Sufism, [449]; in ‘Aylwin,’ [454]
‘Suicide Club, The,’ [220]
Sully, Professor, contributor to ‘Examiner,’ [184]
Sunrise, Poet of the, [398]
Sunsets, in the Fens, [62]
Surtees, [367]
Swallow Falls, [315]
Swift, his humour the opposite of Sterne’s, [250]
Swinburne, Algernon Charles, acquaintance with J. O. Watts, [58]; intercourse and friendship with Watts-Dunton, [89], [268]–74; ‘Jubilee Greeting’ dedicated to, [273]; partly identified with Percy Aylwin, see description of his swimming, [268]; [279]–84; at Théâtre Française, [124]; dedications to Watts-Dunton, [271], [272]; offensive newspaper caricatures of, [263]; championship of Meredith, [284]; on ‘Tom Jones,’ ‘Waverley,’ ‘Aylwin,’ [346]; on ‘Aylwin,’ [363]; references to, [1], [12], [27], [117], [123], [139], [147], [157], [170], [180], [181], [184], [328], [413]; Anecdotes of:—chambers in Great James St., [89]; never a playgoer, [117]; life at ‘The Pines,’ [262] et seq.; the great Swinburne myth, [263]; the American lady journalist, [264]; an imaginary interview, [265]; an unlovely bard; painfully ‘afflated’; method of composition; ‘stamping with both feet,’ [265]; friendship with Watts began in 1872, [268]; inseparable since; housemates at ‘The Pines’; visit to Channel Islands; swimming in Petit Bot Bay, [268]; Sark; ‘Orion’ Horne’s bravado challenge, [269]; visits Paris for Jubilee of ‘Le Roi s’Amuse,’ [269]; swimming at Sidestrand; meets Grant Allen, [269]; visits Eastbourne, Lancing, Isle of Wight, Cromer, [270]; visits to Jowett; Jowett’s admiration of Watts, [279]; Balliol dinner parties, [280]; at the Bodleian, [282]; great novels which are popular, [273]
Swinburne, Miss, [299]