Dhammapada: its estimate of love, 78. Dyson, Jeremiah, a friend of Akenside, Diana and Apollo, 110.
Dickens, Charles: cited, 173 f.
Diede, Charlotte: a friend of Wil- helm von Humboldt, 61, 109. Dietrich, Sir, a hero in the Nibelun- genlied, 289.
Diligere: Latin for "love," 17, 390. Dimitriev cited, 81.
Diodati, Charles, a friend of Milton, 347 f.
Diodorus: cited, 160.
Diogenes Laertius: cited, 98, 258. Diomedes and Glaucus, 285. Diomedes and Ulysses, 158, 285. Dion, a friend of Plato, 255. Dionysius, of Syracuse: influence of friendship on, 131; his oppression of Plato, 255.
Distrust, excluded from friendship, 35-46.
Divina Commedia, Dante's, 303 f. Divine friendship, 26, 385 f. Dobrýnya and Dúnaï, 164. Dominicans and Franciscans, 194-198. Dommett, Alfred, a friend of Brown- ing, 362 f.
Donne, Dr. John, friend of George Herbert and his mother, 341 f. Dorothy Wordsworth, her brother's friend, 359 f.
Douglas, Sir James, and King Robert Bruce, 171.
Dowden, Edward: cited, 332 f.
"Elegy," Gray's: its prompting in friendship, 351.
Eliot, George: cited, 25, 46. Eliot, Sir John, John Hampden, and John Pym, 236-239.
Elizabeth, Princess, a friend of Des- cartes, 266.
Elliott, Sir Gilbert, a friend of Hume, 278.
Ellis, George, a friend of Scott, 357. Emerson, Ralph Waldo: cited, 23, 36, 38, 43, 53 f., 60 f., 82, 96, 256, 370, 383 f.
'Encyclopædia Britannica," quota- tion from, 243 f.
Endamidas, a Corinthian, 30, 31. Engel: cited, 53.
English poetry, shaped by friendship, 321 f.
Enmity, costs less than friendship, 89.
Ennius: cited, 80; his estimate of | Fenelon and Mme. Guion, 109.
"'Enoch, Book of," an Arabic classic, 82 f.
Envy, excluded from friendship, 35-46. Epaminondas and Pelopidas, 106, 159 f. Epic poems the world's first litera- ture, 284.
Epicureans and Stoics, friendship among, 258. Epicurus: cited, 24.
Epitaphium Damonis, Milton's: cited,
"Epithalamion," Spenser's, quotation from, 323 f.
Epochs of history: their center in in- dividuals, 117.
Erasmus, his friendship for John Colet, 106, 202-207; compared with Luther, 203; cited, 213. Erdmann cited, 255. Erskine, William, a friend of Scott, 356. Eskimo, folk-lore tales of, 85. "Essay Concerning Human Under- standing," Locke's: its origin and influence, 269.
Essex, Earl of, and Lord Bacon, 259- 262.
Estrangement, a cause of suffering, 68. Eton, Gray's friendships at, 351. Euripides, cited, 52, 87; friendship in his poetry, 289 f. Euryalus and Nisus, 161 f.
Eusebius and Pamphilus, 106, 179-181. Evelyn, John: cited, 53. Exchanges, symbolic, in friendship, 73 f.
Excursus on New Testament words for "love" and "friendship," 389 f.
FABER, Peter, and Ignatius Loyola, 218-221.
"Faerie Queene," Spenser's: its writ- ing, 325-327.
Faithfulness, the hunger of a faithful heart, 46.
"Faust," Goethe's: friendship's influ- ence on it, 376, 380.
Fear, out of place in love, 40. Feather-on-the-Head, and Three Bears, 165 f.
Fell, Margaret, and George Fox, 221- 223.
Fichte, J. G., and his friends, 281 f. Fiction, friendship in, 173. Finch, Francis, a writer on friendship, 343 f.
Flaxman, John, and Ann Denman,
Flower, Miss Lizzie, a friend of Brown- ing, 362.
Folk-lore: its lessons of friendship, 82-86.
Forster, John, a friend of Browning, 362.
Foster, John: his illustration of de- grees of friendship, 96.
Fox, George, and Margaret Fell, 221- 223.
Francis, St., of Assisi, and St. Clare, 109, 194-196.
Franciscan Order: friendship in its founding, 194-196.
Franklin, Benjamin, maxim of, 45. Fraser, Professor A. C.: cited, 273. Frau von Stein, Goethe's friendship for, 377 f.
French poetry: friendship an inspira- tion in, 366-369.
French Revolution, the: friendship's part in, 248-250.
Friend, a: of art, 16; of country, 16; of literature, 16; of science, 16; as one's own self, 47.
Friend, the one: a court title in an- cient Egypt, 123.
Friendliness not friendship, 97-101. Friends, the Society of: its early his- tory, 221-223.
Friends, who can be? 105-114. Friendship: conflicting estimates of, 13; as a sentiment, not as a rela- tion, 14; meaning of the word, 14; misconceptions of its nature, 14; its etymology, 14; unselfishness of, 15- 17,18; not incompatible with love,18, 105-114; consists in being a friend, 19; may be a mutual affection, 19; does not pivot on reciprocity, 19-26; is loving rather than being loved, 19- 26; is loving another for his own sake, 20; may be coexistent with other loves, 20; what faults are seen in it, 20 f.; its disinterestedness, 21; is wholly unselfish, 27-34; its joy in
GAIN: of having a friend, 382; of being a friend, 382 f.; of union in friend- ship, 384 f.
Gambold, John, and the Wesleys, 225 f. Gardner, Samuel Rawson: cited, 237. Gaunt, John of, a friend of Chaucer, 316 f.
Gay, John: cited, 55; a friend of Pope, 350.
Gemini, the, a sign of the zodiac,
serving, 33; includes readiness for | Froude, J. A.: cited, 203. all service, 34; excludes selfishness, Furnivall, F. J.: cited, 332, 340. 35; its own excuse for being, 35; is without envy or distrust, 35-46; transcends all loves, 47-58; is a tie of the soul, 49-51; is more than conjugal or kinship love, 50-58, 69 f.; is changeless in changes, 59- 68; legacies of, 63 f.; is of world- wide honor, 69-86; its permanency, 70 f.; its sacredness, 70 f.; is equal- ity, 73; lightens burdens, 87; is gainfully expensive, 87-92; is gain- ful only to the unselfish, 88 f.; its limitations and imitations, 93-104; is "charity," 95; is soul-expanding, IOI f.; that might have been, 104; is possible between whom? 105-114; between man and man, 106 f.; be- tween woman and woman, 106 f.; between man and woman, 107-109; preceding and accompanying wed- ded love, 112; following wedded love, 113; compatible with every relation of life, 114; its surpassing potency, 117-120; its power in all the ages, 118; its strongest hold is on the strongest, 118; is a posses- sion of the great-hearted, 119; in- fluencing royalty, 121-154; pro- moting heroism, 155-174; in ancient chivalry, 162-169; impelling reli- gious movements, 175-230; advan- cing civil liberty, 231-250; affecting philosophic thought, 251-282; its uplifting power, 352; inspiring po- etry, 283-380; among the Greeks, 296 f.; in classic days and in Chris- tian, 296-300; for one's wife, 322- 324; is an element of virtue, 350; is earth's best gift to man, 350; its power for good or ill, 354; amongst French poets, 368 f.; what it has done for the world, 381; transfigur- ing all life, 381-387. Friendship-dance, 71 f. Friendship-love: such love as God gives, 385-387; its prominence in the New Testament, 389-393. "Friendships of Women," Alger's work on, 110.
Geraldine (Elizabeth Fitz Gerald), Sur- rey a friend of, 318, 322. German : proverb from, 53; root-term for friendship in, 74. Gesta Romanorum, 84. "Gilpin, John," Cowper's, inspired by friendship, 353.
Fritz, the son of Frau von Stein, 378. Froude, Hurrell, and his friends, 230.
Gladstone, William Ewart, and Cath- erine Glynne, 112; cited, 240. Glaucus and Diomedes, 285. Gnomic poems of Theognis, 290. Godfrey and Tancred, 106, 170 f. Goethe, cited, 32, 33, 57; his place in literature, 370; his characteristics as a friend, 370-372; his friendship for Schiller, 106, 379 f.; for Count de Thorane, 372; for his sister, 372; for Gretchen, 373; for Fraulein von Klettenberg: 373; for Schlosser and Behrisch, 373 f.; for Herder, 375; for Merck, 375 f.; for Karl August, 376 f.; for Frau von Stein, 377 f.
Golden Words" of Pythagoras, 252. Götz von Berlichingen, Goethe's: its prompting, 372.
Gower, John, a friend of Chaucer, 317. Gracchi, the, 110. Gray, Thomas, as friend and poet, 351. Greek, "love and "friendship" in, 17, 74, 389 ff.
Green, a friend of Kant, 281. Green, J. R.: cited, 203 f., 215-217, 237 f. Gretchen, Goethe's friendship for, 373. Grignan, Mme. de, and Mme. de Sévigné, IIO.
Grimm, the Brothers: cited, 83 f. Groot, Gerhard, and Henry Aeger, 199.
Grote, George: cited, 232, 255. "Guardian Angel," Browning's : a tribute of friendship, 361. Guillaume, Francois Pierre, and Mme. Guizot, IIO.
Guion, Mme., and Fenelon, 109. Guizot, M.: cited, 240, 244, 249, 368. Guizot, Mme., and Francois Pierre Guillaume, IIO. Gunner and Njal, 84 f. Gunther and Siegfried, 287.
HADRIAN, and Theodore of Tarsus, 189-191.
Hephæstion, the friend of Alexander,
106, 126-128. Herbert, George:
cited, 23; his mother's friendship, 110; his friend- ship for Lord Bacon, 263; as poet and as friend, 341 f.
Herbert, William, Earl of Pembroke, 333, 340 f.
Hercules and Iolaus, 156 f.
Herder, J. G.: his friendship for his wife, 112; for Goethe, 375. "Hermann and Dorothea," Goethe's: a fruit of friendship, 380. Hermias, of Atarneus, a friend of Aristotle, 257.
Hagen: his friendships and his treach- Heroism promoted by friendship, 155-
ery, 287-289.
Halfdan and Viking, 162.
Hall, Gordon, and Samuel J. Mills,
Herschel, William and Caroline, III. Hervey, James, and the Wesleys, 225. "Hexapla," Origen's: its character, 177 f.
Hildreth, Richard: cited, 241. Hindoos, sacred books of, 43, 51, 76. Hipparchus and Hippias, sons of Pisistratus, 231 f.
Hiram of Tyre, a friend of David and Solomon, 63.
History of German Literature," Scherer's, quotation from, 377 f. History, the world's, as history of in- dividuals, 117.
Hoddeson, John, a friend of Dryden, 348 f.
Hoff, a friend of Shelley, 359. Hogg, James, a friend of Scott, 357. Holland, F. M.: cited, 305. Holmes, Dr. O. W.: cited, 91. 'Holy Fair, The," Burns's : prompting, 354 f.
'Holy Willie's Prayer," Burns's: its prompting, 355.
Homâyoon and Koornivati, 164 f. Homer: cited, 63, 73, 156, 160. Horace: his friendship for Virgil, 106; for Mæcenas, 293-295. Hortalus, brother-friend of Catullus, 292.
Houghton, Lord: cited, 68. Howard, Sir Robert, a friend of Dry- den, 348.
Howitt, William and Mary: cited, 79 f. Hugh de Sade, husband of Petrarch's Laura," 306.
Humboldt, Wilhelm von: cited, 61 f.; | Jesus Christ: his standard of loving,
26; his estimate of friendship, 49 f., 75; his friendship unchanging, 66; his lessons on friendship, 88 f.; he chooses John as a friend, 175; his conversation with Peter, 392. Jewish standard of friendship, 66. John, St. the friend of Jesus, 175; of St. Paul, 176.
John the Baptist, as a friend, 38. Johnson, Dr., and Mrs. Thrale, 109. Jonathan and David: their friendship, 27, 28, 37, 38, 62, 106.
Joseph, the one friend of Pharaoh,
Khaleefs, Muhammadan, 152.
Kings: their longing to be loved, 121. King, Edward, a friend of Milton, 348. Kingsley, Charles: his story of two
monk-friends, 31, 32; his friend- ship for Fanny Grenfell, 112; cita- tion of, 119; his friendships, 230. Kinship, friendship coexistent with, 109-III.
Kirke, Edward, a friend of Spenser, 324 f.
Kirkham, Robert, and the Wesleys, 225.
Klettenberg, Fraulein von: her influ- ence on Goethe, 373.
Knight, Professor William: cited, 276. Knox, General, a friend of Washing- ton, 246 f.
Knox, John, and George Wishart,
Koornivati and Homâyoon, 164 f. Köstlin, Julius: cited, 209, 213.
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