[172]
Manet, Édouard, [91], [93], [95], [101], [116], [179], [303]
Manifesto of the Five ("La Terre"), [234] et seq.
Margueritte, Paul, [234], [235], [378]; Victor, [235], [378]
Marriage vow, violations of the, [401]
Marryat, Captain, [19]
Marseilles, F. Zola at, [13] et seq., [27]; É. Zola at, [52];
canal to, [25]; riots at, [446]
Marshall, F. A., [298]
Martineau, H., [19]
Marx, Adrien, [82], [173]
Marzials, F. T., [298]
Masséna, [428]
Massin, Léontine, as Nana, [203]
Mathieu, Zola's dog, [123]
Matrimony in France, [354], [355], [495], [536]
Matthews, H., Home Secretary, [265] et seq., [296], [298]
Maupassant, Guy de, [63], [141], [162], [163], [167], [191], [192], [194],
[262], [286], [343], [377]
Mayhew, A. and J., [247], [298]
Medal struck in Zola's honour, [490]
Médan, Zola's house at, [168], [179], [180], [187], [207], [209], [210],
[217], [218], [233], [239], [305], [392], [401], [410], [484], [504], [505], [509]
Melbourne, Lord, [403]
Meley, Alexandrine Gabrielle, see Zola, Mme. Émile
Méline, M., [445], [462]
Memorial for H. Vizetelly's release, [297], [298]
Memory, Zola's, [394]
Mendès, Catulle, [134], [146], [158], [321]
Menken, Adah I., [404]
Mentality, Zola's, [394], [395], [432], [533], [534]
Mercier, General, [440], [443]
Meredith, George, [19]
"—— Owen," [298]
Mérimée, Prosper, [22], [249], [377], [404]
Mermaid Series of the Old Dramatists, [253], [263]
Metternich, Prince Richard, [89]
Meurice, Paul, and wife, [116], [117], [118], [367]
Meyer, M., [447]
Michel de Bourges, [404]
Michelet, [21], [66], [86], [89], [367], [374]
Michon, Abbé, [90]
Mignet, [26], [31]
Militarism in France, [438], [441], [442], [452]
Mill, J. S., [19]
Millais, Sir J. E., [298]
Millet, [94]
Mirbeau, Octave, [389], [477], [515]
Miribel, General de, [444]
Mistral, the, [26], [39]
Molière, [17], [18]
Molloy, Fitzgerald, [298]
Monet, Claude, [91], [93]
Monod, Gabriel, [447], [522]
Montmartre cemetery, Zola buried in, [514], [516], et seq.
Monument, projected, to Zola, [524]
Moore, George, [178], [179], [182], [249], [250], [254], [258], [287], [288],
[297], [298], [334], [340], [477], [530]
Moral law, the, and great men, [402] et seq.
Morès, Marquis de, [427]
Morley, Prof. H., [298]
Morny, Duke de, [153]
Mun, Count A. de, [445]
Münster, Count, later Prince von, [452]
Murger, Henri, [59], [60], [262]
Murray, D. Christie, [448]
Musset, Alfred de, [21], [43], [44], [85], [404], [451]
—— Paul de, [85], [89]
Nadar, M., [143], [144]
Names taken by Zola in England, [466], [469], [470]
Nantes, riots at, [446]
Napoleon III., [20], [34], [47], [75], [86], [97], [117], [118], [125], [152],
[186], [350], [351], [357], [362]
—— Jérôme, Prince, [186]
National Defence Delegation, French, in 1870, [127]
—— Gallery, Zola at the, [334], [335]
Nationalists, French, [424] et seq., [452], [457], [462]
National Vigilance Association, [257] et seq., [263], [269],
[282], [285], [287], [288]
Naturalism in Action, [159], [164], [174], [183], [184], [190], [192],
[195], [203], [204], [395], [407], [530], [531]
Nazon, M., [95]
Nelson, [403]
Newgate prison, [294]
Nicholson, Brinsley, [298]
Nieuwerkerke, Count A. E. de, [75]
Nigra, Count, [89]
Ninon, Zola's, [45]; for "Contes à Ninon," see Zola,
Writings
Nisard, Désiré, [47], [402]
Noel, Roden, [298]
Normandy, drunkenness in, [537]
Norris, Frank, [531]
Norwood, Zola at, see Queen's Hotel
Novel, the six-shilling, [249], [250]
Oatlands Park Hotel, Zola at, [467], [470]
Obesity, Zola cures himself of, [302]
Obsequies, Zola's, [514] et seq.
Observation, Zola's powers of, [393]
O'Connor, T. P., [298]
Odelin, M., [423]
Old Bailey, see Central Criminal Court
Olivier, Captain, [515]
Orderliness, Zola's, [395]
"O'Rell, Max," [298]
Orléans, Prince Henri d', [438]
Orson, S. W., [298]
"Ouida," [298]
Païva, Viscount A. de, [185]
—— La, [185]
Pamplin, A. W., [469]
Panizzardi, Colonel, [437], [451], [452], [463]
Paris, F. Zola's scheme for fortifying, [8], [14], [15], [16],
[24], [25]; environs of, [60], [61]; É. Zola at lectures in, [70];
corruption of, [84], [85], [186], [352], [354], [536]; Commune of, [127],
[128], [132]; markets of, [142] et seq.; some restaurants of,
[144], [145]; middle classes of, [207], [208], [354], [355]; working
classes of, [154], [155], [157], [159], [358]; Southerners and Jews
in, [420] et seq., [426]; anti-Semitic disturbances in, [446],
[450], [453], [459]; Zola's trial in, [450] et seq., [521]; boycott
of the Exhibition of 1900, [485]; cohabitation without
marriage in, [536]. See also Quartier Latin
Parkinson, J. C., [247], [298]
Parnassian poets, [86], [116], [129], [321]
Pascal, Zola as Monsieur, [466]
Passy, M., [447]
Paternity and famous men, [400] et seq.
Pavia, [4]
Pays, Mlle., [437]
Pearl, Cora, [186]
Peasantry, French, [230], [231], [361], [362], [381]
Pellieux, General de, [436], [444], [451], [452], [453], [461]
Pelloquet, T., [94]
Pelletan, Eugène, [89], [119]
Penn, Oatlands Chase, Zola at, [468], [470]
Pentonville prison, [295]
Percin, General, [513]
Periodical Publications (newspapers, reviews, etc.)
referred to or quoted American: "New York Herald" (London
edition), [258], [288] "—— Tribune," [341] Austrian:
"Neue Freie Presse," British: "Athenæum," [42], [262], [381]
"Birmingham Daily Mail," [263], [267] "Blackwood's Magazine,"
[243], [261] "Bradford Observer," [268] "Country Gentleman,"
[268] "Dally Chronicle," [288], [340] "English Illustrated
Magazine," [178], [182] "Fortnightly Review," [288] "Globe,"
[267], [287] "Guardian," [267] "Illustrated London News," [246],
[247] "Illustrated Times," [247] "Liverpool Mercury," [287] "M.
A. P.," [466] "Methodist Times," [287] "Morning Advertiser,"
[287] "National Observer," [337] "Newcastle Chronicle," [268]
"New Review," [323] "Notts Daily Express," [263] "Pall Mall
Gazette," [248], [250], [256], [263], [330] "—— Magazine," [466]
"People," [221] "Piccadilly," [268] "Pictorial Times," [246]
"Reynolds's Newspaper," [505] "St. James's Gazette," [287], [377]
"Saturday Review," [250], [287] "Scotsman," [265], [268] "Scottish
Leader," [268] "Speaker," [338], [340] "Standard," [268] "Star,"
[287], [477] "Tablet," [267] "Times," [287], [452] "Truth," [257]
"Weekly Dispatch," [267] "—— Times and Echo," [316] "Welcome
Guest," [247] "Western Daily Press," [268] "—— Morning
News," [287] "Westminster Gazette," [432], [481] "Whitehall
Review," [267], [287] "Wimbledon Annual," [466] French:[1]
"L'Anti-Juif," [425] "L'Artiste," * [103], [121]
"L'Aurore," * [434], [439], [445], [447], [448], [480], [481], [487], [501]
"La Bibliothèque Universelle," [171] "La Cloche," * [131], [132],
[133], [134] "La Croix," [512] "La Grande Revue," * [69], [100], [477]
"La Lanterne," [117], [118] "La Liberté," [83] "La Libre Parole,"
[410], [423], [425], [511] "La Marseillaise," * Zola's, [126], [127]
"La Nouvelle Revue," [189] "La Patrie," [511] "La Petite
République," [445] "La République des Lettres," * [134], [158],
[160] "La République Française," [198] "La Revue bleue, [63], [160]
"La Revue des Deux Mondes," [160] "La Revue hebdomadaire," * [319]
"La Revue illustrée," * [301], [304], La Situation [101]
"La Tribune," * [110], [113], [119], [123], [127], [128] "La
Vie Parisienne," * [74] "La Vie populaire," * [304], [315] "La
Vraie Parole," [425] "Le Bien Public," * [156] et seq., [164],
[170], [171], [184] "Le, Corsaire," * [101], [131] "L'Éclair," [444]
"L'Echo de Paris," [444] "L'Époque," [120] "L'Étendard," [120]
"L'Événement," * [81] et seq., [91] et seq., [97], [98], [118],
[151], [152]; another, [107] "Le Figaro," * [63], [69], [80] et seq.,
[98], [100], [103], [105], [118], [149], [152], [170], [171], [195], [226], [234],
[315], [317], [414], [416], [429], [432], [433] "Le Gaulois," * [118],
[123], [208], [511], [513] "Le Gil-Blas," * [195], [213], [218], [221],
[229], [234], [310] "L'Illustration," * [99], [121] "Le Journal," *
[414], [429], [460] "Le Messager de Provence," * [101], [102], [126]
"Le Petit Journal," * [74], [82], [423], [450], [461] "Le Peuple
Français," [120]; another, [512] "Le Public," [120] "Le Rappel," * [117],
[118], [121] "Le Salut Public" * (Lyons), [74], [118] "Le Sémaphore" *
(Marseilles), [131], [134], [153], [157] "Le Siècle," * [124], [125],
[132], [147], [156], [445], [477], [491] "Le Temps," [135] "Le
Voltaire," * [159], [171], [179], [187], [188], [195], [204]
Russian: "Viestnik Yevropi," * [150], [153], [157], [164], [171],
[195], [204]
[1] Zola contributed to those journals which are marked with an asterisk.
Perlinpinpin, see Pinpin
Perowne, see Worcester, Bishop of
Perraud, Cardinal, [307]
Perrenx, M., [447], [458], [464], [465]
Perrier, E., [415]
Person, Zola's, [390]
Petilleau, G., [326], [327], [335]
Petit, Hélène, [178]
Petrapoli, Antonio, [5]
Philips, F. C., [298]
Phillips, Alderman, [269]
Photographs by Zola, [469]
Picquart, Colonel, [417], [431], [437], [438], [440], [443], [451], [462],
[464], [474], [483], [487], [491], [523]
Pinero, A. W., [298]
Pinpin, Zola's dog, [475], [476]
Pipe-en-bois (G. Cavalié), [127]
Piriac, Zola at, [156]
Pissarro, M., [91], [95], [100]
Plagiarism, charges against Zola of, [143], [170], [171], [221],
[222], [414] et seq.
Plassans suggested by Flassans, [30], [115]; see also Aix
Poe's Tales, [20], [246]
Pollonnais, G., [513]
Ponsard, [86], [112], [185]
Ponson du Terrail, [87], [103]
Pontbriand, M. de, [445]
Pont-de-Beraud, Zola at, [33]
Positivism and Zola, [502], [503]
Post-mortem examination of Zola's remains, [510]
Poulot, Denis, [171]
Powell, Sir F. S., [265]
Pressensé, F. de, [447]
Prévost-Paradol, [66], [86], [98], [112]
Prison Commissioners and H. Vizetelly, [295]
Protestants, French, [214], [503]
Proudhon, [90]
Provence, Zola in, [23], [25] et seq.; scenery of, [40] et seq.
Pseudonyms, Zola's newspaper, [94], [98], [102]
Pushfulness, Zola's belief in, [165]
Quartier Latin, [48], [51], [54] et seq., [59] et seq., [100]
Queen's Hotel, Norwood, Zola at, [470], [477], [480]
Quènemeur, E., [12]
Quiller-Couch, A. T., [338], [340]
Quinet, E., [89]
Rabelais, [253], [308]
Raffaelli, M., [302]
Ralston, W. R. S., [298]
Ranc, A., [447], [453]
"Rat, Le," Zola's projected novel, [430]
Ravary, Major, [444]
Reade, Charles, [178], [494]
Reichstag, the German, declaration about Dreyfus in, [448]
Reinach, Joseph, [429], [447], [462], [487]
Religion, Zola's views on, [502], [503]
Renan, E., [146], [177], [307], [533]
Rennes court-martial on Dreyfus, [484]
Renoir, M., [91]
Republic, French, and Jews, [420] et seq.; and the Roman
Church, [424], [427], [428], [436], [445], [446], [487], [499], [503], [532]
Réville, M., [447]
Révillon, Tony, [158]
Rhys, E., [298]
Ricard, Mgr., [409]
—— X. de, [116]
Richepin, J., [162]
Robert Macaire and Rougon-Macquart, [350]
Robertson, Tom, [247]
Rochefort, Henri, [48], [117], [118], [120], [439], [450], [511]
Rod, Édouard, [160]
Rodays, F. de, [432], [433]
Roman Catholic Church, the, canonizes G. B. Zola, [3];
difficulties of Abbé Giuseppe Zola with, [3], [4]; in relation
to France, [408], [409], [416], [421] et seq., [436], [445], [446],
[487], [499], [503], [532], [538]
Rome, Zola's visit to, [410] et seq.; see also Zola,
Writings
Rosny, J. H., [234], [235]
Rouen, Zola at, [193], [194]
Rougon-Macquart and Robert Macaire, [350]
Rousseau, Théodore, [94]
Roux, Marius, [33], [70], [97], [106], [126], [146], [147]
Rovigo, Duke de, [10], [11]
Russell, T. W., M. P., [265]
—— W. Clark, [298]
Saint Arroman, R. de, [501]
—— Aubin, Zola at, [154], [218]
—— Joseph, Zola's birthplace, [16], [17], [18]
—— Louis, Lycée, Zola at, [47] et seq.; famous pupils of, [48]
—— Pierre, Bernardin de, [56]
Sainte-Beuve, [21], [105], [106]
Sala, G. A., [178], [247], [298]
Sambourne, L., [298]
Sand, George, [22], [85], [161], [190], [249], [374], [389], [404];
Maurice, [146]
Sandeau, J., [404]
Sandherr, Colonel, [433]
"Sapho," Daudet's novel, [217]
Sarcey, Francisque, [16], [135], [141], [160], [233], [236]
Sardou, V., [84], [112]
Saussier, General, [436]
Savoy Hotel, Zola at, [330], [335]
Schérer, E., [214]
Scheurer-Kestner, M., [431], [433], [434], [442]
Schneider, Colonel, [437]
—— Hortense, [186]
Scholl, Aurélien, [329]
Schreiner, Olive, [298]
Schveninger cure for obesity, [302]
Schwarzkoppen, Colonel von, [433], [437], [451], [452], [463]
Science, Zola's belief in, [503], [533]
Scott, Sir W., [190]
Sensitiveness, Zola's physical, [392], [393]
Senior, W., [298]
Shark, Zola called the, [308]
Sharp, William, [298]
Sherard, R. H., [77], [188], [207], [208], [213], [220], [232], [319]
Simon, Jules, [90], [129]
Singer, Dr. I., [425]
Six-shilling novel, the, [249], [250]
Smith, Samuel, M. P., [262] et seq.
Socialism, Zola and, [494]
Société des Gens de Lettres and Zola, [323], [326], [329], [394]
"Soil, the," translation of La Terre, publication of and
proceedings against, [254], [261], [268], [269], [270], [277]
Soissons, Count C. S. de, [98]
Solari, M., sculptor, [33], [69], [100]
Soulié, F., [22]
Soult, Marshal, [11], [24], [428]
Southey, R., [19]
Spalding, Percy, [316], [477]; Mrs., [467]
Spencer, Herbert, [179]
Spontaneous combustion, death by, [383]
Spottiswoode, A., [246]
Staff, French General, [433], [441], [442], [444], [451], [459], [462]
Stage, the, Zola and, [388]
Stead, W. T., [256] et seq., [286]
Stendhal, [22]
Stephen, Sir Leslie, [298]
Stephenson, Sir A. K., [271]
Storey, S., M. P., [298]
Story, G. W., [341]
Strachey, J. St. Loe, [298]
Strickland, Agnes, [19]
Students, Zola's address to the Paris, [323]
"Sublime, Le," Poulot's, [171]
Sue, Eugène, [22], [155]
Sully-Prudhomme, [116]
Summerfield, Addlestone, Zola at, [469], [470]
Superstitions, Zola's, [392], [400], [503], [504]
Survival of Zola's memory, [529]
Swinburne, A. C., [196]
Symonds, J. A., [19], [298]
Symons, Arthur, [298]
Syndicate, alleged Jewish, [445], [454]
Sylvacanne, Impasse, at Aix, Zola at, [32]
Tabar, L., [91], [92]
Taglioni, La, [80]
Taine, H., [68], [74], [87], [98], [100], [146], [308], [395]
Talmeyre, M., [222]
Tanera, Captain, [317]
"Tartarin of Tarascon," Daudet's, [88]
Thackeray, [19], [216], [246], [283]
Theatres, chiefly those at which Zola's plays, libretti,
or adaptations of his novels were performed:——
Ambigu (Paris), [159], [177], [201] et seq., [219]
—— (Marseilles), [106], [107]
Châtelet, [227], [303]
Cluny, [148], [149]
Comédie Française, [75], [88], [135], [215], [225], [389]
Gymnase, [99], [148]
Odéon, [74], [88], [233], [389]
Opéra Comique, [304], [407], [498]
—— Grand, [430]
Palais Royal, [148], [168], [169]
Renaissance, [141], [142]
Théâtre Français, see Comédie
—— Libre, [233], [301], [302]
—— de Paris, [233]
Vaudeville, [99]
Theuriet, A., [161]
Thévenot, E., [170]
Thiboust, Lambert, [202]
Thiers, A., [24], [26], [31], [32], [34], [131], [156]
Thomson, W. M., [269], [286]
Tolstoï, Count, [252], [323], [389], [519]
Tornielli, Count, [452]
Torse, river, [33]
Toudouze, M., [146]
Toulouse, Dr., on Zola, [390] et seq.
Tourgeneff, [141], [144], [145], [146], [147], [150], [154], [209]
Toussenel on the Jews, [420], [422]
Tragedy in Zola's life, [527], [52]
Traill, Dr. H. D., [29]
Translations, of English novels in France, [283]; of Zola's
novels into English, [244]-299, [323], [385] et seq., [414], [542]
et seq.
Trarieux, Senator, [447]
Trials of Zola (Dreyfus case), see Paris and Versailles
Truro, Bishop of, [337]
Turner's paintings and Zola, [335]
—— F., [214], [243]
Ulbach, L., [104], [105], [131], [132], [133], [172]
Umberto, King of Italy, [411]
"Uncle Tom's Cabin," [246]
Union Générale Bank, [196], [421]
Vacquerie, Auguste, [117]
—— Charles, [118]
Valabrègue, A., [38], [70] et seq., [73], [76], [78], [99], [101], [108], [164]
Valenciennes, Zola at, [220]
Vallès, Jules, [210]
Vandam, Albert, [221], [229]
Vaughan, Ernest, [439]
—— Mr., magistrate, [286]
Venables, E. G., [468]
Venice, Zolas of, [2], [5], [6]; É. Zola at, [412], [455]; Vizetellys
from, [244]
Verne, Jules, [161]
Véron, Dr., [82]
Versailles, Zola at, [131], [132]; his trials at, [461], [463], [464], [465]
Vigny, A. de, [21]
Vigilance Association, see National
Villars, Nina de, [368]
Villemessant, H. de, [69], [80] et seq., [88], [92], [93], [94], [97],
[98], [117], [120]
Vitu, Auguste, [120]
Vizetelly & Co., [243] et seq., [284]
—— Arthur, [248], [256], [299]
—— Edward Henry, [248]
—— Ernest Alfred, [173], [174], [248], [250] et seq., [278], [284],
[285], [289] et seq., [295], [313] et seq., [324] et seq., [334],
[335], [337], [338], [410], [413], [414], [429], [445], [460], [466], [467], [469],
[470], [472] to [479], [484] et seq., [497], [502], [505], [515], [542]
et seq.; Marie, wife of, [253], [313], [314], [466], [468]; Victor
René, son of, [474]; Violette, daughter of, [468], [469], [472], [473]
—— family, [244] et seq.
—— Frank Horace, [248], [290], [295]
—— Henry
Richard, [90], [243] et seq., [252], [255], [256], [263], [268]
et seq., [284] et seq., [301], [329], [340]
—— James Henry, [245], [246]
—— James Thomas George, [246]
Waldeck-Rousseau, M., [484], [487], [488], [512], [525]
Walsin-Esterhazy, Major, [417], [431], [433], [435] et seq., [439]
et seq., [448], [454], [464], [474]
War of 1870, Zola during the, [125] et seq.
Wareham, F. W., [466] et seq., [478]
Watkin, Sir E. W., [298]
Webster, Daniel, [403]
Welldon, Rev. J. E. C., [337], [338]
Wellington, Duke of, [403]
Westminster Abbey, Zola at, [335]
Wharton, H. T., [298]
Williams, F. B., Q. C., [275], [280], [281], [282]
Williamson, C. N., [298]
Willis, N. P., [20]
Wilson, Daniel,
[234]
—— H. J., M. P., [267]
Wingfield, Hon. L., [298]
"Winter, John Strange," [298]
Wimbledon, Zola at, [466], [467]
Wolf, Lucien, [336], [477]
Wolff, Albert, [236]
Wollstonecraft, Mary, [405]
Worcester, Bishop of, [336], [337], [338]
Wybouroff, M., [503]
Xau, Fernand, [235], [237], [329], [414]
Yates, Edmund, [247], [296], [297], [298]
Young, J. Carleton, [525]
Zola, Alexandrine Gabrielle, née Mesley, wife of Émile,
[100], [121], [122], [123], [125], [126], [128], [134], [135], [150], [154], [180],
[202], [210], [212], [219], [240], [302], [311], [329], [332], [375], [401],
[402], [412], [413], [454], [465], [469], [470], [475], [477], [478], [505] et
seq., [514], [522], [523]
—— Benedetta, née Kiariaki, [5], [6]
—— Canal, see Aix
—— Carlo, judge, [5], [6], [412]
—— di, Modigliana, [2]
Zola, Émile Édouard Charles Antoine, his birth and destiny,
[18]; contrasted with A. Daudet, [22];. taken from Paris to
Aix, [24], [25]; at his father's funeral, [27]; his childhood,
[30] et seq.; his animus against Aix, [30]; his first school
and friends, [33]; studies at Alx college, [34] et seq.; his
first literary attempts, [36]; his college friends and their
pranks, [39]; plays the clarionet, [40]; roams the country
round Aix, [40] et seq.; his taste for poetry and his early
verses, [43] et seq., [51]; awakes to love, [44], [45]; returns
to Paris, [46], [47]; studies at Lycée St. Louis, [47] et seq.;
his first "Conte & Ninon," [49]; his holidays at Aix, [49],
[51]; ill with fever, [49]; fails to secure a degree, [49], [50],
[52]; is employed at the Docks Napoléon, [53]; is stranded
in the Quartier Latin, [54] et seq.; his "Amoureuse
Comédie," [56]; his bitter poverty, [57], plans a poetic
trilogy "Genesis," [57], [58]; is Quartier Latin life and love
affair, [60] et sea.: his "Confession de Claude," [60], [61],
[68], [70], [73], [76] et seq.; his rambles round Paris, [61] et
seq.; plays the "Arab," [63]; pawns his coat, [64]; can get
no work, [64]; employed at Hachette's house, [64] et seq.;
becomes acquainted with Hachette's authors, [66]; chats
with Taine, [67]; writes various tales, [68]; his verse and
prose rejected by Haehette, [69]; taljes his mother to live
with him, [69]; his "band," [70]; reports various lectures,
[70]; sells his "Contes a Ninon," [70], [71]; abandons verse
for prose, [71]; impressed by "Madame Bovary," [72]; duality
of his nature, [73]; early contributions to journalism,
[74]; writes "La Laide," a comedy, [74]; his articles, "Mes
Haines," [74], [96], [101]; his intercourse with the Goncourts
begins, [74], [109] et seq.; his impressions of "Henriette
Maréchal," [75]; is attacked by Barbey d'Aurévilly, [77];
quits Hachette, [77], [78]; will not be crushed by fools, [78];
serves under Villemessant, [82], [83]; his "Books of To-day
and To-morrow," [83] et seq.; visits Littré and Michelet,
[86]; meets A. Daudet, [88]; attacks Abbé Michon, [90]; visits
Librairie Internationale, [90], [91]; meets artists and art
critics, [91]; criticises the Salon and champions Manet,
[92] et seq.; stays at Bennecourt, [96], [97]; writes "Le
Vœu d'une Morte," [97]; his "Marbres bres,et Plâtres," [98];
passes from "L'Événement" to "Le Figaro," [98]; his drama "La
Madeleine," [99], [107], [301], [302]; writes a definition of the
novel, [99], [100]; poor and in love, [100]; attempts a Salon for
"La Situation," [101]; his "Mystères de Marseille," [101], [102],
[106], [107]; his "Thérèse Raquin," [102] et seq.; projects a
book on Balzac, [108]; writes for "La Tribune," [110], [113],
[119], [123], [127], [128]; origin of his Rougon-Macquart series,
[110] et seq.; arranges for its publication, [114]; begins
"La Fortune des Rougon," [115], [123]; Goncourt's allegation of
his venality, [116] et seq.; frequents the Meurices' salon,
[116]; meets Sully-Prudhomme and F. Coppée, [116]; contributes
to "Le Rappel," [117], [118]; his Republicanism, [118]; falsity
of Goncourt's charge, [119] et seq.; introduced to
Flaubert, [121]; marries Mlle. Mesley, [121]; his home Rue
de La Condamine, [122]. [123]; his difficulties with "Le
Siècle," [124], [125]; begins "La Curée," [125]; goes to southern
France, [125]; is exempt from military service, [126]; runs a
war newspaper at Marseilles, [126]; appointed secretary to
Glais-Bizoin, [127]; almost becomes a sub-prefect, [128], [129];
his view of politics, [130]; contributes to "Le Sémaphore,"
"La Cloche," and "Le Corsaire," [131]; writes "La Curée,"
[132], [133], [134]; his publisher failing, is reduced to dire
poverty, [134]; recommended by T. Gautier to G. Charpentier,
[134], [135]; sells the Rougon-Macquarts to Charpentier, [136]
et seq.; is generously treated by him, [138], [139]; becomes
intimate with Flaubert, Tourgeneff, Daudet, and Goncourt,
[140] et seq.; suffers from various ailments, [141], [153],
[154], [195], [210], [212], [213], [218], [221], [302], [392], [393], [474],
[475], [510]; his play "Thérèse Raquin," [141], [142]; his "Ventre
de Paris," [142], [143]; joins the Dinner of the Hissed
Authors, [144], [145]; becomes partial to good fare, [145];
attacks Chateaubriand, [146]; does not smoke, [146]; a poor
conversationalist, [147]; his weekly dinners, [147]; publishes
"La Conquête de Plassans," [147], [148]; his comedy "Les
Héritiers Rabourdin," [148], [149]; his home in the Rue St.
Georges, [149], [150]; contributes to the "Viestnik Yevropi,"
[150]; writes his "Faute de l'Abbé Mouret," [150], [151]; Issues
"Nouveaux Contes à Ninon," [151], [152]; writes "Son Excellence
Eugène Rougon," [151] et seq.; is eager to put everything
in his books, [153]; sees mice, [154]; plans "L'Assommoir"
at St. Aubin, [154] et seq.; becomes dramatic critic to
"Le Bien Public," [156], [157]; his income in 1876, [157]; his
difficulties with L'Assommoir, [157], [158]; transfers it to
"La République des Lettres," [158]; controversy respecting
his work and ideas, [159] et seq.; his adherents, [162], [163];
is accused of self-advertisement by Flaubert, [163]; his
answer, [164]; his belief in pushfulness, [165]; writes "Une
Page d' Amour," [166] et seq.; buys a house at Médan (q.
v.), [168]; his farce "Le Bouton de Rose," [168] et seq.;
again charged with plagiarism, [170]; attacks contemporary
novelists, [171] et seq.; his pamphlet on Naturalism and
the Republic, [174]; is promised the cross of the Legion of
Honour, [174] et seq.; his novel "L'Assommoir" dramatised,
[177], [178]; his rise to affluence, [179]; his extensions at
Médan, [180]: his collections, [180], [181]; his studies, [182];
development of his reforming Instinct, [182] et seq., [200];
writes "Nana," [185] et seq.; some of his short stories,
[190], [191]; contributes to "Les Soirées de Médan." [191];
disclaims the foundation of a school, [193]; deeply affected
by Flaubert's death, [194]; and by that of his mother, [194],
[195], [210]; his hypochondriacal tendency, [195], [210] et seq.;
quits "Le Voltaire" for "Le Figaro," [195]; attacks Hugo's
"L'Ane," [196]; assails Gambetta and defends "L'Assommoir,"
[196] et seq.; his real nature manifest in his newspaper
articles, [200]; assists Busnach to dramatise "Nana," [201];
defends the play, [202]; reissues in book form many critical
and biographical papers, [203], [204]; strenuousness of his
life, [205]; begins "La Joie de Vivre," [206]; enlarges the
Rougon-Macquart series, [207]; writes "Pot-Bouille," [207];
deems it his clearest book, [208]; hears Goncourt read "La
Paustin," [209]; his expenditure at Médan, [209]; tale of his
first franc, [209]; fears a sudden and violent death, [210];
gives a diner fin, [211]; writes "Au Bonheur des Dames,"
[212]; falls seriously ill, [213]; publishes "Le Capitaine
Burle" and other tales, [213]; finishes "Au Bonheur des
Dames," [214]; declining sale of his books, [215]; still
stage-struck, [216]; advises Daudet to stand as candidate for
the Academy, [216]; is cheered by Daudet's companionship,
[217], [218]; finishes "La Joie de Vivre," [218]; helps to
dramatise "Pot-Bouille," [219]; projects his novel "La
Terre," [219]; turns to "Germinal," [220]; recovers physical
and mental strength, [221]; again accused of plagiarism, [221],
[222]; begins "L'Œuvre," [224]; his view of some young authors,
[224]; is stirred by V. Hugo's death, [225]; his telegram to
George Hugo, [226]; resents the interdiction of "Germinal" as
a play, [226]; writes a prefatory note to "Germinal," [227];
publishes "L'Œuvre," [228], [229]; begins "La Terre," [229]; its
purport, [231], [232]; goes on a tour of Investigation, [232];
dramatises "Le Ventre de Paris" and "La Curée," [233]; issues
"La Terre" in the "Gil-Blas," [234]; treats the Manifesto
of the Five with contempt, [234] to [237]; becomes a knight
of the Legion of Honour, [238] et seq.; resolves to stand
for the Academy and, perhaps, the Senate, [240]; his works
translated in England, [242] et seq.; his view of the
failure of Christianity, [258], [259]; attacked by "Blackwood's
Magazine," [261]; his writings denounced in the House of
Commons, [263] et seq.; and by the British press, [267], [268];
proceedings against the English translations of his works,
[268] et seq.; H. Vizetelly's protest in his favour, [271]
et seq.; his view of Vizetelly's first trial, [283]; he
produces "Le Rêve," [300], [304]; he cures himself of obesity,
[302]; his novel "Germinal" as a play, [303]; he writes "La
Bête Humaine," [304], [305]; tries to enter the Academy, [306]
et seq.; writes "L'Argent," [310]; and "La Débâcle," [311]
et seq.; his first visit to Lourdes, [311]; his regular
intercourse with Ernest Vizetelly begins, [314]; reception
of his novel "La Débâcle," [317]; he returns to Lourdes and
visits Genoa, [318]; he writes "Le Docteur Pascal," [319]; is
entertained on completion of the Rougon-Macquart novels,
[320]; extent of his writings, [322]; becomes an officer of
the Legion of Honour and president of the Société des Gens
de Lettres, [323]; is asked to London by the Institute of
Journalists, [323] et seq.; his stay there, [329] et seq.;
his address on anonymity in Journalism, [330]; at dinner
with the Authors' Club, [332]; sees some London sights,
[334] et seq.; again attacked by English Pharisees, [336]
et seq.; his work to 1893 surveyed, [342] et seq.; his
love of animals (q. v.), [365]; panoramic character of his
writings, [365]; his researches and experience of life, [366];
preparation of his novels, [369] et seq.; his handwriting,
[373] et seq.; his MSS. and proofs, [375], [376]; some of his
errors, [376]; heaviness of some of his books, [377]; his view
of literary "fireworks," [378]; some of his good "bits," [378],
[379]; some of his volumes criticised, [379] et seq.; his
private slang lexicon, [380]; his connection with the stage,
[388]; his view of Ibsen and Tolstoï, [389]; his personal
appearance, [390]; his hand and palmistry, [391], [392]; his
superstitions and nervosit6f [392], [393], [504]; his powers of
observation, [393], [394]; his systematic memory and mind,
[394], [395], [432]; he forces himself to work, [395], [396]; his
abstemious habits, [396], [397]; routine of his life, [397]: his
"confession," [398]; the craving of his life, [398] et seq.;
his childless home, [400], [401]; his illegitimate children,
[402]; perturbation in his life, [405], [406]; his "Attaque du
Moulin" as an opera, [407]; his series "Les Trois Villes,"
[407] et seq.; his "Lourdes," [408], [409]; his "Rome," [410]
et seq.; he does not ask the Pope for an audience, [411];
he is received by King Umberto, [411]; visits his Italian
relatives, [412]; answers charges of plagiarism in "Rome,"
[414] et seq.; acknowledges help in writing his books,
[415]; his "Nouvelle Campagne," [416]; his view of spiritism,
[417]; begins to defend the Jews, [417], [429]; writes "Paris,"
and the libretto of "Messidor," [429], [430]; projects a novel
on ballet-girls, [430]; turns to the Dreyfus case, [431]; his
first intervention, [432], [433]; his pamphlet campaign, [434]
et seq.; is hissed at Daudet's funeral, [434], [435]; his
indignation at Bsterhazy's acquittal, [438]; his letter
"J'Accuse," [438] et seq.; is prosecuted for it, [445], [447]
et seq.; his windows broken, [446]; writes to Gen. Billot,
[447]; is sued by the handwriting experts, [448], [463], [474], [475], [476];
receives expressions and testimonials of sympathy, [448];
entrusts his defence to M. Labori, [449]; summons a hundred
witnesses, [450]; his first trial (Paris), [450] et seq.;
his address to the jury, [454] et seq.; he is convicted
and sentenced, [458], [459]; appeals, [460]; publishes "Paris,"
[460]; his conviction quashed, [461]; his second trial
(Versailles), [461]; he answers Judet's attack on his father,
[462]; issues a letter to M. Brisson, [463]; his third trial
(Versailles), [464], [465]; withdraws to England, [465]; entrusts
himself to Ernest Vizetelly, [466] et seq.; sensation
created by his disappearance, [467]; his homes in England,
[467] et seq.; is suspended from the Legion of Honour,
[468]; begins "Fécondité," [468]; his life in England, [468]
et seq.; names he assumed there, [469], [470]; some of his
notes to Vizetelly, [470], [471], [472]; studies English, [472];
receives a strange telegram, [473]; is impressed by Violette
Vizetelly's dream, [473]; his hope of returning to France
unfulfilled, [473], [474]; falls ill, [474], [475]; his grief for
his dog, [475], [476]; execution and sale at his Paris home,
[474], [475], [476]; removes to Queen's Hotel, Norwood, [477]; Is
visited by friends, [477]; writes "Angellne," [477]; some more
of his notes to Vizetelly, [478], [479]; his nervous state,
[479]; learns that Dreyfus is to be retried, [480]; returns to
France, [480]: issues a manifesto, [481] et seq.; remains
at Médan during the Rennes court-martial, [484], [485]; is
horrified by the verdict, [485]; issues "Le Cinquième Acte,"
[485]; refuses to write on the case for foreign journals,
[485], [486]; addresses a letter to Mme. Dreyfus, [486];
publishes "Fécondité," [486]; protests against the Amnesty,
[487] et seq.; renounces proceedings against Judet and
the experts, [488], [489]; his sacrifices for the cause of
Dreyfus, [489], [490]; accepts a medal struck in his honour,
[490] et seq.; turns from destructive to constructive
writing, [493]; his evolution towards Socialism, [494]; remarks
on his "Fécondité," [495]; his "Travail," [496] et seq.;
his libretto for "L'Ouragan," [499]; he begins "Vérité,"
[499]; his difficulties with that work, [500] et seq.; his
disinterestedness, [501]; his religious views, [502], [503]; he
rids himself of fads, [504]; last weeks of his life, [504],
[505]; his death, [505] et seq.; attempts to revive him,
[509]; examination of his remains, [509], [510]; tributes to
and attacks on his memory, [511], [512]; his will, [513]; his
obsequies, [513] et seq.; orations on his literary work,
[516] et seq.; on his rôle in the Dreyfus case, [520] et
seq.; his "Vérité" published, [524]; projected monument in
his honour, [524]; his books sold, [524], [525]; translation of
his remains, [526]; tragic elements in his life, [527], [528];
survival of his memory and his writings, [528] et seq.;
influence of his writings, [530]; his apostolic fervour,
[533]; his prophetic instinct, [534]; his projected volume
"Justice," [535]; his libretto for "L'Enfant Roi," [536]; his
measure of success, [536]; estimate of his career, [538];
declaration of his birth, [541]; of his death, [542]; English
translations of his works, [542] et seq.
Writings of Émile Zola classified:
I. Les Rougon-Macquart, Histoire naturelle d'une Famille
sous le second Empire
The series generally: [30], [108] et seq., [114], [136] et
seq., [154], [167], [168], [207], [305], [320], [322], [323], [344], [348],
[349], [350], [364] et seq., [532]
The volumes are placed below in the order in which they
should be read:
1. "La Fortune des Rougon," [34], [45], [115], [124], [125], [132],
[133], [136], [286], [350], [351], [382]
2. "Son Excellence Eugène Rougon," [151] et seq., [156], [174],
[286], [351], [376], [382]
3. "La Curée," [125], [130], [132] et seq., [136], [286], [352], [382],
[415]
4. "L'Argent," [310], [315], [352]
5. "Le Rêve," [240], [261], [300], [301], [304], [325], [352], [382]
6. "La Conquête de Plassans," [144], [147], [148], [353], [382]
7. "Pot-Bouille," [207], [208], [212], [268], [270], [354], [380]
8. "Au Bonheur des Dames," [212], [213], [214], [215], [355], [415]
9. "La Faute de l'Abbé Mouret," [150], [151], [286], [355], [373],
[376], [382], [410]
10. "Une Page d'Amour," [27], [167] et seq., [170], [356], [373],
[378], [382], [384] 389
11. "Le Ventre de Paris," [141] to [145], [154], [162], [286], [357],
[379], [382]
12. "La Joie de Vivre," [123], [155], [206], [215], [218], [286], [357],
[415]
13. "L'Assommoir," [154] et seq., [171], [198] et seq., [212],
[252], [285], [358], [371], [372], [379], [536], [537]
14. L'Œuvre," [58], [69], [92], [94], [122], [180], [224], [226], [228], [359],
[379]
15. "La Bête Humaine," [305], [306], [314], [325], [360]
16. "Germinal," [220] et seq., [227], [360], [379], [523], [534]
17. "Nana," [45], [171], [185] et seq., [189], [212], [252], [268],
[353], [359], [360], [376], [380], [382]
18. "La Terre," [219], [229] et seq., [238] et seq., [254]
et seq., [261], [268], [339], [361], [379], [380], [381]
19. "La Débâcle," [126], [311], [312], [315] et seq., [362], [376],
[379], [380]
20. "Le Docteur Pascal," [261], [311], [318], [319], [320], [363], [379],
[382] et seq., [405], [406], [415]
II. Les Trois Villes
The series generally: [407], [408], [494]
1. "Lourdes," [311], [318], [327], [407] to [410], [532]
2. "Rome," [376], [407], [408], [410], [411], [413], [414], [416], [532]
3. "Paris," [153], [375], [407], [408], [429], [460], [489], [535]
III. Les Quatre Évangiles
The series generally: [468], [493], [497], [498]
1. "Fécondité," [405], [406], [416], [468], [469], [477], [480], [484],
[486], [489], [490], [495]
2. "Travail," [406], [496] et seq., [534]
3. "Vérité," [416], [498] et seq., [504], [505], [524], [532]
4. "Justice," [504], [535]
IV. Other Novels
"La Confession de Claude," [60] et seq., [68], [70], [73], [76] et
seq., [344]
"Madeleine Férat," [107], [110], [113], [302], [344]
"Les Mystères de Marseille," [101], [102], [126], [344]
"Thérèse Raquin," [102] et seq., [107], [110], [344], [381]
"Le Vœu d'une Morte," [97], [98], [344]
V. Tales
"Angeline," [477]
"Le Capitaine Burle" and other stories, [213], [233], [343]
"Contes à Ninon" and "Nouveaux Contes à Ninon," [33], [45], [49],
[121], [62], [63], [68] et seq., [99], [118], [151], [155], [342], [343]
"Naïs Micoulin" and other stories, [190], [221], [343]
"Nantas," [190], [343]
"Pour une Nuit d'Amour," [343]
"Soirées de Médan" ("L'Attaque du Moulin"), [163], [191] et
seq.
"La Vierge au Cirage," [73]
VI. Plays and Libretti
"L'Assommoir," [171], [177], [224]
"L'Attaque du Moulin," [191], [407]
"Au Bonheur des Dames," adapted by St. Arroman, [501]
"Le Bouton de Rose," [168] et seq., [202], [388]
"Enfoncé le Pion," [36]
"L'Enfant Roi," [536]
"Germinal," [226], [303]
"Les Héritiers Rabourdin," [144], [148], [149]
"Jacques Damour," by Hennique from Zola's tale, [233]
"La Laide," [74]
"La Madeleine," [99], [107], [301], [302]
"Messidor," [430]
"Les Mystères de Marseille," [106], [107]
"Nana," [201] et seq.
"L'Ouragan," [498]
"Pot-Bouille," [219]
"Renée" ("La Curée"), [233]
"Le Rêve," [304]
"La Terre," by St. Arroman and Hugot from Zola's novel, [501]
"Thérèse Raquin," [141], [142], [144]
"Tout pour l'Honneur," by Céard from "Le Capitaine Burle," [233]
VII. Verse
"L'Amoureuse Comédie," [56], [69]
"Genèse," [57], [58], [111]
Various, [43], [45], [49], [51], [55], [56], [57], [58]
VIII. Critical and Political Writings, etc.
"Nos Auteurs dramatiques," [204]
"Une Campagne:1880-1881," [195]
"Nouvelle Campagne: 1896," [416], [417]
"Documents Littéraires," [204]
"Mes Haines" (contains "Mon Salon"), [74], [96]
"Livres d'aujourd'hui et de demain," [83] et seq.
"Le Naturalisme au Théâtre," [204]
"La République et la Littérature," [159], [174]
"Retour de Voyage," [317]
"Le Roman Expérimental," [159], [174], [183], [184], [195], [203]
"Les Romanciers Naturalistes, [204]
"La Vérité en Marche" (Dreyfus case), [6], [9], [434]; the
pamphlets, letters, and articles reproduced in this volume,
as well as others, are quoted or referred to on pages [432],
[434], [435], [438] et seq. (J'accuse), [447], [462], [463], [480] et
seq., [485], [486], [487]
For references to various uncollected newspaper articles
by Zola see Periodical Publications: "La Cloche," "La
Marseillaise," "La Situation," "La Tribune," "La Vie
Parisienne," "Le Corsaire," "L'Événement," "Le Figaro,"
"Le Gaulois," "Le Petit Journal," "Le Rappel," "Le Salut
Public," "Le Sémaphore"
For a list of English translations of his books, see
Appendix
Zola, Emma, Signora Fratta, [6]
—— Francesco, otherwise François, father of Émile, his
birth and early military service, [6]; becomes an engineer,
[7]; his horse railway in Austria, [8]; his travels; his plans
for fortifying Paris, [8], [14] et seq., [24], [25]; serves
in the French Foreign Legion, [8] et seq.; his memory
attacked, [9] et seq., [29], [461], [462], [488]; established at
Marseilles, [13]; some of his schemes there, [13], [14]; plans
the Aix canal, [15], [25] et seq.; his appearance, [15]; his
marriage, [15], [16]; his Paris home, [16] et seq., his death,
[27]; his grave and memory, [28], [29]
Zola, Françoise Émilie, mother of Émile, [15] et seq., [25]
et seq., [29], [32] et seq., [46], [47], [52], [54] et seq., [69],
[123], [126], [128], [154], [195], [210]
Zola, Giovanni Battista, Jesuit, [2], [3]
—— Giuseppe, Abate, [3], [4]
—— Marco, engineer, [5]
—— Name of, [1], [2]
—— Predosa, [2]
Zolas, Brescian and Venetian, [2] et seq., [6]
Zurlinden, General, [474]