world, man shall put it there; that even if all evolution be necessarily truncated, yet moral evolution, so long as our race lasts, there shall be; that even if man's virtue be momentary, he shall act as though it were an eternal gain." It was an inspiring message that the finer spirits of the French Revolution bequeathed as a legacy to the nineteenth century; is not the message equally inspiring which the one great poet left living at the close of the nineteenth century has brought to the twentieth as a gift? That message is again illustrated, and if possible even more impressively, in the poem entitled "Super Flumina Babylonis.” "Unto each man his handiwork, unto each his crown, The just Fate gives; Whoso takes the world's life on him and his own lays down, He, dying so, lives. "Whoso bears the whole heaviness of the wronged world's weight And puts it by, It is well with him suffering, though he face man's fate; "Seeing death has no part in him any more, no power He has bought his eternity with a little hour, "For an hour, if ye look for him, he is no more found, Then ye lift up your eyes to him and behold him crowned, A deathless face. "On the mountains of memory, by the world's well-springs, In all men's eyes, Where the light of the life of him is on all past things, Beers, H. A., 2. Beethoven, L. van, 50. Blackwood's Magazine, 24. Brandes, G., 81, 107-9, 207. Bruno, G., 112, 113. Byron, G. G., 13, 25, 35, 59, Caine, H., 84. Campbell, J. D., 126. Carlyle, T., 72, 73, 80, 93, 114, Carman, B., 282. Chamisso, A. v., 70. Castelar, E., 49. Chapman, G., 43, 380. Chartism, 193, 342. Classicism, 179. manticism.) Chaucer, 322-4, 326-7. (See Ro- Coleridge, S. T., 35, 37, 55, 87, 96-127, 131, 142, 176, 199. Convention of Cintra, 146, Dante, 46, 49, 203, 301-6. Dickens, C., 186. Eastern Question Association, Edinburgh Review, 24. Emerson, R. W., 210, 288, 376. Evolution, 2, 211-6, 239-43. Fichte, J. G., 111. Fitz Gerald, E., 236. Forman, H. B., 31, 272, 299, Fox, C. J., 36, 173. Galton, A., 271. Gates, L. E., 275, 281. German literature, 114. Goethe, 10, 29, 46, 69, 73, 74, 83, 105, 115, 143, 117, 189, Greek Revolution, 51, 91, 92, Hugo, V., 57, 70, 75, 373. Huxley, T. H., 214. Ibsen, H., 80, 106, 335, 340. Immermann, K., 70. Italy, 161-2, 370-1. Jackson, A., 174. Kant, I., 35, 55, 111, 112, 115, Keats, J., 1-32, 35, 55, 61, 87, Kingsley, C., 342. Lamartine, A. de, 70. Landor, W. S., 3, 13, 38, 91-2, Leopardi, G., 80. Mackail, J. W., 324, 332-3, Madison, J., 173. Magnusson, E., 332. Mallock, W. H., 5. Martineau, J., 238. Masson, D., 17. Maurice, F. D., 342. Mazzini, G., 69, 72, 93, 171, Mickiewicz, A., 69. Mill, J. S., 5, 112, 116, 124-5. Quarterly Review, 24. Republicanism, 173-5, 371-3. Romanticism, 1, 178. Rousseau, J. J., 37, 75, 76, 77, Royce, J., 200. Ruskin, J., 253, 287, 339-40. Sagas, 332. Sainte-Beuve, C. A., 76. Sharp, W., 317, 335. Shelley, P. B., 6, 13, 28, 33-63, Shorey, P., 239, 247. Sidney, P., 5. Singleton, A., 29. Smith, G., 207. Southey, R., 4, 37, 98, 104, 142, Spain, 145, 165. Spencer, H., 212. Spinoza, B., 235, 259, 376. Stedman, E. C., 160, 178, 189, |