[23] James's house was number 95, his mother-in-law's number 107.

[24] Augusta was the house-maid; Dinah, a bull-terrier.

[25] It will be recalled that Davidson had a summer School of Philosophy at his place called Glenmore on East Hill, and that East Hill is at one end of Keene Valley. See also James's essay on Thomas Davidson, "A Knight Errant of the Intellectual Life," in Memories and Studies.

[26] A gift which provided for building the "Harvard Union."

[27] "You have never spent a night under our roof, or eaten a meal in our house!" This fictitious charge had become the recognized theme of frequent elaborations.

[28] The World and the Individual, vol. I. Mrs. Evans was inclined to contend for Royce's philosophy.

[29] The name of an American claret which his correspondent had "discovered" and in which it also pleased James to find merit.

[30] The second volume of The World and the Individual. (Gifford Lectures at the University of Aberdeen.)

[31] Interpretations of Poetry and Religion. New York, 1900.

[32] Memoiren einer Idealistin, by Malwida von Meysenbug, Stuttgart, 1877.