Richter, Jean Paul, 1, 141.
Rindge, Frederick H., 1, 330, 2, [39].
Rio de Janeiro, 1, 58 ff.
Risks, choice of, 2, [49], [50].
Ritter, Charles, 1, 23, 2, [25], [55].
Robertson, Alexander, 1, 8, 9.
Robertson, G. Croom, editor of Mind, 1, 222, 254.
See Contents.
Robeson, Andrew R., 1, 33.
Romanism and Anglicanism, 2, [305].
Romanticism, 1, 256.
Rome, Philosophical Congress at, 2, [225] ff., 228;
mentioned, 1, 178, 180, 2, [138], [139], [269].
Roosevelt, Theodore, as possible President of Harvard, 2, [232] and n.;
mentioned, 94, 266.
Ropes, John C., death of, 2, [108], [109];
mentioned, 1, 35, 2, [10], [156].
Rosmini-Serbati, Antonio, 1, 295.
Rousseau, Jean-Jacques, 1, 142.
Royce, Josiah, early life, 1, 200, 201;
quoted, on his first acquaintance with J., 200, 201;
brought to Harvard through J.'s influence, 201;
his Religious Aspect of Philosophy, 239, 242, 265;
"a perfect little Socrates," 249;
made professor, 332;
and J., as teachers, compared by Miller, 2, [16];
"the Rubens of philosophy," 86;
The World and the Individual, 113 and n., 114, 116, 121 and n.;
his system, 114;
a sketcher in philosophy, 114, 116;
mentioned, 1, 238, 239, 255, 262, 280, 291, 318, 347, 2, [18], [122], [143], [216], [234], [321], [322].
See Contents.
Ruskin, John, his letters to C. E. Norton, 2, [206], [207];
characterized by J., 206;
Modern Painters, 206;
mentioned, 1, 220, 2, [306].
Rye (England), 2, [104].
And see Lamb House.
Sabatier, Paul, 2, [142].
St. Gaudens, Augustus, his monument to R. G. Shaw unveiled, 2, [59]-61.
St. Louis, hurricane at, 2, [35], [36].
St. Louis Exposition (1904), 2, [216].
Sainte-Beuve, C. A., 1, 142.
Salisbury, Robert Cecil, Marquis of, 2, [27].
Salter, C. C., 1, 51.
Salter, W. M., 1, 248, 346, 2, [97].
See Contents.
Salter, Mrs. W. M. (Mary Gibbens), 1, 248.
San Francisco, earthquake at, 2, [246] ff., 251, 256;
mentioned, 80, 81.
Sanctis, Professor di, 2, [225].
Sand, George, and A. de Musset, 2, [63];
mentioned, 1, 106, 182, 183.
Santayana, George, Interpretations of Poetry and Religion, 2, [122]-124;
Life of Reason, 234, 235;
mentioned, 1, 335, 2, [14], [121], [225].
See Contents.
Sardou, Victorien, Agnes, 1, 168.
Sargent, Epes, Planchette, reviewed by J., 1, 225 n.
Sargent, John S., 1, 303.
Saturday Club, Early Years of the. See Emerson, Edward W.
Saxons, the, 1, 86.
Scenery, part played by, in J.'s spiritual experience, 2, [174], [175].
Schelling, Friedrich W. J. von, 1, 14.
Schiller, F. C. S., his article on J. in Mind, 2, [65], [66];
Studies in Humanism, 270;
mentioned, 172, 186 n., 208, 230, 257, 267, 296, 300, 311, 313, 314, 337.
See Contents.
Schiller, J. C. Friedrich von, 1, 91, 141, 202.
Schinz, Herr, 2, [337].
Schlegel, August W. von, 1, 141.
Schlegel, Karl W. F. von, 1, 141.
Schmidt, Heinrich J., History of German Literature, 1, 141.
Schopenhauer, Arthur, 1, 191, 2, [293].
Schott, Dr. (Nauheim), 2, [124], [128], [134], [157].
Schurman, Jacob G., 1, 334, 2, [166].
Scotland, J. strongly attracted by, 1, 286.
Scott, Sir Walter, his Journal, 1, 309.
Scripture, Edward W., 1, 334.
Scudder, Samuel H., 1, 31.
Sea, J.'s views of traveling by, 1, 58.
Seals, trained, 1, 278.
Sécretan, Charles, 1, 324.
Sedgwick, Arthur G., 1, 320 and n., 2, [10].
Sedgwick, Lucy (Mrs. Arthur G.), 1, 320 and n.
Sedgwick, Sara, 1, 76 and n.
And see Darwin, Mrs. W. E.
Sedgwick, Theodora, 1, 181, 291, 315, 317, 328, 331, 2, [151], [152], [191], [200], [207], [308].
See Contents.
Selberg, "a swell young Jew," 1, 112, 114, 115.
Semler, Dr., 1, 87.
Seth, Andrew, 2, [96], [116], [144].
And see Pringle-Pattison, A. S.
Seth, James, 2, [144].
Shakespeare:
H. Grimm on Hamlet, 1, 111;
As You Like It, 144 n., 190;
at Stratford, 2, [166];
mentioned, 330, 335, 336.
Shaler, Nathaniel S., quoted, on J. Wyman, 1, 48;
The Individual, 2, [153] and n., 154;
Autobiography, 325;
mentioned, 1, 31, 2, [258], [288].
See Contents.
Shaw, G. Bernard, Cæsar and Cleopatra, 2, [263];
mentioned, 330.
Shaw, Robert G., unveiling of St. Gaudens's monument to, 2, [59]-61;
mentioned, 1, 43.
Sherman, William T., 1, 56, 57.
Sidgwick, Henry, "Lecture against Lecturing," 2, [12];
death of, 141;
mentioned, 1, 229 n., 287, 290, 345, 2, [50], [156].
Slattery, Charles L. See Contents.
Smith, Adam, 1, 283.
Smith, Norman K. See Contents.
Smith, Paulina C., 2, [106].
Smith, Pearsall, 1, 287.
Snow, William F., quoted, on J. and the San Francisco earthquake, 2, [247] n.
Snow, Mrs. W. F., 2, [246].
Society for Psychical Research. See Psychical Research, Society for.
Solomons, Leon M., death of, 2, [119];
his character and work, 119, 120.
Sorbonne, the, J. declines appointment as exchange professor at, 2, [236] and n.
Sorrento, to Amalfi, 2, [221], [222].
Spain, misrule of, in Cuba, 2, [73].
Spanish War, the, 2, [73], [74].
Spannenberg, Frau, 1, 85.
Spectator, The, 2, [126].
Spelling reform, J.'s attitude toward, 2, [18], [19].
Spencer, Herbert, Psychology, 1, 188;
Data of Ethics, 264;
mentioned, 143, 164, 191, 254.
Spinoza, Baruch, 1, 283, 2, [13].
Spirit-theory, the. See Psychic phenomena.
Spiritualism. See Psychic phenomena.
Spiritualists, and the Medical License bill, 2, [68].
Springfield Republican, 2, [125].
Stanford, Leland, 2, [242], [244].
Stanford, Mrs. Leland, 1, 242, 244.
Stanford, Leland, Jr.,1, 243.
Stanford University, J.'s lectures at, 2, [235], [240], [244] and n.;
a miracle, 241;
its history, 242, 243;
what it might be made, 243, 244.
Stanley, Sir Henry M., 1, 303.
Stanley, Lady, 1, 303.
Starbuck, E. D., Psychology of Religion, 2, [217].
See Contents.
Stead, W. T., 2, [276], [277].
Steffens, Heinrich, 1, 141.
Stephen. Sir James Fitz-James, "Essay on Spirit-Rapping," 1, 34 n.
Stephen, Sir Leslie, Utilitarians, 2, [152];
his letters, 176.
Steuben, Baron von, 1, 5.
Storey, Moorfield, 1, 109, 2, [10].
See Contents.
Stout, G. F., 2, [47], [65].
Strasburg, 1, 86, 87.
Stratford-on-Avon, and the Baconian theory, 2, [166].
Strong, Charles A., 2, [198], [225], [229], [230],
282, 295, 301, 309, 310, 315, 337.
See Contents.
Stumpf, Carl, Tonpsychologie, 1, 266, 267;
mentioned, 211, 212, 213, 216, 289.
See Contents.
Sturgis, James, 1, 184.
Style in philosophic writing, 2, [217], [228], [229], [237], [244], [245], [257], [272], [281], [300].
Subjectivism, tendency to, 1, 249.
Subliminal, Problem of the, 2, [141], [149], [150], [212].
Success, worship of, 2, [260].
Sully, James, 2, [1] n., 225, 226, 218.
See Contents.
"Supernatural" matters. See Psychic phenomena.
Suttner, Baroness von, Waffennieder, 2, [340].
Swedenborg, Emmanuel, influence of his works on H. James, Senior, 1, 12, 13, 14;
Society of the Redeemed Form of Man, quoted, 12 and n.;
H. James, Senior's, essay on, 117;
mentioned, 2, [40].
Switzerland, 1, 322, 323, 327, 328, 336.
Sylvain, Mlle., 2, [224].
Sylvain, M., 2, [224].
Tappan, Mary, 2, [200].
See Contents.
Tappan, Mrs., 1, 118.
Taylor, A. E., 2, [208], [216], [281], [282].
Temple, Ellen, 1, 38, 39, 51, 2, [61], [81].
And see Emmet, Mrs. Temple.
Temple, Henrietta, 1, 39.
Temple, Katharine, J.'s portrait of, 1, 24;
mentioned, 36, 51, 74, 75.
See Contents.
Temple, "Minny," the original of two of Henry James's heroines, 1, 36;
J. quoted on, 36, 37;
her "madness," 38;
mentioned, 43, 51, 74, 75, 98.
Temple, Mrs. Robert (J.'s aunt), 1, 36.
Tennyson, Alfred, Lord, 2, [276].
Teplitz, 1, 133, 134, 137.
Thames, the, 1, 287.
Thatness. See Whatness.
Thaw, Henry, trial of, 2, [264].
Thayer, Abbott, 2, [276].
Thayer, Gerald, 2, [275], [276].
Thayer, Joseph Henry, 1, 323.
Thayer, Miriam, 1, 323.
Thayer Expedition. See Brazil, Agassiz's expedition to.
Thies, Louis, 1, 107, 112, 157.
Thies, Miss, 1, 116.
Thompson, Daniel G., 1, 295.
Tieck, Ludwig, 1, 141.
Tolstoy, Leo, War and Peace, 2, [37], [40], [48];
and P. Bourget, 37, 38;
Anna Karenina, 41, 48;
and H. G. Wells, 316;
mentioned, 44, 45, 51, 52, 63.
Torquay, 2, [167].
Townsend, Henry E., 1, 122.
Truth, the, obscured by American philosophers, 2, [237], [272], [337].
Tuck, Henry, 1, 122, 124.
Tuckerman, Emily, 2, [168].
Turgenieff, Ivan, 1, 177, 182, 185.
Twain, Mark, 1, 333, 341, 342, 2, [264].
Tweedie, Mrs. Edmund, 1, 36.
Tweedies, the, 1, 117, 184.
Tychism, 2, [204], [292].
Tychistic and pluralistic philosophy of pure experience, 2, [187].
Union College, H. James, Senior, graduates at, 1, 8.
Unitarian Review, Davidson's article in, 1, 236.
Unitarianism (Boston), the "bloodless pallor" of, 1, 236.
United States, J.'s remarks on, 1, 216, 217;
and the Philippines, 2, [140], [141];
rushing to wallow in the mire of empire, 141;
manner of eating boiled eggs in, 188;
vocalization of people of, 189;
and England, 304, 305.
Upham, Miss, 1, 34, 50.
Uphues, 1, 345, 346.
Van Buren, "Elly," 1, 70, 74, 75.
Van Rensselaer, Stephen, 1, 3.
Venezuela Message, Cleveland's, 2, [26] ff.
Venus de Milo, 1, 113.
Verne, Jules, Tour of the World in Eighty Days, 1, 173.
Veronese, Paul, 1, 90.
Verrall, Mrs. A. W. See Mediums.
Vers-chez-les-Blanc, 1, 320, 345, 2, [48].
Victor Emmanuel III, King of Italy, 2, [227].
Victoria, Queen, her Jubilee, 1, 270.
Vienna, exhibition of French paintings at, 1, 210.
Villari, Pasquale, 1, 338, 339, 342.
Villari, Mrs., 1, 338, 339, 342.
Vincent, George E., 2, [41], [42].
Virchow, Rudolf, 1, 72.
Vischer, F. T., Essays, 1, 94;
Aesthetik, 94.
Viti, Signor da, 2, [227].
Vivekananda, 2, [144].
Voltaire, 1, 144 n.
Vulpian, A., 1, 156.
Walcott, Henry P., 1, 347, 2, [10].
Waldstein, Charles, 1, 274, 2, [224].
See Contents.
Walsh, Catherine (J.'s 'Aunt Kate'), 1, 41, 51, 60, 61, 70, 80, 81, 114, 118, 183, 218, 259, 280, 282, 285.
Walsh, Hugh, 1, 8.
Walsh, Rev. Hugh, 1, 8 n.
Walsh, James (J.'s maternal grandfather), 1, 8.
Walsh, Mary, marries H. James, Senior, 1, 8;
her ancestry, 8, 9.
And see James, Mrs. William.
Walsh, Mrs. Mary (Robertson), 1, 8.
Walston, Sir Charles. See Waldstein, Charles.
Wambaugh, Eugene, 2, [132].
Ward, James, 2, [312], [313], [314], [315].
Ward, Samuel, 1, 73.
Ward, Thomas W., on the Brazilian expedition, 1, 59, 60, 65;
mentioned, 33.
See Contents.
Ward, Dorothy, 2, [166].
Ware, William R., 1, 124, 153.
Waring, Daisy, 2, [202].
Waring, George E., quoted, on Henry James, 1, 184, 185.
Warner, Joseph B., 2, [160], [233].
Warren, W. R., 2, [233].
Washington, Booker T., Up from Slavery, 2, [148];
mentioned, 60, 61.
Washington, Mrs. Booker T., at Ashfield, 2, [199].
Washington, George, 1, 5, 277.
Washington, State of, forest fires in, 2, [80].
Wells, H. G., Utopia, 2, [230], [231];
Anticipations, 231;
Mankind in the Making, 231;
J.'s appreciation of, 231;
Kipps, 241;
"Two Studies in Disappointment," 259, 260;
First and Last Things, 316;
the Tolstoy of the English World, 316;
mentioned, 246, 257, 318.
See Contents.
Werner, G., 2, [242].
Whatness and thatness, 1, 244, 245.
"White man's burden," cant about the, 2, [88].
Whitman, Henry, death of, 2, [156];
mentioned, 1, 298, 302.
Whitman, Sarah (Mrs. Henry), her character and accomplishments, 1, 302, 2, [205], [206];
last illness and death, 204, 205, 207;
mentioned, 1, 309 n., 348, 2, [156], [256].
See Contents.
Whitman, Walt, 2, [123].
Whole, Idolatry of the, 1, 246, 247.
Wilkinson, Emma. See Pertz, Mrs. Emma.
Wilkinson, J. J. Garth, 1, 135 n.
William II of Germany, his message to Kruger, 2, [27], [28].
Wilmarth, Mrs., 2, [50].
Witmer, Lightner, 2, [320].
Wolff, Christian, 1, 264.
Woodberry, George E., The Heart of Man. 2, [89], [90].
Woodbridge, F. J. E., Journal, 2, [244].
See Contents.
Worcester, Elwood, The Living World, 2, [318].
Wordsworth, W., The Excursion, 1, 168, 169.
Wright, Chauncy, and J., 1, 152 n.;
mentioned, 2, [233].
Wundt, Wilhelm M., as a type of the German professor, 1, 263;
his System, 333;
mentioned, 119, 215, 216, 224, 264, 295, 2, [321].
Wyman, Jeffries, influence as a teacher, 1, 47;
C. W. Eliot and N. S. Shaler quoted on, 47, 48;
J. quoted on, 48, 49;
mentioned, 35, 37, 50, 71, 72, 150, 155, 160, 163, 170.
Yale University, 1, 231.
Yankees, a German lady's idea of, 1, 89, 90.
Yoga practices, 2, [252] ff.
Yosemite Valley, 2, [81].
Zennig's restaurant (Berlin), 1, 112, 113.
Zion's Herald, Emerson number of, 2, [197].
Zola, Émile, Germinal, 1, 287;
mentioned, 2, [67], [73].

McGrath-Sherrill Press
GRAPHIC ARTS BLDG.
BOSTON

The following typographical errors have been corrected by the etext transcriber:
mutally encouraging=>mutually encouraging
Malvida von Meysenbug, Stuttgart, 1877=>Malwida von Meysenbug, Stuttgart, 1877
Meysenbug, Malvida von, Memoiren einer Idealistin=>Meysenbug, Malwida von, Memoiren einer Idealistin
Rome eems to beat=>Rome seems to beat
Qu'on est bien dans çe fauteuil=>Qu'on est bien dans ce fauteuil

FOOTNOTES:

[1] "It seems to me that psychology is like physics before Galileo's time—not a single elementary law yet caught a glimpse of. A great chance for some future psychologue to make a greater name than Newton's; but who then will read the books of this generation? Not many, I trow. Meanwhile they must be written." To James Sully, July 8, 1890.

[2] President Eliot, in a memorandum already referred to (vol. 1, p. 32, note), calls attention to these courses and remarks: "These frequent changes were highly characteristic of James's whole career as a teacher. He changed topics, textbooks and methods frequently, thus utilizing his own wide range of reading and interest and his own progress in philosophy, and experimenting from year to year on the mutual contacts and relations with his students." James continued to be titular Professor of Psychology until 1897, just as he had been nominally Assistant Professor of Physiology for several years during which the original and important part of his teaching was psychological. His title never indicated exactly what he was teaching.

[3] At this meeting he delivered a presidential address "On the Knowing of Things Together," a part of which is reprinted in The Meaning of Truth, p. 43, under the title, "The Tigers in India." Vide, also, Collected Essays and Reviews.

[4] In a brief letter to the Harvard Crimson (Jan. 9, 1896), James urged the right and duty of individuals to stand up for their opinions publicly during such crises, even though in opposition to the administration. Mr. Rhodes, in his History of the United States, 1877-1896, makes the following observation: "Cleveland, in his chapter on the 'Venezuelan Boundary Controversy,' rates the un-Americans who lauded 'the extreme forbearance and kindness of England.' ... The reference ... need trouble no one who allows himself to be guided by two of Cleveland's trusted servants and friends. Thomas F. Bayard, Secretary of State during the first administration, and actual ambassador to Great Britain, wrote in a private letter on May 25, 1895, 'There is no question now open between the United States and Great Britain that needs any but frank, amicable and just treatment.' Edward J. Phelps, his first minister to England, in a public address on March 30, 1896, condemned emphatically the President's Venezuela policy." See Rhodes, History, vol. VIII, p. 454; also p. 443 et seq.

[5] "The Evolution of the Summer Resort."

[6] "Address of the President before the Society for Psychical Research." Proc. of the (Eng.) Soc. for Psych. Res. 1896, vol. XII, pp. 2-10; also in Science, 1896, N. S., vol. IV, pp. 881-888.