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miles, 111. 74; inscribe themselves,
IV. 261; integrate themselves, II.
102; intellectual quality, vi. 158; †
we put our life in, 11. 101; magne-
tism of, 11. 63; leave no mark in the
world, 1. 278; measured by depth
of sentiment, II. 155; IV. 268; me-
chanical, 11. 135; men of, iv. 267;
men wanted more than, 1. 278; and
misaction, x. 268; original, necés-
sary, x 267; natural, 1. 19; every
necessary action pleases, vi 291;
Nelson on, viii. 308; are pearls to
discourse, 1. 95; need perspective,

5;, picture-book of creed, VIII.
23; a great pleasure, vii. 38; is
prayer, 11.77; reaction, 11.96; re-
sounding, III. 41; a resource, 1.
98; satellites to Nature, 1. 39; es-
-sential to scholar, 1. 94; self-re-
warding, 11. 102; we shrink from
actions of our own, x1. 521; is in
silent moments, 11. 161; right
speech not distinguished from,
VIII95; spontaneous, strong, II.
138, 328; 111. 47, 68; steps in lad-
‚v der, 11. 305;, subject for sculpture,
VII. 130; should rest on substance,
.in. 101; partiality, the tax on, iv.
266; timely, 11. 228; and thought,
81. 272; IV. 266; vii. 38; transfig-
ured as thoughts, 1. 96; a trick of
the senses, 11. 163; not better than
verses or pictures, XII. 343; uncon-
scious, vII. 38; give vocabulary,
1. 97; give a return of wisdom, 1.
1998; 11. 227.
Activity, amiable, x. 47; children
and thoughtless people, like, x.
174; contagious, IV. 13; frivolous,
x. 267; too great, v11. 312; mis-
cellaneous, to be stopped off, vi.
73; makes room for itself, v.. 34.
Actors, worst provincial excels ama-

teur, vi. 77. 1:

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Adams, John, courage, XII. 203; ele-
vation, vi. 161; fame, XII. 210;
old age, vi. 323; patriotism, X.
248; no backward-creeping crab,
XL 537; visit to, VII. 332.
Adams, John Q., vi. 175; company
for kings, x 392; courage, XI. 134;
eloquence, 11. 60; VII. 83; auda-
cious independence, xi. 521; on
literature, VIII. 123; reading, VIII.

122.

..

Adams, Samuel, vII. 116.
Adaptation, none in man, 111. 57;
the peculiarity of human nature,
IV. 161; VIII. 306; of Nature, vi.
39; we are victims of, vi, 139.
Addition, the world not to be ana-
lyzed by, II, 339:
ADIRONDACS, IX. 182-194.
Adjustments, Nature's, vi. 37.
Admetus, II. 31; VII. 176.
Admiration, strain to express, VIII.
86; x. 306; not forgiven, XII. 30.
Adrastia, law of, 11. 84.
Adsched of Meru, VIII, 244.
Adultery, vi. I

Advance, the history of Nature, VI,
35; XI. 525; XII. 60.
Advantage, has its tax, 11. 120; XI,
1,25, 186.

Actual, dwarfish, 1. 285; Goethe,
poet of, x11. 329, 331; ideal truer
than, x330 the imposing, x1. | Advantages, each envies those he has

not, VI144; cannot afford to miss,
X, 69.

Adventure, love of, vi. 68; xI. 200.
Adventurer, well received, vr. 211.
Adversity, the prosperity of the
`great, VI. 233; VIIL 231.067%6
Advertisement, most of life mere, HI.
-'73; VII. 290..

Eolian Harp, 1x. 237-241; 256;
dumb, viii. 273; in Nature, ni.
172, 175; VIII. 287; 1x. 230, 322;

129; melancholy, x11. 406.
olus, steam his bag, 1. 13.
Æons, vi. 83; vii. 180; 1x. 115, 285.
Aerolites, Shakspeare's, IV. 208.1,
Eschylus, we are civil to, vi. 67; in
earnest, vII. 53; Eumenides, 111.
82; grandest of Greek tragedians,
VII. 198; counterpart in Scott's
Bride of Lammermoor, x1. 465;
quoted, 11. 106; x1. 239.
Æsop, Lincoln an, XI. 333; his price,
x49; knew the realities of life,
vi. 261; VIII. 3; a man of the
world, v. 147.
Æsop's Fables, 111. 31; IV. 201; as

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sociate us, 1. 123; VII. 14, 15.
Affections, beauty, 1.99; benefits,

VII. II; exhilaration, 11. 191; geo-
metric, VIII. 107; Heraclitus said.
were colored mists, 1, 326; in
"creases intellect, 11. 192; VIII. 228;
XII. 44, 61; jets, 11. 193; and
memory, XII. 99, 104; metamor-
phosis, 11. 193; tent of a night, 11.
188; pathetic region of, vi. 316;
sweetness of life, 11 191; make
web of life, vII. 300; essential to
will, vi. 28; woman's crown, xi
412.

Affinities, in conversation, 11. 207;
"essential to man of the world, 111.
125; to great men, av. 41; be-
tween man, and, works, x11.63;
neglect of, 11. 151; perception of,
makes the poet, I. 54; cf 'persons,
11. 52; vi. 46; range, vi. 137; re-
ciprocity, vII. 14; of thoughts, XII.

23; of virtue with itself in different
persons, 11. 195; women's, In. 151;
world enlarged by, vii. 302.
Affirmative, being is, 11. 121; class,
VI. 72; forces, VI. 57; good mind
chooses, vII. 307; x. 61; inces-
sant, vi. 309; love is, vII. 309;
XII. 61; we love the, Iv. 170; in
manners, etc., VII. 308; philoso
phy, x. 244; power, x. 234, 235;
principle, 1. 45; sacred, x. 219.
Afraid, do what you are afraid to do,
II. 260; x. 406.
Afrasiyab, vIII. 242
Africa, civilization, XI. 141, 145.See
Negro, Slavery... paket N
Africanization of U. S., x1, 298.
Afternoon men, 11. 229; saunterings,
I. 163,

Agamemnon, 11. 24.

Agaric, self-planting, 111. 23.
Agassiz, Louis, vIII. 213; IX. 193;
museum, VIII. 151; theories, VIII.
7; XI. 391.

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Age, old. See Old Age.
Age, the characteristics of different
ages, I. 109, 281, 287; of the pre-
sent, the interest in familiar things,
1, 110, 271; VI. 3; VIII. 208; of
fops, 1x. 207; of gold, 111. 87; 1x.
273; of omnibus, XI. 538; walks
about in persons, 1. 264; VI. 39; of
reason in a patty-pan, x. 364;; re
trospective, 1. 3;. riddle of, vi. 4;
of analysis, x. 326; each, new, xẻ
254; XII. 387.

Ages, of belief, great, v1. 216; x. 206;
equivalence of, VIII. 213; instruct
the hours, 11. 4; ideas work in, xi.
160; not idle, 1. 311.
Agiochook, 1. 170; 1x. 77,
Agitation, blessed, x1. 533.
Agitators, 1. 285.

Agricultural Report, x11. 360.
Agriculture, praise of, 1. 366; attacks
on, 1. 252; aids civilization, v11. 22,.
151 f; x1.34; English, v. 95, 1895
check on nomadism, 1.

is

oldest profession, 1. 240; respect | Alderman, dreariest, vi. 312.
for, 1. 235, 381; vII. 137; steam Alembert, Jean d', quoted, vi. 313;
in, v. 95; thrift in, 11. 234. See
Farming.

X. IIO.

Alembic of man, 1. 24; vIII. 16.

AGRICULTURE OF MASSACHUSETTS, Alexander, and Aristotle, x. 307; a

XII. 358-364.

Aids, casting off, 111. 260; x1. 235,
236.

Aim, high, 1. 216; 111. 185, 268; vi.
232; VIII. 301; x. 65; aggrandizes
the means, vii. 273; men of, x. 39;
mind own, Ix. 30; want of, vi.

208.

Air, artful, Ix. 179; influence on body

and brain, XII. 140, 160; exhala-
tion, XII. 183; fame, 1x. 222; food
of life, x11. 183; gifts, x. 70; in-
spiration, 111. 29; intellectual, vII.
171; effect on manners, XII. 183;
is matter subdued by heat, vII.
144; full of men, vi. 17; moral sen-
timent in, 1. 42; music, 11. 8; an
ocean, 1. 12; receptacle, vii. 144;
of mountains, a good republican,
XII. 183; like a river, 1. 44; is
Rock of Ages dissolved, x11. 141;
salubrity, vi. 243; 1x. 219; coined
into song, 11. 176; sounds, XII. 32;
useful and hurtful, 11. 339; forged
into words, 1. 40; works for man,
VII. 144; worth, x. 276.
Air-ball, thought, vr. 288,
Air-bells, of fortune, ix. 231.
Air-lord, poet, III. 42.

Air-pictures, 111, 221.

Air-sown words, Ix. 222.

Airs, logs sing, II. 227.

Airs, putting on, XII. 202.

gentleman, III. 125; x. 318; x1,
285; estimate of life, 111. 274; and
Napoleon, XII. 339; not represent-
ative, vIII. 302; victories, XI. 153.
Alexander of soil, x11. 358.
Alfieri, quoted, v. 62.
Alfred, v. 117, 141, 175, 290; VII. 295.
Ali, Caliph, quoted, 1. 222; 11. 88;

success, x. 58; vigor, 1. 317.
All, the encroaching, x11.405; life of,
must stream through us, XIL 21;
whom he knew, met, vill. 92.
All-confounding pleasure, 11. 209.
Allies, best, vIII. 231.
Allingham, William, quoted, vini.
280.

Allston, Washington, Coleridge on,
v. 10, 14; design, vii. 47; habits,
VIII. 291; house, vi. 113; quoted,

III. 241.

Almanac, of birds, 1x. 176; man an,
VI. 131; of mental moods, xii. 11;
Thomas's, XII. 361. See, also, Cal-
endars.

Alms-giving, 1. 123: VII. 115.
Almshouse, world an, 11. 365.
Alone, flight of, to the alone, iv. 97;
must go, 11. 71; none, vi. 226.
Alphabet, boy and, viii. 168.
ALPHONSO OF CASTILE, IX. 25-28;

advice, 111. 238.

Alpine air, ix. 181; cataracts, IX.
141; district, vi. 216.

Aisles, forest, IX. 45; monastic, ix. 6; Alps, Ix. 341; Dante etched on, ix.

of Rome, IX. 7.

Akhlak-y-Jalaly, IV. 40.

Aladdin's lamp, oil, vIII. 142.
Alarmists, vi. 61.

Alchemy, is in the right direction, vi.

282.

Alcibiades, 111. 274.
Alcott, A. B., X. 376.
Alcuin, IX. 293.

221; fires under, 1x. 335; globe-
girdling, 1x. 63; landscape, xI.
347; love eats through, 1x. 295;
pedestals of, 1x. 192; shadow, 11.
148; snowy shower, 1x. 355-
Alternation, law of Nature. 11. 197;

VI. 322; VII. 225, 249; VIII. 149,
150; IX. 23.
Amasis, Iv. 112.

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Amateurs, and practitioners, vi. 79.
Ambassadors, objects like, xII. 5.
Amber of memory, 11. 175.
Ambient cloud, x. 55.
Ambition, adjusted to powers, 11.
141; errors from, vi. 218; makes
insane, XII. 118; pure, 111. 275;
VII. 122; of scholar, 1. 173; thiev-
ing, vi. 278; 1x. 276.
Amelioration, principle of, 1. 372; IV.
35, 81. See Melioration.
Amen, obsolete, 1. 249.
America, advantages, VIII. 104, 207;
XI. 386, 537; architecture, vIII.
212; aristocracy, 1. 261; arts, II.
82; vII. 56; bill of rights, x1. 517;
Carlyle on, v. 16; Chanticleer, XI.
389; is charity of God to man, XI.
540; civilization, vII. 104; x1.
123, 385, 537; clubs, x1. 527; co-
lossal, xI. 385; Congress, vII. 90;
Constitution, I. 274; III. 211;
courts, vi. 62; crisis, x1. 516; de-
mocracy, x1. 526; destiny, x1. 383;
despondency, x11. 406; discovery,
VII. 175; XI. 165, 515; domestic
service, vi. 275; economists, V.
150; education, vII. 119; VIII.
233; XI. 527; and England, v. 53,
119, 121, 150; and Europe, 11. 22;
VII. 161; expensiveness, vi. 210;
extent dazzles the imagination, III.
38; vi. 256; flag, IX. 199, 206; XI.
530; fortune, x1. 530; represents
future of mankind, x1. 515; genius,
III. 230; v. 36; x1. 209, 385, 537;
geography sublime, men not, vi.
256; VIII. 141; government, the-
ory of, x1. 258, 529; growth, x11.
200; an immense Halifax, xI. 533;
history short, 1. 392; home of man,
1. 391; to be home of peace, XI.
175; hopes and fears for, x1. 329;
idea, v. 286; imitative, 1. 157; 11.
82; vii. 180; x1. 385; immigra-
tion, x. 242; x1. 516; a nation of
individuals, xi. 529; influence, 1.
371; institutions, III. 207; land-

scape, v. 288; law, ethical, x. 112;
life, vin. 141; literature optative,
1. 342; XII. 404; materialism, 1.
191; x. 62, 242; x1. 384, 531;
mendicant, vii. 180; money-get-
ting, XI. 523; names, v. 179; Na.
ture's charge to, x. 249; newness,
VIII. 212; means opportunity, vIII.
100, 141; XI. 299, 541; a poem,
III. 37, 38; political economy, x1.
519; politics, viii. 242; x.86; xi.
387, 388, 518, 522; country of poor
men, XI. 526; provincial, x1. 533;
progress, VII. 31, 283; XI. 530; ra-
dicalism, 111. 210; reform, 1. 268;
XI. 529; religion, x. 212; resources,
VIII. 104, 141, 154; x1. 522; schol-
arship, 1. 157; sentiment, 1. 364;
want of sincerity in leading men,
VI. 212; XI. 288; slavery, see Sla-
very; love of talent, x11. 57; of
thought, 111. 72; talking, 111. 82;
vanity, 1. 392; XI. 530; wealth,
shame for, v. 153; women, III. 150;
Wordsworth on, v. 19; country of
young men, vII. 331. See, also,
American, Americans, United
States.

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1 VI.

education of, vi. 142; forbidden,
VI. 144; need of, vIII. 150; x. 109;
safeguard of rulers, 11. 268; VI,

33.
Analogy, 1. 27, 85; v. 239, 254; VII.
54; VIII. 13, 195; X. 11, 183.
Analysis, III, 62; VI. 311; X. 220;

. XII. 14.

Anarchy, value of, 1. 323; III. 211,
240; in the church, vi. 203; x1.
262.

Anatomy, in art, 1, 43; XII. 219;

1.246; rely on dollar, 1. 249; dress
with good sense, VIII. 87; energy,
VIII. 142; contrasted with English,
v. 128, 138,261, 275, 307; XI, (529;
- deference to English, 1. 167, 392;
vi. 62; x1. 123, 533, 534; ethics in
money-paying, x. 62; passion for
Europe, 1. 114, 363; 11. 22, 214;
vi. 145, 266; vII. 180, 292; XI.
533 ff; lack faith, 1. 249; choked
by forms, x1.258; fury, XI. 388;
gentlemen, XI. 537; lack idealism,
XI. 536; idlers, XI. 533, 535; im-morbid,. vii. 276, 308; of national
pulsiveness, xi. 532; independ-
ence, XII. 201; intellect, x. 277,
369; levity, x. 255; XI. 532; life,
xi. 536; manners, vi. 174; VII.
: 79;. melioration, VIII. 141; and
New Zealanders, 11. 84; percep-
tion, 11. 228; poetic genius, III. 37;
practicality, x. 266; deaf to prin-
ciple, x1. 239; a puny and fickle
folk, 1. 191; no purists, x. 62; lack
repose, 1.284; VI. 145; VII. 286;
XI. 531; lack reverence, x. 206;
self-assertion, 1. 363; XI. 521, 528;
sensualism, x1. 531; no sentiment,
1.249; shop-keepers, XI. 123; soci-
ety, vi. 32; VIIL. 101, 112; X 40;
sovereignty, XI. 384; speech-mak-
ing propensities, VI. 152; students,
v. 206; success, vII. 288; x1.532;
superficialness, vil 5; VIL, 290; re-
spect for talent, IV. 280; X 277;
love of travel, u. 80; v. 273 f ; vII.
180; XI. 383, 533; workman, ver-
sus foreign, vi. 225; youth, VI.
150; viii. 85.

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Ames, Fisher, quoted, 111. 211.
Amici, Prof., và 8,

Amphibious, men are, 111, 229.1
Amphion, 111. 197; IX. 271.
Amphitheatre, Roman, origin of the
shape, vII. 54; XII. 325.
AMULET, THE, IX. 98.
Amulets, Ix. 32; x. 16... **
Amurath, Sultan, IV. 263.
Amusements, aim of society, VI. 247;

tendencies,..v. 138; Swedenborg
on, Iv. 112; sympathetic, vi. 229.
Ancestors, escape from, vi. 9; face
represents, v. 50; vi. 181; rever-
ence for, vII. 177; a man repre-
sents each of several ancestors, vi.
10; independence of, 1. 173.
Anchors, easy to twist, vi. 276.
Ancients, why venerable, xu. 387.
Andes, 11. 58; vi. 272; VIII. 132.
ANGELO, MICHAEL, XII. 213~244;
on beauty, 1, 58; cardinal in pic-
ture, IV. 137; cartoons, v..202;
conscience of Italy, vin. 216; cre-
ative, vII. 39; on death, VIII. 329;
on eye of artist, vi. 178; frescoes,
11. 356; Landor on, v. 7; influ-
ence on Milton, XII. 259; sonnet
translated, ix. 298; XII. 213; son-
nets, XII. 240; memory, xi. 105;
on test of sculpture, 11. 155; self-
confidence, vII. 291; Sistine
Chapel, vi. 72; XII. 228, 230; soli-
tude, vii. 7; vIII. 216; XII. 237;
beauty the purgation of super-
Auities, vi. 294.

Angels, past actions are, 1.96; asp
or, 1.341; of the body, r. 187; vi.
170; of children, Iv. 30; for cook,
vi. 275; shown in crises, 1. 149;
disguised, 1. 291; our ancestors' fa-
miliarity with, x. 106; favoritism,
x. 16; flutes, 1x. 178; food, 1.338;
gossip keeps them in the proprie-
ties, VI. 222; guardian, x. 22, 78;

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