[6] The Sun.
[7] Benecke, Woman in Greek Poetry, traces a germ of this romance even in Greek days.
[8] “De la Servitude Volontaire”.
[9] As Whitman in this connection (like Tennyson in connection with In Memoriam) is sure to be accused of morbidity, it may be worth while to insert the following note from In re Walt Whitman, p. 115, “Dr. Drinkard in 1870, when Whitman broke down from rupture of a small blood-vessel in the brain, wrote to a Philadelphia doctor detailing Whitman’s case, and stating that he was a man ‘with the most natural habits, bases, and organisation he had ever seen.’”
Index
INDEX
- Achilles and Patroclus, [45], [68 et seq.], [74], [85]
- Æschylus, on Achilles, [72], [73]
- African Customs, [4], [5], [6], [14]
- Agathon, epigram to, by Plato, [79]
- Agesilaus and Lysander, [17]
- Albania, Customs, [20], [21]
- Alexander the Great and Hephæstion, [188]
- Amis and Amile, story of, [106]
- Anacreon, epigram, [77];
- to Bathyllus, [77]
- Anne, Princess, and Lady Churchill, [146]
- Anselm’s letters to brother Monks, [104];
- to Lanfranc, [104];
- to Gondulph, [105]
- Apollo and Hyacinth, [88]
- Arabia, customs, [12], [109], [119]
- Archidamus and Cleonymus, [17]
- Aristophanes, speech of, [51 et seq.]
- Aristotle quoted, [185]
- Aster, epigrams to, by Plato, [78]
- Athenæus quoted, [25], [28], [74], [147]
- Augustine, Saint, his friend, [99 et seq.]
- Bacon, Francis, quoted, [137]
- Bagdad Dervish, story of, [116];
- another story, [177]
- Balonda, ceremonies among, [4]
- Banyai, customs among the, [14]
- Barnfield, Richard, “The Affectionate Shepheard,” [133];
- Sonnets, [134 et seq.]
- Baylis, J. W., quoted, [36], [90]
- Beaconsfield, Lord, on boy-friendships, [168]
- Beaumont and Fletcher, [191 et seq.]
- Bengali coolies, [7]
- Benecke, E. F. M., quoted, [68], [97]
- Bernard, Saint, [103]
- Bion quoted, [86]
- Blood, mutual tasting of, [5]
- Browne, Sir Thomas, “Religio Medici” quoted, [144]
- Browning, Robert, poem by, [174]
- Bruno, Giordano, quoted, [130]
- Buckingham, J. S., Travels in Assyria, &c., [115 et seq.]
- Butler, Lady E., and Miss Ponsonby, [161], [162]
- Byron, letter to Miss Pigot, [160];
- friendship with Eddleston, [161];
- paraphrase of story of Nisus and Euryalus, [163];
- comments by T. Moore, [164];
- story of Calmar and Orla, [217]
- Callias and Autolycus, [59]
- Calmar and Orla, [217]
- Carlyle, T., on Fritz of Prussia and von Katte, [205]
- Catullus, [89];
- to Quintius, [92];
- to Juventius, [92];
- to Licinius, [93]
- Chæronæa, battle of, [22], [23], [68]
- Chariton and Melanippus, [15];
- story of, [29]
- Chivalry, customs of, in Arabia and Africa, [11], [12], [14]
- Chivalry, mediæval, compared with Greek friendship, [15], [45], [47]
- Christian influences, [97 et seq.]
- Christian and Greek Ideals compared, [98]
- Cleomachus, story of, [27]
- Comrade-attachment, institution in the early world, [1 et seq.], [41], [46], [177, &c.];
- essential part of Greek civilisation, [41], [42 et seq.], [208], [209];
- romance of, [42], [46], [47], [52], [53], [56-60], [68 et seq.];
- heroic quality, [11], [12], [13], [16], [21-25], [28], [31-37], [50], [51, &c.];
- Educational value, [16-21], [46], [49], [74], [210], [211];
- relation to chivalry, [11-16], [45], [47], [97];
- relation to Politics, [42], [46], [49], [50], [99], [147], [211], [212];
- relation to Philosophy, [30], [47-63];
- relation to the Divine Love, [48], [54-59], [63], [130], [132], [133], [145]
- Cratinus and Aristodemus, [15]
- Crete, customs, [17]
- Damon and Pythias, [8];
- story of, [36]
- Dante quoted, [69]
- David and Jonathan, [6], [7], [15], [108]
- Democratic Vistas quoted, [178]
- Dickinson, G. L., quoted, [45], [75]
- Diocles, tomb honoured by lovers, [20], [82]
- Diocles and Philolaus, [15], [19]
- Diomedes and Sthenelus, [45]
- Diotima the prophetess, [53], [129]
- Don Karlos and the Marquis of Posa, [199 et seq.]
- Dorian customs, [16 et seq.]
- Eastern countries and poets, [109]
- Eighteenth Century, influence of, [147]
- Emerson, R. W., essay on friendship, [175]
- Epaminondas, [28], [29];
- and Pelopidas, [185]
- Epigrams, Greek Anthology, [80];
- of Plato, [78], [79]
- Epitaph, Greek Anthology, [80]
- Exchange of gifts, [5], [6], [7], [18], [36];
- of names, [5], [6];
- of flowers, [7]
- Fitzgerald, Edward, friendship for Tennyson, Thackeray and others, [222];
- devotion to Fletcher, or ‘Posh,’ the sailor, [223], [224]
- Fletcher, John, lament for Francis Beaumont, [194]
- Flower Friends, [7]
- Fraunce, Abraham, translation of Virgil, [91]
- Frederick the Great, his friendship with von Katte, [204 et seq.];
- poems by, [207]
- Frey, Ludwig, quoted, [45], [149]
- Gamameda or Ganymede, [220]
- Ganymede, [57], [82]
- Germans, primitive, [11], [13]
- Germany, modern, [147 et seq.]
- Goethe, on Winckelmann and Greek friendships, [149];
- poem by, [150]
- Greek friendship compared with mediæval chivalry, [15], [45], [47]
- Hæckel, Ernst, and his Rodiya boy in Ceylon, [219 et seq.]
- Hafiz quoted, [113], [190]
- Hallam, Arthur, and Tennyson, [169 et seq.]
- Harmodius and Aristogeiton, [15], [28];
- story of, [32]
- Hazlitt, Wm., Life of Montaigne quoted, [124]
- Hephæstion, favorite of Alexander the Great, [188]
- Hercules and Ioläus, [23], [25], [44]
- Herder on Greek friendship, [208], [209]
- Hermaphrodites, [52]
- Homer’s Iliad, motive of, [68-72]
- Hyacinth, favorite of Apollo, [87];
- story of, [88]
- Idomeneus and Meriones, [45]
- “In Memoriam,” Tennyson’s, reviled by the “Times,” [169];
- quoted, [170 et seq.]
- Ioläus, [23], [25], [44]
- Jalal-ud-din Rumi, [109], [110], [111]
- Jealousy in friendship, [9]
- Kasendi, an African ceremony, [5]
- Khalifa at Khartoum, [12]
- Kitir, Joseph, verses by, [213]
- Lacedæmonians, customs among, [25]
- Ladies, the, of Llangollen, [161], [162]
- “Leaves of Grass” quoted, [179-181]
- Leigh Hunt on school-friendships, [166], [167]
- Lover answerable for his friend, [18];
- disgraceful for a youth not to have a lover, [ibid]
- Lovers invincible in battle, [11], [12], [13], [23], [24], [28]
- Lucian quoted, [35]
- Ludwig of Bavaria and R. Wagner, [153 et seq.];
- letters to Wagner, [214 et seq.]
- Macaulay’s History of England quoted, [145], [146]
- Maid’s Tragedy quoted, [195]
- Manganjas, ceremonies among, [5]
- Mania, divine, [54]
- Marquesas Islands, [9]
- Martial’s epigrams quoted, [94]
- Maximus Tyrius quoted, [129]
- “May and Death,” poem by Browning, [174]
- Melantius and Amintor, [195]
- Meleager, verses by, [79]
- Melville, Herman, quoted, [8 et seq.]
- Michel Angelo, Sonnets, [129];
- quoted, [131 et seq.]
- Military Comradeship, [11 et seq.]
- Monastic life, friendship in, [97], [103 et seq.]
- Montaigne and Stephen de la Boëtie, [123 et seq.];
- on marriage, [125]
- Montalembert quoted, [103 et seq.]
- Moore, T., on Byron’s friendships, [164]
- Moschus, lament for Bion, [86]
- Mulamirin, or bodyguard of Khalifa, [13]
- Müller, History and Antiquities of the Doric Race, [16 et seq.]
- Niobe, the sons of, [26], [27]
- Orestes and Pylades, [15], [44];
- story of, [35]
- Parmenides and Zeno, [30]
- Patroclus and Achilles, [45], [68], [74], [85]
- Penn, William, quoted, [145]
- Persia, customs, [109], [119]
- Persian Poetry, [110 et seq.], [189], [190]
- Phædo, story of, [31]
- Phædrus of Plato, [47], [49], [55]
- Pheidias and Pantarkes, [30]
- Philip of Macedon and the Theban Band, [23]
- Pindar to Theoxenos, [78];
- see also [153]
- Platen, Count August von, [151];
- sonnets to his friend Karl Theodor German, [151], [152];
- sonnet on death of Pindar, [153]
- Plato quoted, [16], [48 et seq.], [72], [73];
- epigrams, [78]
- Plutarch quoted, [22], [26], [27], [61 et seq.];
- referred to, [123]
- Polemon and Krates, [187]
- Polynesian Apollo, [9]
- Polynesian customs, [8 et seq.]
- ‘Posh’ and Edward Fitzgerald, [223], [224]
- Potter, Archbishop, quoted, [147]
- Raffalovich quoted, [151]
- Reminiscence, true love a, [55-59]
- Renaissance, influence of, [99], [123]
- Rückert, verses to his friend, Joseph Kopp, [21]
- Saadi quoted, [113], [189], [190]
- Sacred Band, see Theban Band
- Sacredness of friendship in the early world, [10], [37], [45]
- Sappho, [75];
- to Lesbia, [76]
- Schiller quoted, [198 et seq.]
- School-friendships, [165 et seq.]
- Sentiment of Comradeship, influenced by Christianity, [97 et seq.];
- by the Renaissance, [99], [123];
- its place in the monastic life, [97], [103 et seq.];
- in modern Democracy, [178], [211]
- Shakespeare, [128], [138], [152];
- sonnets quoted, [139 et seq.];
- Merchant of Venice, [142];
- Henry V., [143]
- Shelley, Adonais, [86];
- essay on friendship, [165]
- Sidney, Philip, friendship with Fulke Greville, [127];
- with Hubert Languet, [127], [128]
- Sininyane and Moshoshoma, [5], [6]
- Socrates, his views, [47];
- quoted, [53 et seq.], [58], [59], [75]
- Socrates and Phædo, [31]
- Sophocles, his tragedy of Niobe, [74]
- Sparta, customs, [16]
- Suleyman the Magnificent and Ibrahim, [114]
- Symonds, J. A., quoted, [15], [20], [31], [47], [68], [79]
- Symposium of Plato, [48 et seq.];
- speech of Phædrus, [49];
- of Pausanias, [51];
- of Aristophanes, [52];
- of Socrates, [53], [54];
- also [72]
- Symposium of Xenophon, [59-61]
- Tacitus, Germania, [11]
- Tahiti, customs in, [8]
- Tennyson, Alfred, and his friend Hallam, [169];
- “In Memoriam” quoted, [170 et seq.]
- Theban Band, account of, [21 et seq.];
- also 28, [68], [211]
- Theocritus, Idyll xii., [80 et seq.];
- Idyll xxix., [83]
- Theognis and Kurnus, [74], [75]
- Theseus and Pirithöus, [15], [44], [85]
- Thirlwall, Bishop, quoted, [44]
- Thoreau, H. D., quoted, [175-6]
- Thucydides quoted, [32]
- Ulrichs, K. H., [157];
- verses quoted, [159]
- Valerius Maximus quoted, [37]
- Vauvenargues and De Seytres, [196], [197]
- Virgil, 2nd Eclogue, [90];
- imitated, [133]
- Vision, the divine, [55], [56], [58]
- Von Katte, his execution, [205]
- Von Kupffer, Anthology quoted, [189], [190], [210], [211]
- Wagner, Richard, friendship with Ludwig II., [153];
- letters, [154], [155];
- on Greek comradeship, [156]
- Whitman, Walt, his “love of comrades,” [177];
- Democratic Vistas quoted, [178];
- Leaves of Grass quoted, [179-181]
- William of Orange and Bentinck, [145]
- Winckelmann, [148];
- his letters, [148];
- Goethe on, [149]
The End.
Printed by S. Clarke,
41, Granby Row, Manchester