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'glorious Chivalry.' Noble devout-hearted Chevaliers. Ignoble Bucaniers and Chactaw Indians: Howel Davies. Napoleon flung out, at last, to St. Helena; the latter end of him sternly compensating for the beginning. (163.) The indomitabie Plugson, as yet a Bucanier and Chactaw. William Conqueror and his Norman followers. Organisation of Labour: Courage, there are yet many brave men in England! (165.)

CHAP. XI. Labour.

A perennial nobleness and even sacredness in Work. Significance of the Potter's Wheel. Blessed is he who has found his Work; let him ask no other blessedness. (p. 168.)—A brave Sir Christopher, and his Paul's Cathedral: Every noble work at first 'impossible.' Columbus royalest Sea-king of all: A depth of Silence, deeper than the Sea; a Silence unsoundable; known to God only. (170.)

CHAP. XII. Reward.

Work is Worship: Labour, wide as the Earth, has its summit in Heaven. One monster there is in the world, the idle man. (p. 172.)—' Fair day's-wages for a fair day's-work,' the most unrefusable demand. The 'wages' of every noble Work in Heaven, or else Nowhere: The brave man has to give his Life away. He that works bodies forth the form of Things Unseen. Strange mystic affinity of Wisdom and Insanity: All Work, in its degree, a making of Madness sane. (174.)-Labour not a devil, even when encased in Mammonism: The unredeemed ugliness, a slothful People. The vulgarest Plugson of a Master-Worker, not a man to strangle by CornLaws and Shotbelts. (178.)

CHAP. XIII. Democracy.

Man must actually have his debts and earnings a little better paid by man. At no time was the lot of the dumb millions of toilers so entirely unbearable as now. Sisterhood, brotherhood often forgotten, but never before so expressly denied. Mungo Park and his poor Black Benefactress. (p. 179.) -Gurth, born thrall of Cedric the Saxon: Liberty a divine thing; but 'liberty to die by starvation' not so divine. Nature's Aristocracies. William Conqueror, a resident House-Surgeon provided by Nature for her beloved English People. (182.)-Democracy, the despair of finding Heroes to govern us, and contented putting-up with the want of them. The very Tailor unconsciously symbolising the reign of Equality. Wherever ranks do actually exist, strict division of costumes will also be enforced. (185.)- Freedom from oppression, an indispensable yet most insignificant portion of Human Liberty. A best path does exist for every man; a thing which, here and now, it were of all things wisest for him to do. Mock Superiors and Real Superiors. (187.)

CHAP. XIV. Sir Jabesh Windbag.

Oliver Cromwell, the remarkablest Governor we have had for the last five centuries or so: No volunteer in Public Life, but plainly a balloted soldier: The Government of England put into his hands. (p. 191.)-Windbag, weak in the faith of a God; strong only in the faith that Paragraphs and Plausibilities bring votes. Five years of popularity or unpopularity; and after those five years, an Eternity. Oliver has to appear before the Most High Judge: Windbag, appealing to 'Posterity.' (192.)

CHAP. XV. Morrison again.

New Religions: This new stage of progress, proceeding 'to invent God, a very strange one indeed. (p. 194.)-Religion, the Inner Light or

Moral Conscience of a man's soul. Infinite difference between a Good man and a Bad. The great Soul of the World, just and not unjust: Faithful, unspoken, but not ineffectual 'prayer.' Penalties: The French Revolution; cruelest Portent that has risen into created Space these ten centuries. Man needs no 'New Religion; nor is like to get it: Spiritual Dastardism, and sick folly. (195.)-One Liturgy which does remain forever unexceptionable, that of Praying by Working. Sauerteig on the symbolic influences of Washing. Chinese Pontiff-Emperor and his significant punctualities.' (200.) -Goethe and German Literature. The great event for the world, now as always, the arrival in it of a new Wise Man. Goethe's Mason-Lodge. (203.)

BOOK IV.-HOROSCOPE.

CHAP. I. Aristocracies.

To predict the Future, to manage the Present, would not be so impossible, had not the Past been so sacrilegiously mishandled: a godless century, looking back to centuries that were godly. (p. 205.)--A new real Aristocracy and Priesthood. The noble Priest always a noble Aristos to begin with, and something more to end with. Modern Preachers, and the real Satanas that now is. Abbot-Samson and William-Conqueror times. The mission of a Land Aristocracy a sacred one, in both senses of that old word. Truly a 'Splendour of God' did dwell in those old rude veracious ages. Old Anselm travelling to Rome, to appeal against King Rufus. Their quarrel at bottom a great quarrel. (207.)-The boundless Future, predestined, nay already extant though unseen. Our Epic, not Arms and the Man, but Tools and the Man; an infinitely wider kind of Epic. Important that our grand Reformation were begun. (214.)

CHAP. II. Bribery Committee.

Our theory, perfect purity of Tenpound Franchise; our practice, irremediable bribery. Bribery, indicative not only of length of purse, but of brazen dishonesty: Proposed improvements. A Parliament, starting with a lie in its mouth, promulgates strange horoscopes of itself. (p. 216.)— Respect paid to those worthy of no respect: Pandarus Dogdraught. The indigent discerning Freeman; and the kind of men he is called upon to vote for. (218.)

CHAP. III. The one Institution.

The 'Organisation of Labour,' if well understood, the Problem of the whole Future. Governments of various degrees of utility. Kilkenny Cats; Spinning-Dervishes; Parliamentary Eloquence. A Prime-Minister who would dare believe the heavenly omens. (p. 220.)-Who can despair of Governments, that passes a Soldier's Guard-house? - Incalculable what, by arranging, commanding and regimenting, can be made of men. Organisms enough in the dim huge Future; and United Services' quite other than the red-coat one. (223.)-Legislative interference between Workers and Master-Workers increasingly indispensable. Sanitary Reform: People's Parks: A right Education Bill, and effective Teaching Service. Free bridge for Emigrants: England's sure markets among her Colonies. London the All-Saxon-Home, rendezvous of all the 'Children of the Harz-Rock.' (226.) -The English essentially conservative: Always the invincible instinct to hold fast by the Old, to admit the minimum of New. Yet new epochs do actually come; and with them new peremptory necessities. A certain Editor's stipulated work. (230.)

CHAP. IV. Captains of Industry.

Government can do much, but it can in nowise do all. Fall of Mammon: To be a noble Master among noble Workers, will again be the first ambition with some few. (p. 231.)-The Leaders of Industry, virtually the Captains of the World: Doggeries and Chivalries. Isolation, the sum-total of wretchedness to man. All social growths in this world have required organising; and Work, the grandest of human interests, does now require it. (232.)

ness.

CHAP. V. Permanence.

The tendency to persevere,' to persist in spite of hindrances, discouragements and 'impossibilities,' that which distinguishes the Species Man from the Genus Ape. Month-long contracts, and Exeter-Hall purblindA practical manufacturing Quaker's care for his workmen. (p. 237.) -Blessing of Permanent Contract: Permanence in all things, at the earliest possible moment, and to the latest possible. Vagrant Sam-Slicks. The wealth of a man the number of things he loves and blesses, which he is loved and blessed by. (240.) The Worker's interest in the enterprise with which he is connected. How to reconcile Despotism with Freedom. (241.)

CHAP. VI. The Landed.

A man with fifty, with five hundred, with a thousand pounds a day, given him freely, without condition at all, might be a rather strong Worker : The sad reality, very ominous to look at. Will he awaken, be alive again; or is this death-fit very death?-Goethe's Duke of Weimar. Doom of Idleness. (p. 242.)—To sit idle aloft, like absurd Epicurus'-gods, a poor life for a man. Independence, 'lord of the lion-heart and eagle-eye: Rejection of sham Superiors, the needful preparation for obedience to real Superiors. (245.)

CHAP. VII. The Gifted.

Tumultuous_anarchy calmed by noble effort into fruitful sovereignty. Mammon, like Fire, the usefulest of servants, if the frightfulest of masters. Souls to whom the omnipotent guinea is, on the whole, an impotent guinea: Not a May-game is this man's life; but a battle and stern pilgrimage: God's justice, human Nobleness, Veracity and Mercy, the essence of his very being. (p. 247.).—What a man of Genius is. The Highest 'Man of Genius.' Genius, the clearer presence of God Most High in a man. Of intrinsic Valetisms you cannot, with whole Parliaments to help you, make a Heroism. (250.)

CHAP. VIII. The Didactic.

One preacher who does preach with effect, and gradually persuade all persons. Repentant Captains of Industry: A Chactaw Fighter become a Christian Fighter. (p. 251.)—Doomsday in the afternoon. The 'Christianity' that cannot get on without a minimum of Four-thousand-five-hundred, will give place to something better that can. Beautiful to see the brutish empire of Mammon cracking everywhere: A strange, chill, almost ghastly dayspring in Yankeeland itself. Here as there, Light is coming into the world. Whoso believes, let him begin to fulfil: Impossible," where Truth and Mercy and the everlasting Voice of Nature order, can have no place in the brave man's dictionary. (≈53.)-Not on Ilion's or Latium's plains; on far other plains and places henceforth can noble deeds be done. The last Partridge of England shot and ended: Aristocracies with beards on their chins. O, it is great, and there is no other greatness : To make some nook of God's Creation a little fruitfuler; to make some human hearts a little wiser, manfuler, happier : It is work for a God! (254)

INDEX.

ALISON, Dr., 3, 128.

Anselm, travelling to Rome, 212.
Apes, Dead-Sea, 131, 187, 189.
Arab Poets, 74

Aristocracy of Talent, 23; dreadfully dif-
ficult to attain, 26, 29, 207; our Phan-
tasm-Aristocracy, 120, 148, 151, 174, 242,
254; duties of an Aristocracy, 147, 151,
165; Working Aristocracy, 148, 152,
233, 255; no true Aristocracy, but must
possess the Land, 150, 210; Nature's
Aristocracies, 183; a Virtual Aristocracy
everywhere and everywhen, 207; the
Feudal Aristocracy no imaginary one,
210, 235.

Arrestment of the knaves and dastards,
31, 210.

Atheism, practical, 127, 132.
Becket, 205, 213.

Beginnings, 108.

Benefactresses, 181.

Benthamee Radicalism, 25.

Berserkir rage, 141.

Bible of Universal History, 206.
Blockheads, danger of, 77.

Bobus of Houndsditch, 26, 29, 252.

Bribery, 216.

Brindley, 137.
Bucaniering, 164.

Burns, 30, 75, 175, 243.
Byron's life-weariness, 133, 248.
Canute, King, 41.

Cash-payment not the sole relation of
human beings, 126, 161, 167; love of
men cannot be bought with cash, 233.
Centuries, the, lineally related to each
other, 34, 43.
Chactaw Indian, 164.

Champion of England, the, 'lifted into
his saddle,' 121.

Chancery Law-Courts, 221, 224.
China, Pontiff-Emperor of, 201.
Chivalry of Labour, 163, 233, 237, 241,
247, 254.

Christianity, grave of, 119; the Christian
Law of God found difficult and incon-
venient, 143; the Christian Religion not

accomplished by Prize-Essays, 160, 173.
or by a minimum of Four-thousand-five-
hundred, 252. See New Testament.
Church, the English, 144, 224; Church
Articles, 194; what a Church-Apparatus
might do, 208.

Coeur-de-Lion, 39, 91; King Richard, too,
knew a man when he saw him, 99.
Colonies, England's sure markets among
her, 229.

Columbus, royalest Sea-king of all, 171.
Competition and Devil take the hindmost,
158, 160; abatement of, 232.
Conscience, 94, 195.

Conservatism, noble and ignoble, 8, 10;
John Bull a born Conservative, 140;
Justice alone capable of being con-
served,' 142.

Corn-Laws, unimaginable arguments for
the, 5, 21, 129, 140; bitter indignation
in every just English heart, 142; ulti-
mate basis of, 148; mischief and danger
of, 151, 156, 179; after the Corn-Laws
are ended, 159, 216, 220; what William
Conqueror would have thought of them,
184.

Cromwell, and his terrible lifelong wrestle,
17; by far our remarkablest Governor,

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Edmundsbury, St., 40.

Education Service, an effective, possible,
228.

Election, the one important social act, 66;
electoral winnowing-machines, 68, 71.
Emigration, 228.

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England, full of wealth, yet dying of in-
anition, 1; the guidance of, not wise
enough, 24, 233; England of the year
1200,' 38, 42, 54, 95, 210; disappear-
ance of our English Forests, 85: this
England, the practical summary of Eng-
lish Heroism, 114; now nearly eaten up
by puffery and unfaithfulness, 124; real
Hell of the English, 125; of all Nations,
the stupidest in speech, the wisest in
action, 138; unspoken sadness, 138; con-
servatism, 140; Berserkir rage, 141; a
Future, wide as the world, if we have
heart and heroism for it, 229.
Essex, Henry Earl of, 92, 195.
Experience, 251.

Fact and Semblance, 11; and Fiction, 40.
Fame, the thing called, 111, 115.
Fighting, all, an ascertainment who has
the right to rule over whom, 11, 209;
murderous Fighting become a 'glorious
Chivalry,' 163.

Flunkies, whom no Hero-King can reign
over, 30. See Valets.

Formulas, the very skin and muscular
tissue of Man's Life, 109, 111.
Fornham, battle of, 44.

French Donothing Aristocracy, 154; the
French Revolution a voice of God,
though in wrath, 199.
Funerals, Cockney, 107.

Future,the, already extant though unseen,
214; England's Future, 229. See Past.
Geese, with feathers and without, 129.
Genius, what meant by, 75, 250.
Gideon's fleece, 171.

God, forgetting, 117; God's Justice, 164,
197; belief in God, 191; proceeding 'to
invent God,' 195.

Goethe, 203, 244; his Mason-Lodge, 204.
Gossip preferable to pedantry, 43; seven
centuries off, 64.

Governing, art of, 76, 78; Lazy Govern-
ments, 221; every Government the
symbol of its People, 231.

Great Man, a, 172. See Wisdom.
Gurth, born thrall of Cedric the Saxon,
19, 182, 210, 215.

Habit, the deepest law of human nature,

109.

Hampden's coffin opened, 103.
Happy, pitiful pretensions to be, 132; hap-

piness of getting one's work done, 134.
Hat, perambulating, seven-feet high, 121.
Healing Art, the, a sacred one, 3.
Heaven and Hell, our notions of, 124.
Heaven's Chancery, 162, 167.

Hell, real, of a man, 58; Hell of the Eng-
lish, 125, 232.

Henry II. choosing an Abbot, 69; his

Welsh wars, 93; on his way to the
Crusades, 100; our brave Plantagenet
Henry, 209.

Hercules, 155, 176.

Heroic Promised-Land, 32.

Hero-worship, 29, 48, 103, 106, 196, 211
245; what Heroes have done for us,
114, 123.

History, philosophical, 205.

Horses, able and willing to work, 19;
Goethe's thoughts about the Horse, 135.
Howel Davies, the Bucanier, 164.
Hugo, Abbot, old, feeble and improvident,
50; his death, 53; difficulties with Monk
Samson, 63.

Ideal, the, in the Real, 50, 163.
Idleness alone without hope, 126; Idle
Aristocracy, 149, 153, 174, 242.
Igdrasil, the Life-Tree, 33, 112, 214.
Ignorance, our Period of, 207.
Iliad, the, 113.

Impossible, 16, 19; without soul, all
things impossible, 129; every noble work
at first 'impossible,' 171, 176, 254.
Independence, 246.

Industry, Captains of, 165, 178, 233, 247,
252; our Industrial Ages, 214.
Infancy and Maturity, 110.

Injustice the one thing intolerable, 181.
Insanity, strange affinity of Wisdom and,

177.
Insurrections, 13.

Irish Widow, an, proving her sisterhood,
128, 181.

Isolation the sum-total of wretchedness,
235.

Jew debts and creditors, 51, 79, 80; Bene-
dict and the tooth-forceps, 156.
Jocelin of Brakelond, 34; his Boswellean
Notebook seven centuries old, 35.
John, King, 39, 90.

Justice the basis of all things, 7, 16, 95,
141; what is Justice, 12, 184; venerable
Wigged-Justice began in Wild-Justice,
114; God's Justice alone strong, 164,
250. See Parchments.
Kilkenny Cats, 221.

King, the true and the sham, 72, 76, 190;
the Ablest Man, the virtual King, 191;
again be a King, 215; the proper name
of all Kings, Minister, Servant, 222.
'Know thyself,' 168.
Labour, to be King of this Earth, 146;
Organisation of, 168, 180, 221; peren-
nial nobleness and sacredness in, 168.
See Chivalry, Work.
Laissez-faire, 158; general breakdown
of, 160.

Lakenheath eels, 56.

Landlords, past and present, 45; Land-
owning, 148; whom the Land belongs
to, 150; the mission of a Land Aristo-
cracy a sacred one, 211, 242.

Law, gradual growth of, 114; the Maker's
Laws, 197. See Chancery.
Legislative interference, 226.

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