism of the golden age, [178];
- a false application, [223]
- Sincerity, better than gracefulness, [267];
- Smoke, advantage of consuming one’s, [114]
- Snorro, his description of Odin, [260], [264], [268]
- Society founded upon Cloth, [38], [45], [47];
- Solitude. See [Silence].
- Sorrow-pangs of Self-deliverance, [115], [120], [121];
- Southey, and Literature, [396]
- Space and Time, the Dream-Canvas upon which Life is imaged, [40], [49], [192], [195]
- Spartan wisdom, [172]
- Speculative intuition, [38].
- See [German].
- Speech, great, but not greatest, [164]
- Sphinx-riddle, the Universe a, [97]
- Star worship, [247], [283]
- Stealing, [151], [172]
- Stupidity, blessings of, [123]
- Style, varieties of, [54]
- Suicide, [126]
- Summary, [231]
- Sunset, [70], [116]
- Swallows, migrations and co-operative instincts of, [72]
- Swineherd, the, [70]
- Symbols, [163];
- Tabûc, the War of, [306]
- Tailors, symbolic significance of, [217]
- Temptations in the wilderness, [138]
- Testimonies of Authors, [227]
- Tetzel, the Monk, [362], [363]
- Teufelsdröckh’s Philosophy of Clothes, [4];
- he proposes a toast, [10];
- his personal aspect, and silent deep-seated Sansculottism, [11];
- thawed into speech, [13];
- memorable watch-tower utterances, [14];
- alone with the Stars, [16];
- extremely miscellaneous environment, [17];
- plainness of speech, [21];
- universal learning, and multiplex literary style, [22];
- ambiguous-looking morality, [23];
- one instance of laughter, [24];
- almost total want of arrangement, [25];
- feeling of the ludicrous, [36];
- speculative Radicalism, [47];
- a singular Character, [58];
- Genesis properly an Exodus, [62];
- unprecedented Name, [65];
- infantine experience, [66];
- Pedagogy, [76];
- an almost Hindoo Passivity, [76];
- schoolboy jostling, [79];
- heterogeneous University Life, [83];
- fever-paroxysms of Doubt, [87];
- first practical knowledge of the English, [88];
- getting under way, [90];
- ill success, [94];
- glimpse of high life, [96];
- casts himself on the Universe, [101];
- reverent feeling towards Women, [102];
- frantically in love, [104];
- first interview with Blumine, [106];
- inspired moments, [108];
- short of practical kitchen-stuff, [111];
- ideal bliss and actual catastrophe, [112];
- sorrows and peripatetic stoicism, [113];
- a parting glimpse of his Beloved on her way to England, [116];
- how he overran the whole earth, [118];
- Doubt darkened unto Unbelief, [122];
- love of Truth, [124];
- a feeble unit, amidst a threatening Infinitude, [125];
- Baphometic Fire-baptism, [128];
- placid indifference, [129];
- a Hyperborean intruder, [136];
- Nothingness of life, [138];
- Temptations in the wilderness, [138];
- dawning of a better day, [141];
- the Ideal in the Actual, [148];
- finds his true Calling, [149];
- his Biography a symbolic Adumbration, significant to those who can decipher it, [152];
- a wonder-lover, seeker and worker, [156];
- in Monmouth Street among the Hebrews, [181];
- concluding hints, [219];
- his public History not yet done, perhaps the better part only beginning, [223]
- Theocracy, a, striven for by all true Reformers, [382], [451]
- Thinking Man, a, the worst enemy of the Prince of Darkness, [91], [150];
- true Thought can never die, [185]
- Thor, and his adventures, [255], [271]-[274];
- his last appearance, [275]
- Thought, miraculous influence of, [258], [266], [393];
- musical Thought, [316]
- Thunder. See [Thor].
- Time, the great mystery of, [246]
- Time-Spirit, life-battle with the, [65], [98];
- Time, the universal wonder-hider, [197]
- Titles of Honour, [186]
- Tolerance, true and false, [368], [379]
- Tools, influence of, [30];
- the Pen, most miraculous of tools, [150]
- Trial by Jury, Burke’s opinion of, [422]
- Turenne, [312]
- Unbelief, era of, [86], [112];
- Universities, [83], [389]
- Utgard, Thor’s expedition to, [273], [274]
- Utilitarianism, [121], [176]
- Valkyrs, the, [267], [268]
- Valour, the basis of all virtue, [268], [271];
- Vates, the, [313], [314], [317]
- View-hunting and diseased Self-consciousness, [117]
- Voltaire, [146];
- War, [131]
- Wisdom, [50]
- Wish, the Norse god, [255];
- enlarged into a heaven by Mahomet, [310]
- Woman’s influence, [102]
- Wonder the basis of Worship, [50];
- region of, [51]
- Words, slavery to, [40];
- Word-mongering and Motive-grinding, [123]
- Workshop of Life, [149].
- See [Labour].
- Worms, Luther at, [364]
- Worship, transcendent wonder, [247].
- See [Hero-worship].
- Young Men and Maidens, [97]
- Zemzem, the sacred Well, [284]
THE END