Rehan, Ada, [131]

Reid, Sir Wemyss, [185]

‘Relapse, The,’ [259]

Relative humour: see Humour, absolute and relative

Religion, Renascence of Wonder in, [375]; poetic, [455]

‘Reminiscence of Open-Air Plays,’ Epilogue, [133]

Renascence, decorative, connection with pre-Raphaelite movement, [16]

Renascence, Jewish-Arabian, connection with instinct of wonder, [14]

Renascence of religion, [22]

Renascence of Wonder, exemplified in ‘Aylwin,’ [2]; origin of phrase, [11]; meaning of phrase, [13], [17], [374]; Garnett on, [11], French Revolution, cause of, [13]; pre-Raphaelite movement, connection with, [16]; Watts-Dunton’s article on, [20], [25]; in Philistia, [327], [328]; in religion, [22], [375]; ‘Coming of Love, The,’ the most powerful expression of, [25]; Watts-Dunton’s Treatise on Poetry, [257]; ‘Aylwin,’ passages on, [446]; foreign critics on, [374]; [9], [325]