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Romantic Love and Personal Beauty / Their development, causal relations, historic and national peculiarities

Chapter 248: INDEX
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About This Book

The author examines romantic love and notions of personal beauty from biological, psychological, and cultural perspectives. He traces instincts and sexual selection in animals, outlines varieties of affection (maternal, filial, friendship, romantic), and analyzes emotional overtones such as jealousy, coyness, gallantry, and exclusiveness. Historical chapters compare attitudes in ancient societies, medieval chivalry and troubadour poetry, and the emergence of modern courtship, with attention to erotic display, courtship customs, and the role of beauty in mate choice. The work balances evolutionary explanations with literary and social examples to explain changing forms and motives of love.

INDEX

  • About, E.: fashionable disease, 510
  • Absence: effect on Love, 256
  • Addison: familiarity, 184, 258
  • Æsthetic sense: developed from utilitarian associations, 336;
    • training the, 340;
    • highest product of civilisation, 409, 479
  • Æsthetic suicide, 388, 390
  • Affection, impersonal, 11-16;
    • for dismal scenery, 13
  • Affections, Personal: love for animals, 16-19;
    • maternal love, 19;
    • paternal, 20;
    • filial, 22;
    • brotherly and sisterly, 23;
    • friendship, 24;
    • romantic love, 26;
    • differentiation of, 180
  • Age: which preferred by Cupid, 303;
    • beauty of old, 334;
    • and decrepitude, 334;
    • ears in old, 430;
    • eyebrows, 474;
    • hair, 489, 493
  • Air: fresh, 317;
  • Albinos, 468, 501
  • Alcock, Dr.: colour of tropical man, 456
  • Alfieri: first love, 204, 214
  • Alison: on taste, 451
  • Allen, Grant: origin of æsthetic sense, 336
  • Amazons, 191
  • Ambidexterity, 408, 444
  • American beauty, 177, 300;
  • American Love: courtship, 118;
    • flirtation, 122, 126;
    • Gallantry, 158;
    • and Beauty, 177;
    • at eighteen, 193;
    • replaces German and French courtship, 288, 294-301
  • Amicis, E. de: Spanish beauty, 517
  • Amiel, H. F.: on Germans, 523
  • Animals: love for, 16;
    • ignored in Christian ethics, 18;
    • love among, 33;
    • jealousy, 39, 128;
    • kissing, 227, 229;
    • as tests of Beauty, 331;
    • arctic, why white, 456
  • Apes, caressing, 225;
  • Apollo, 490
  • Arabian beauty, 516
  • Aryan Love, ancient, 72
  • Asceticism and ugliness, 314
  • Augustine, St.: love and jealousy, 128
  • Austrian beauty, 319, 516
  • Bach, A. B.: chest-exercise, 399
  • Bachelors, 194
  • Bacon: friendship, 25;
    • amorous hyperbole, 162;
    • celibacy and genius, 197;
    • love and genius, 207;
    • employment versus love, 257
  • Bain, Prof., 225, 341, 346.
  • Baldness, 492
  • Ballet-dancing, 370
  • Ballrooms: unhealthy, 364, 402;
    • for birds, 365
  • Balzac: prolonging Love, 218;
    • how his love was won, 252;
    • hand of great men, 405
  • “Bangs,” 388, 495
  • Banting, 384
  • Bathing, 461, 518, 524, 534
  • Beard, G. M.: diet, 384;
  • Beard, the, 489
  • Beauty, in flowers, origin of, 8;
    • dependent on Health and Cross-fertilisation, 10
  • Beauty, Personal: the æsthetic overtone of Love, 32;
    • admiration of, by animals, 43;
    • by savages, 59;
    • among Hebrews, 72;
    • Hindoos, 74;
    • Greeks, 83;
    • Romans, 88;
    • mediæval, 108;
    • feminine versus masculine strength, 115;
    • arouses jealousy, 133;
    • when only skin-deep, 155;
    • and intellect, 155;
    • refines Love, 177-180;
    • feminine, in masculine eyes, 177;
    • masculine, in feminine eyes, 178;
    • neglected after marriage, 185;
    • lost prematurely, 186;
    • “skin-deep,” 190;
    • elimination of ugly and masculine women, 190;
    • fatal to bachelors, 194;
    • physical, a source of Love, 303;
    • facial, 304;
    • dependent on Health, 310;
    • independent of utility, 311;
    • Greek, 313;
    • increased through Hygiene, 316, 335;
    • effect of crossing on, 318;
    • Jews, 320;
    • quadroons, 321;
    • increased through Love, 322, 323;
    • as a fine art, 329, 417;
    • tests of, negative, 331;
    • positive, 338;
    • human less frequent than animal, 391;
    • lost in degradation, 333;
    • and age, 334;
    • expression versus form, 349;
    • proportion, 354;
    • feet, 355, 361;
    • value of exercise, 362, 403;
    • lower limbs, 371;
    • Hygiene and civilisation, 372, 394;
    • lacing fatal to, 381, 382;
    • corpulence, 383;
    • rare, 387;
    • chest, 394, 396;
    • increased by deep-breathing, 399;
    • neglect of, a sin, 400;
    • neck and shoulder, 400;
    • finger-nails, 406;
    • jaw, 408;
    • characteristic, 411;
    • dimples, 412;
    • lips, 413;
    • cheeks, 423;
    • colour and blushes, 425;
    • ears, 429;
    • noses, 440;
    • Greek, 440;
    • arm and hand, 405, 408;
    • cosmetic value of gastronomy, 446;
    • of fragrant air, 447;
    • of sunlight, 460, 462;
    • skin, 453, 458, 488;
    • eyes, 464 et seq., 516;
    • beards and moustaches, 489;
    • sexual selection preserves hair, 492;
    • sensuous, of eyes, 480;
    • of hair, 492, 493;
    • versus Fashion, 387, 496;
    • Brunette versus Blonde, 496;
    • national traits, 505;
    • race-mixture and Love, 508;
    • and mental culture, 324, 520;
    • stature, 520;
    • beautiful and pretty, 521
  • Beauty-sleep, 317
  • Beauty-spots, 452
  • Beddoe, Dr.: brunettes and blondes, 499;
    • races of Britain, 529
  • Beer, 525, 526
  • Beethoven: Love-affairs, 210, 212, 217
  • Bell, Sir Charles: the lips, 227;
    • Greek beauty, 349;
    • woman’s gait, 373;
    • facial expression, 414;
    • beards, 490
  • Bella donna, 504
  • Berlioz: love-affairs, 199, 206
  • Birds: affections of, 35;
    • intermarriages, nuptial mass meetings, 37;
    • courtship, 38;
    • love-dances, 39, 52;
    • jealousy, 39;
    • coyness, 40;
    • choice of a mate, 42;
    • source of colours, 44;
    • love-calls, 51;
    • female seeks male, 51;
    • display of ornaments, motives of, 52;
    • æsthetic taste of, 53;
    • murdered for vulgar women, 150;
    • billing, 230
  • Blackie, Prof.: Goethe’s love-affairs, 212
  • Blaikie, W.: American physique, 540
  • Blind, why love is, 164, 202
  • Blonde versus Brunette, 496, 529
  • Blushes, 425;
    • eyes of Albinos, 468
  • Bodenstedt: Oriental women, 185;
    • Georgian women, 325
  • Bones, 410
  • Bothmer, Countess von: French Love, 269, 270;
    • German women, 283;
    • English flirtation, 293
  • Brain, the, 449, 522
  • Brandes, Georg: feminine Love at thirty, 193, 197
  • Breath, offensive, 423
  • Breathing, healthy, 380;
    • deep, magic effects of, 397, 447
  • Brinton and Napheys, 379, 421, 432, 444, 484
  • Brotherly and sisterly love, 23
  • Browne, Lennox: corset ruins grace, 382;
    • consumption, 399
  • Brunette versus Blonde, 305, 496, 513, 520, 526, 529
  • Bryant, 254
  • Büchner, L., 534
  • Bulkley, Dr.: care of skin, 460;
    • removing hairs, 493
  • Bunyan: kissing, 284
  • Burke: delicacy, 343;
    • smoothness, 344;
    • neck and breasts, 394;
    • love and stature, 521
  • Burns: Love and cosmic attraction, 6;
    • amorous hyperbole, 162;
    • first love, 205;
    • ardour of his love, 208;
    • fickleness, 211;
    • undercurrents, 213;
    • a lover’s dream, 220;
    • kissing, 231
  • Burton, 4, 259
  • Bustle, the, 375, 494
  • Buxton, 259
  • Byron, Lord: affection for mountains, 13;
    • epitaph on dog, 17;
    • woman’s Love, 121;
    • waltzing, 129;
    • the coquette, 142;
    • Romantic Love, 163;
    • love-affairs, 202;
    • first love, 204;
    • a poet’s love, 210;
    • Swift, 210;
    • kissing, 236;
    • refusals, 241;
    • how to win love, 243, 252;
    • sarcasm on marriage, 259;
    • money and “love,” 263;
    • Italian Love, 274;
    • Love inspired by inferior beauty, 305;
    • black eyes, 498;
    • Italian beauty, 512
  • Calderwood: on affection, 11
  • Calisthenics, 397
  • Campbell, Sir G.: Aryan cheekbones, 424
  • Camper’s angle, 449
  • Canada: Love-matches and Beauty, 178, 373, 510
  • Capture of women, 56
  • Caresses, 225
  • Carew, 256
  • Celibacy: mediæval notions of, 92;
    • bachelors, 195;
    • and genius, 197
  • Cervantes, 202, 280
  • Chamfort, 224
  • Chaperonage: in Greece, 77;
  • Characteristic, the, 410
  • Cheeks, 423;
    • colour and blushes, 425
  • Chemical affinities, 3-6
  • Chest, the, 304, 394, 397
  • Chesterfield: birth of “flirtation,” 124;
    • flattery, 245
  • Children: head, 449;
  • Childs, Mrs,: Love and marriage, 122
  • Chin, 412
  • China: Love in, 118;
    • jealousy, 129, 133;
    • aristocracy of intellect, 210;
    • standard of Beauty, 328;
    • mutilation of the feet, 352;
    • dancing, 366;
    • cheeks, 423;
    • eyes, 473, 483, 485
  • Chiromancy, 406
  • Chivalry: militant and comic, 98;
  • Choice, sexual. See Individual Preference
  • Chopin: musician for lovers, 170
  • Christianity and Love, 97;
    • sympathy, 149;
    • and Beauty, 323
  • Circassian women, 320, 427
  • City air, 447;
    • city life, injurious to health, 372
  • Civilisation: and Beauty, 424;
    • and noise, 434
  • Clarke, E. H.: American Health and Beauty, 539;
    • sex and education, 541
  • Clavel, Dr.: English Beauty, 532
  • Cleanliness, 96, 364, 533
  • Climate, 542
  • Clough, 227
  • “Colds,” 540
  • Coleridge: fruitless Love, 121;
    • best marriages, 190;
    • virtue and passion, 218;
    • compliments, 245;
    • love and absence, 256
  • Collier, Miss M.; Italian Love and Hygiene, 512
  • Collier, R. L.: English and American courtship, 292
  • Colour: a normal product, proportionate to vitality, 44;
    • Typical and Sexual, 44;
    • Protective and Warning, 48;
    • means of recognition of species, 49;
    • complementary, 172, 345;
    • in cheeks, 425;
    • ears, 432;
    • skin, 453, 488;
    • of man’s skin, original, 456;
    • eyes, 465, 478
  • Complementary qualities: colours, 172;
  • Complexion: white versus black, 453;
    • Scandinavian and Spanish, 459;
    • cosmetic hints, 460;
    • freckles, 462;
    • brunette versus blonde, 500, 526;
    • English, 533, 534;
    • injured by hot air, 540
  • Compliments, 244
  • Confidence, value of, to lovers, 239, 242
  • Conjugal love: among animals, 34;
    • savages, 182;
    • Hebrews, 69;
    • Greeks, 75;
    • Romans, 86;
    • troubadours, 102;
    • self-sacrifice, 160;
    • in France, 162;
    • differs from Romantic, 180 et seq.;
    • modern, 182;
    • essence of, 183;
    • feminine deeper than masculine, 186;
    • and friendship, 258
  • Constable, 167
  • Consumption, nurseries of, 399
  • Coquetry: in birds, 40;
    • and flirtation, 122;
    • historic excuse for, 124;
    • essence of, 142;
    • masculine, 142;
    • and high collars, 242
  • Corpulence, 304, 382;
    • how to reduce, 384;
    • in old England, 530
  • Corset: fatal to Beauty, 379 et seq.;
    • causes corpulence, 382, 385;
    • ruins chest, 400
  • Cosmetic hints (see also Hygiene and Exercise): how to refine the lips, 421;
  • Cosmic attraction, 3-6
  • Costume, study of, 495
  • Court-plaster, 452
  • Courts of Love, 103
  • Courtship: among animals, 37;
    • facilitated by love-calls, 50;
    • display of ornaments, 53;
    • among savages, 56;
    • Hebrews, 70;
    • Greeks, 77;
    • Plato on, 78;
    • advice to mediæval girls, 106;
    • definition and value of, 118;
    • playing at, 122;
    • modern, 125, 126, 173;
    • mediæval, 239;
    • French, 268;
    • Italian, 275;
    • Spanish, 278;
    • German, 282;
    • American and English, 288, 292, 294, 299;
    • the object of dancing, 364;
    • needed in France, 509;
    • Germany, 527
  • Cousins: Love and kissing, 235;
    • as chaperons, 297
  • Coyness: an overtone of Love, 30;
    • among animals, 40;
    • among primitive maidens, 64;
    • Hindoos, 74;
    • Greeks, 77;
    • mediæval, 100;
    • modern, 114; et seq.;
    • a feminine weapon, 115;
    • disadvantages of, 118;
    • lessens woman’s Love, 119;
    • displaced by flirtation, 122;
    • of fate, 170;
    • after marriage, 185;
    • varies, 253;
    • how to overcome, 254;
    • needed in Germany, 285
  • Crimes, against Health and Beauty, 400, 419
  • Criminal types, 324
  • Crinoline craze, the, 376
  • Cross-fertilisation: advantages to Health and Beauty, 8, 318
  • Crossing, 306;
    • a source of Beauty, 318
  • Crowe and Cavalcaselle, 274
  • “Cunning to be strange,” 115
  • Cupid’s arrows, 84
  • Curing Love, art of: 154, 196, 255;
    • absence, 256;
    • travel, 257;
    • employment, 257;
    • contemplation of married misery, 257;
    • of feminine inferiority, 260;
    • focussing her faults, 262;
    • reason versus passion, 263;
    • Love versus Love, 264
  • Curvature, 341, 355, 371, 379, 381, 393, 396, 400, 413, 473, 474
  • Dancing: love-dances of birds, 39, 52;
    • and grace, 364;
    • and courtship, 365;
    • birds, 365;
    • Greeks and Romans, 366;
    • why men no longer care for, 367;
    • evolution of dance-music, 367;
    • dance of Love, 369;
    • ballet, 370
  • Dante, 2, 109, 168, 198, 201, 215, 420
  • Darwin: on flowers and insects, 7;
    • benefactor of animals, 18;
    • birds, 35;
    • animal jealousy, 39;
    • coyness, 40;
    • sexual selection, 43;
    • love charms and calls, 50;
    • birds displaying their ornaments, 53;
    • English Beauty, 145;
    • female tenderness, 150;
    • masculine females, 190;
    • expression of Love, 224;
    • amorous desire for contact, 225;
    • origin of kissing, 229;
    • feminine inferiority, 260;
    • taste, 326;
    • symmetry in nature, 338;
    • bird dances and courtship, 365;
    • Hottentot bustle, or steatopyg, 375;
    • jaws and hands, 409;
    • lip mutilations, 416;
    • expression of emotions, 418;
    • Siamese notions of Beauty, 423;
    • blushing, 427;
    • Albinos, 501;
    • movements of ears, 430, 433;
    • point of, 431;
    • mutilations, 432;
    • the nose, 436;
    • sense of smell, 446;
    • Indian heads, 450;
    • movements of the scalp, 452;
    • complexion, 455;
    • eyebrows, 474;
    • loss of man’s hair, 486
  • Darwinism, new proof for, 389
  • Decrepitude, 334
  • Deformity: fatal to Love, 304;
    • elimination of, 323
  • Degradation: a cause of ugliness, 333
  • Delicacy, 343, 410, 413
  • Depilatories, 492
  • De Quincy: inferiority of feminine imagination, 261
  • Diagnosis of Love, 254
  • Diderot: effects of Love, 242
  • Dimples, 405, 412
  • Disease: kills Love, 304;
    • a cause of ugliness, 334, 341;
    • resulting from tight shoes, 354;
    • from lacing, 380, 381;
    • hollow eyes, 473;
    • and Fashion, 510, 541
  • Display of ornaments, by animals, 52
  • Don Juans, among birds, 36
  • Draughts, stupid fear of, 317
  • Drayton, 167
  • Dress, improprieties of, 380;
    • woman’s for woman, 388;
    • in France, 510
  • Dryden: on Love, 89, 166;
    • Love versus Love, 264
  • Dühring, Dr.: German money-marriages, 282
  • Dürer, 481
  • Ears: a useless ornament, 429;
    • physiognomic theories, 432
  • Eckstein: antiquity of Love, 1
  • Education of Girls, 156;
  • Egypt: Love in, 67
  • Electricity, as a cosmetic, 464, 493, 505
  • Eliot, George: on first Love, 138
  • Elopements, 61, 188
  • Elson, L. C.: Troubadours and Minnesingers, 104
  • Emerson: poetry and science, 9;
    • lovers’ sympathy, 31;
    • on lovers, 134;
    • amorous hyperbole, 163, 165, 241;
    • balm for rejected lovers, 255;
    • ocular expression, 475;
    • Health and Beauty, 533
  • Emotional differentiation, 180
  • Empedokles, 3, 180
  • Engagements, 293;
  • English Beauty, 145;
  • English Love: courtship, 118;
  • Epicures: why handsome, 446
  • Erasmus: kissing in England, 233
  • Erotomania, 222
  • Evolution of Love, 111, 173, 180, 181;
    • of Beauty, 327;
    • of taste, 327;
    • great toe, 359
  • Exaggeration: characteristic of bad taste, 61
  • Exclusiveness: amorous. See Monopoly
  • Exercise: effects on Beauty, 186, 313, 372;
  • Exogamy, 56
  • Expression: improves form of features, 155;
  • Eyes, 164, 262;
    • smiling, 415;
    • the most beautiful feature, 464;
    • colour of, 465;
    • lustre, 469;
    • form, 472;
    • lashes and brows, 474, 503, 483;
    • expression of, 479;
    • movements of iris, 475;
    • of eyeball, 480;
    • of lids, 482;
    • of brows, 484;
    • “making eyes,” 491;
    • dark versus light, 503;
    • Spanish, 516, 517
  • Face, the, 411, 448, 490
  • Factories: unhealthy, 400;
    • whistles, 434
  • Fashion: the Handmaid of Ugliness, 328;
    • a disease, 352;
    • mutilates the feet, 352, 360;
    • frustrates advantages of dancing, 365;
    • prescribes absurd hours, 367;
    • its essence vulgar exaggeration, 375;
    • crinoline craze, 375;
    • wasp-waist mania, 379;
    • lacing, 380;
    • Fashion Fetish analysed, 385;
    • and Darwinism, 389;
    • repeats itself, 389;
    • ludicrous features, 390;
    • masculine, 391, 393;
    • disgusting pictures, 393;
    • deforms the breasts, 395;
    • finger-nails, 406;
    • gloves, 407;
    • right-handedness, 408;
    • teeth, 415;
    • powders and paints, 425, 458, 459;
    • ears, 432;
    • noses, 436, 443;
    • versus Taste, 437;
    • forehead, 431, 450, 451;
    • court-plaster, 452;
    • eyebrows, 474;
    • hollow eyes, 483;
    • mutilates eyes, 485;
    • head-dresses, 494;
    • tyranny of ugliness, 496;
    • in France, 509;
    • and bad manners, 510
  • Fat, cosmetic value of, 120, 132
  • Feet, the: size, 351;
    • fashionable ugliness, 352;
    • tests of Beauty, 354;
    • not enlarged by graceful walking, 362
  • Feminine Beauty: in masculine eyes, 177;
  • Feminine Inferiority, 260, 262, 274
  • Feminine Love: less deep than masculine, 120, 273;
    • desire to please, 159;
    • dynamic, not æsthetic, 178, 253, 303;
    • at thirty, 193;
    • expression of, 224;
    • lessens delicacy, 254;
    • Fichte on, 284, 401
  • Feminine virtues, 98;
    • mediæval culture, 105;
    • cruelty, 150;
    • devotion, 160
  • Femininity, standard of, 290
  • Fichte: feminine Love, 284
  • Fickleness of genius, 210
  • Figuier, 458, 506, 509, 511, 517
  • Figure: a good, inspires Love, 154;
  • Filial Love, 22
  • Finger-nails, 406
  • Fletcher, 167
  • Flirtation and coquetry, 122;
    • definition of, 123;
    • versus coyness, 123;
    • in France, 273;
    • in Spain, 278;
    • Germany, 285;
    • England, 293;
    • with the eyes, 484, 491
  • Flower love and beauty, 7-11
  • Flower, Prof.: walking, 358;
  • Forehead, the, 388, 411;
    • Beauty and brain, 448;
    • fashionable deformity, 450, 496
  • Fragrance, a tonic, 447
  • France: the source of vulgar Fashions, 352
  • Franklin, B.: early marriages, 189;
    • advantages of large families, 189
  • Freckles, not caused by sunshine, 462, 500, 524
  • French Beauty: rare as Love-marriages, 272;
    • feet, 362;
    • ugly fashions, 389;
    • brunettes and blondes, 499;
    • general 506;
    • in America, 510;
    • compared with English, 533
  • French Love: Chivalry, 99;
  • French, T. R.: nose-breathing, 445
  • Freytag, G.: mediæval German marriages, 281
  • Friendship, 24;
    • among animals, 34;
    • female, in Greece, 81, 180;
    • advantages over conjugal love, 258
  • Fringe, 388, 495
  • Gait, graceful, 357, 363;
  • Gallantry: an overtone of Love, 30;
    • among animals, 39;
    • among savages, 66;
    • birth of, in Rome, 91;
    • crazy mediæval, 100, 157;
    • modern, 157;
    • conjugal, 185;
    • extravagant forms of, 221;
    • feminine, 244;
    • flattery in actions, 245;
    • Italian, 274;
    • Spanish, 278;
    • German, 283;
    • American, 298;
    • true, 388;
    • why on the wane, 495
  • Galton: on Coyness, 124;
    • callous feelings, 148;
    • morals and large families, 189;
    • heredity of genius, 201;
    • woman’s senses less delicate than man’s, 261;
    • ancestral influences, 306;
    • criminal types, 324;
    • stature and marriage, 521;
    • change in English physiognomy, 530
  • Gastronomy: cosmetic value of, 446;
  • Gautier, Th.: woman has no sense of beauty, 124
  • Genius: emotional, 2, 90, 110;
    • and Health, 179;
    • and marriage, 197;
    • and Love, 201, 217;
    • modern, abundant, 203;
    • in Love, 204;
    • amorous precocity, 204;
    • ardour, 207;
    • versus rank and money, 209;
    • fickleness, 210;
    • multiplicity, 213;
    • and Monopoly, 214;
    • fictitiousness, 215
  • Georgian women, 60
  • German Beauty: 144;
    • Bavarian corpulence, 385;
    • Brunettes gaining on Blondes, 499;
    • physiognomy, 514;
    • general, 522-528
  • German Love: chivalry, 99;
  • Girls: of the Period, 119;
    • plain, chances of getting married, 154;
    • pretty, apt to be spoiled, 155, 200;
    • wrong education, 156, 261;
    • cages versus nets, 185;
    • hints on men, 187;
    • American and English, 188;
    • best education for, 195;
    • easily duped, 224;
    • in France, 267;
    • Germany, 283;
    • know when they are ugly, 307;
    • should skate, 373;
    • how to acquire a fine figure, 385, 404
  • Gladstone: Greek hair, 496, 498;
  • Godkin, E. L.: true character of milliners, 387
  • Goethe: Elective Affinities, 5;
    • affection for nature, 15;
    • ancient love, 116;
    • first love, 136;
    • intellect and Love, 157;
    • love affairs, 202, 206, 212, 213;
    • unhappy marriages, 258;
    • transitoriness of Love, 287;
    • aversion to noise, 435
  • Goldsmith: on Love, 116, 165;
    • his first love, 211;
    • English Love, 299
  • Grace, where found, 308, 343;
    • of gait, 357;
    • acquired by dancing, 364;
    • destroyed by corsets, 382;
    • movements of the head, 401;
    • French, 507;
    • Italian, 514;
    • Spanish, 518, 520
  • Gradation, 42, 339, 355, 371, 394, 400, 404, 459
  • Grandchildren: sacrificed to money-marriages, 160, 162, 245, 260
  • Gratiolet, 479
  • Greek Beauty, 83;
  • Greek Love, 75, 116, 157, 180, 191
  • Griffin, Sir L.: French women, 506;
    • American women, 536
  • Grose: noses, 437
  • Grote, G.: Platonic love, 80;
    • Greek Beauty, 83;
    • Amazons, 191
  • Gymnastics: among Greeks, 384
  • Gypsy, Spanish, 516
  • Haeckel, Prof., 431, 523
  • Hair: how to wear, 388, 530;
    • on the arm, 403;
    • cause of man’s nudity, 486;
    • how to remove, 491;
    • preserved by Sexual Selection, 492;
    • æsthetic value of, 494;
    • blonde and brunette, 496, 501;
    • red, 503
  • Hamerton, P. G.: Love and age, 138;
    • feminine sympathy, 156;
    • embers of passion, 264;
    • French Love, 267, 271, 272
  • Hammond, Dr. W.: Delirium of Persecution, 220;
    • erotomania, 222
  • Hand, 402, 405, 408
  • Handel, 199
  • Harrison, J. P.: length of first and second toes, 359
  • Hartmann, E. von: pleasure and pain, 168;
    • masculine and feminine Love, 284
  • Hats, tall, 393;
  • Haweis, Mrs.: Fashion versus Beauty, 494;
    • turban, 495;
    • hair-powder, 503
  • Hawthorne, N.: a love-letter, 250;
    • English Beauty, 531;
    • American physique, 538
  • Hawthorne, Julian: German Beauty, 526
  • Haydn, 198, 206
  • Hazlitt, 258
  • Head, the deformities of, 328;
    • and hair, 492
  • Health: correlated with Beauty in flowers, 8, 10;
  • Hebra, Prof.: freckles, 462
  • Hebrews: Love among ancient, 69;
    • sense of beauty, 72;
    • absence of jealousy, 129;
    • beauty and ugliness of, 320;
    • noses, 438, 440
  • Hegel: colour of the skin, 453
  • Heine: flower and butterfly love, 10;
    • the word love, 11;
    • joy and torture, 32;
    • persiflage of coyness, 118, 120;
    • jealousy, 130, 132;
    • on first Love, 137;
    • his marriage, 157;
    • poet for lovers, 170, 202;
    • his first love, 205;
    • his true love, 208;
    • æsthetic love, 211;
    • multiplicity, 213;
    • wedding music, 259;
    • woman’s character, 259;
    • curing Love with Love, 264;
    • French Love, 267;
    • an emotional educator, 286;
    • Italian Beauty, 515
  • Helmholtz: overtones, 29
  • Herder: Love, 71;
    • eyes of great men, 482
  • Heredity: of genius, 201
  • Hetairai, 79
  • Higginson, T. W.: sexual likeness, 174;
    • American physique, 541
  • Hindoo Love maxims, 73
  • History of Love, 67
  • Holland, F. W.: morals and large families, 189
  • Holmes, O. W.: feminine barbarity, 151;
    • refined lips, 419
  • Homer: Helen’s Beauty, 314
  • Honeymoon, 164, 188
  • Horwicz, 16, 21, 240
  • Hottentots: notions of Beauty, 376
  • Howells, W. D.: monogamy, 133;
    • feminine self-abnegation, 259;
    • Italian courtship, 275-276;
    • broken engagements, 300;
    • playful flattery, 301
  • Hueffer, F.: Troubadours, 102
  • Hume: uncertainty augments passion, 124;
    • mixed emotions, 172
  • Humphrey, Dr.: walking, 358
  • Hungarian Beauty, 319
  • Huxley: female education, 261;
    • ape’s foot, 358
  • Hygiene, modern: a source of Beauty, 316;
  • Hyperbole: emotional, an overtone of Love, 32;
    • in ancient Aryan Love, 74;
    • modern, 162-166;
    • after marriage, 184;
    • pathologic analogies, 219, 221;
    • contact, 225;
    • and genius, 243;
    • in America, 301
  • Jaeger, G.: personal perfumery, 446
  • James, Henry: American women, 158;
    • Daisy Miller, 295
  • Japan: jealousy, 129, 133
  • Jaws, the, 408
  • Jealousy: an overtone of Love, 30;
    • among animals, 39;
    • moral mission of, 62;
    • occasional absence among savages, 62;
    • Greek, 77;
    • mediæval, 103;
    • modern, 127-133;
    • retrospective and prospective, 131;
    • aroused by Beauty, 133, 172;
    • conjugal, 184;
    • Oriental, 185;
    • morbid, 221
  • Jeffrey: on Taste, 328;
    • theory of Beauty, 335
  • Jews. See Hebrews
  • Johnson, Dr.: second Love, 135;
    • marriage and Love, 258
  • Jowett, Prof.: Sokrates, love and friendship, 258
  • Kant: women ensnared by counterfeit lovers, 243;
    • value of smiles, 421
  • Karr, A.: Woman’s Love, 259
  • Keats: amorous hyperbole, 163;
  • Kissing, 142, 227;
    • among animals, 227;
    • savages, 228;
    • origin of, 229;
    • ancient, 232;
    • mediæval, 233;
    • modern, 234;
    • love-kisses, 235;
    • art of, 237;
    • varieties of, 414;
    • on the ears, 432;
    • cheeks, 425
  • Knight: Beauty and utility, 336, 340
  • Knille: Italian Beauty, 514
  • Kollmann, Prof.: feminine Beauty, 342;
    • walking, 371;
    • muscular development, 373;
    • gait, 374;
    • breasts, 395;
    • face, 411;
    • nose, 436;
    • hair, 502;
    • results of crossing, 320
  • Koran, the: on woman’s soul, 94
  • Krafft-Ebing: Insanity and Love, 173, 222
  • La Bruyère: how to win love, 244;
    • on use of paint, 459
  • Lacing: fatal to Beauty, 379
  • Lamartine: genius and Love, 210;
    • love-affairs, 252
  • Lamb, Chas.: amorous paradoxes, 166;
    • love-affairs, 212
  • Language of Love: words, 223;
    • facial expression, 224;
    • caresses, 225;
    • kissing, 227
  • La Rochefoucauld: Love and friendship, 26;
    • and absence, 256
  • Lathrop, G. P.: Love-making in Spain, 278;
    • Spanish Beauty, 518
  • Laughter, 421
  • Lavater: chin, 412;
    • ocular lustre, 470
  • Lawson, F. P.: effect of education on Beauty, 324
  • Leanness, 304, 382;
    • how to cure, 384
  • Lecky: on kindness to animals, 18;
    • family affections among Greeks, 75;
    • asceticism and chastity, 93;
    • feminine devotion, 160;
    • southern type of Beauty, 501
  • Lenau: love-letters, 248;
    • music and Love, 257
  • Leo, Judah: on Love, 4
  • Lessing: every woman a shrew, 259
  • Life: prolonged through hygienic care, 316
  • Lips, 227, 231;
    • expression of scorn, 410;
    • refined, 413;
    • lip language, 414;
    • effect on, of æsthetic culture, 419
  • Liszt, 199
  • London, 435
  • Longfellow, 264
  • Love-charms (and calls): among animals, 50;
  • Love-dramas, among flowers, 9
  • Love-maxims: Hindoo, 11
  • Love, Romantic: a modern sentiment, 1, 180;
    • superior to friendship, 26;
    • to maternal love, 27;
    • secures to man the benefits of cross-fertilisation, 28;
    • overtones of, 29;
    • a great moral, æsthetic and hygienic force, 28, 97;
    • among animals, 33;
    • savages, 54;
    • Egyptians, 67;
    • Hebrews, 69;
    • ancient Aryans, 72;
    • more traces of modern in Indian poetry than in Greek and Roman, 73;
    • among Greeks, 75;
    • origin of, 85;
    • among Romans, 86;
    • Mediæval, 92;
    • wooing and waiting, 101;
    • dependent on refinement, 101;
    • maid versus married woman, 105;
    • birth of modern, 109;
    • order of development proved, 111;
    • at the altar, 113;
    • in novels, 113;
    • pleasure of pursuit, 115;
    • value of procrastination, 116, 118;
    • coyness lessens woman’s, 119;
    • masculine deeper than feminine, 120, 259, 272;
    • modern jealousy, 127;
    • passion or admiration, 130;
    • is transient, 135, 180;
    • is first best? 136;
    • Heine on first, 137;
    • first is not best, 137;
    • individual versus the species, 139;
    • coquetry, 142;
    • opposed by rank, 143;
    • intensifies emotions, 147;
    • stimulates social sympathy, 149;
    • selfish aspect of, 151;
    • at first sight, 38, 152;
    • inspired by a fine figure, 154;
    • by sympathy, 156;
    • responsible for general growth of Gallantry, 158;
    • refines men, 159;
    • impels toward self-sacrifice, 159, 161;
    • in France, 162;
    • emotional hyperbole, 162, 175;
    • intoxication of, 163;
    • honeymoon, 164;
    • mixed moods and paradoxes, 166;
    • course of true, 170;
    • lunatic, lover, and poet, 172;
    • and conjugal, 173;
    • individual choice, 174;
    • and culture, 176;
    • idealised by Beauty, 177-180;
    • responsible for Beauty, 177;
    • differs from conjugal, 180;
    • elements of, in conjugal affection, 184;
    • makes men embarrassed, 187;
    • free choice does not always imply Love, 188;
    • eliminates ugly and masculine women, 190;
    • inspired by Beauty, 194;
    • a duty, 196;
    • must be mutual, 196;
    • genius is amorous, 201;
    • a creative impulse, 202;
    • imagined is real, 203;
    • arouses genius, 204;
    • precocious, 204;
    • most intense in men of genius, 208;
    • fickle, 210, 216;
    • loving two at once, 213;
    • “sublimed” by Beauty, 218;
    • pathologic analogies, 218;
    • erotomania, 222;
    • language of, 223;
    • facial expression of, 224;
    • caresses, 225;
    • kissing, 227;
    • how to win, 237-255;
    • feminine, and genius, 242;
    • effects of, 242;
    • compliments, 244;
    • love-letters not necessarily slovenly, 247;
    • extracts from, 247-250;
    • charms for women, 251;
    • masculine, and vanity, 252;
    • opposed to viragoes, 252;
    • proposing, 253;
    • signs and tests of, 254;
    • how to cure, 255;
    • effect of absence on, 256;
    • effects of marriage on, 257;
    • poisoned by humiliation, 263;
    • versus Love, 264;
    • chances of recovery, 265;
    • national peculiarities, 265;
    • massacred in France, 266;
    • Italian, 274, 276;
    • Spanish, 277;
    • German, 280;
    • English, 288, 299;
    • American, 294;
    • a cause of Beauty, 280, 301, 309;
    • points out woman’s sphere, 292;
    • obedience to, a moral duty, 286;
    • Schopenhauer’s theory of, 301-310;
    • sources of, 303;
    • complementary, explanation of, 307;
    • leads to happy marriages, 309;
    • a source of Beauty, 322;
    • displaces cruel Natural Selection, 323, 424;
    • is inspired by grace, 344, 357, 362;
    • more concerned with form than with colour, 347;
    • guided by subtle signs, 349;
    • individualisation and “beauty-spots,” 350;
    • neglects no detail of Beauty, 351;
    • the object of dancing, 365;
    • killed by fashionable deformity, 380;
    • feminine and masculine, 401;
    • maintains æsthetic proportion, 412;
    • related to Health and Beauty, 415;
    • beautifies the face, 324, 418;
    • special expression of, 418;
    • beautifies the lips, 420;
    • the cheeks, 424;
    • and fresh air, 426;
    • and blushes, 429;
    • inspired by a musical voice, 435;
    • beautifies the nose, 440;
    • eliminates high feminine foreheads, 448, 450;
    • method of amorous selection, 458;
    • awakens the sense of beauty, 458;
    • banishes rouge, 459;
    • inspired by eyes, 464, 482;
    • beautifies the eyes, 469;
    • eyebrows, 474, 485;
    • large pupils, 479;
    • musculus amatorius, 482;
    • killed by sunken eyes, 483;
    • preserves the hair, 492;
    • favours brunettes, 305, 497, 529;
    • eye-lashes, 503;
    • and Beauty, 508;
    • favours small women, 520;
    • versus reason, 522;
    • and Beauty in England, 534;
    • sexual differentiation, 541;
    • in America, 541;
    • age of, 542
  • Lovers: selfish bores, 135, 147;
    • quarrels, 170;
    • musician and poet for, 169;
    • falsetto, 224, 436
  • Love-sickness: real, 222
  • Love-stories; none in Greek literature, 76
  • Lubbock, Sir J.: on flowers and insects, 8;
    • absence of certain emotions in savages, 55;
    • kissing, 228
  • Lungs: hygiene of, 398
  • Lustre, 345;
  • Luther: and marriage, 97
  • Lynn-Linton, Mrs.: Girl of the Period, 187
  • Macaulay: Petrarch’s love, 216
  • Madonna, Sistine, 481;
  • Magnus, Dr. Hugo: colour of the eye, 469;
    • lustre, 470;
    • expression, 475;
    • portraits, 481;
    • individuality, 481
  • Manicure secrets, 407
  • Manners: essence of good, 495;
  • Mantegazza: on courtship, 118;
    • caresses, 226;
    • Esquimaux nose, 437;
    • Italian noses, 437, 444;
    • wrinkles, 452;
    • Italian Beauty, 512
  • Manu, laws of: on woman, 72
  • Mariolatry: influence on woman’s position, 97
  • Marlowe: amorous hyperbole, 165;
    • half-kisses, 238
  • Marriage: among animals, 36, 37;
    • Egyptian trial, 68;
    • modern ideal of, 68;
    • in Greece, 78;
    • in Rome, 93;
    • and chivalry, 99, 103;
    • Love versus expediency, 112;
    • maiden versus wife, 115;
    • through accident, 139;
    • men becoming cautious, 156;
    • Love not a motive in France, 162;
    • of men of genius, 164, 197, 199;
    • money versus Beauty, 177;
    • “the sunset of Love,” 181;
    • conditions of happy, 182;
    • nets and cages, 185;
    • of love, versus “reason,” 186, 522;
    • hints, 188;
    • chances for ugly women, 191;
    • age for, advancing, 192;
    • misery of, 257-260;
    • in France, 268;
    • Germany, 281;
    • America, 301;
    • based on Love, 302;
    • and dancing, 367;
    • and noses, 436;
    • and complexion, 459;
    • Albinos, 501;
    • and stature, 521
  • Masculine Beauty: in feminine eyes, 177;
  • Masculine Love; deeper than feminine, 120, 259, 273;
    • coquetry, 142;
    • Gallantry, 158;
    • beautifying impulse, 179;
    • insincerity, 187;
    • comic expression of, 224;
    • won vid Vanity, 252;
    • increases delicacy, 254;
    • versus feminine, 284
  • Masculine vanity, 252
  • Masculine women: eliminated as old maids, 190, 253
  • Massage, 403
  • Maternal Love, 19;
  • Mediæval Love, 92;
    • celibacy, versus marriage, 92;
    • woman’s lowest degradation, 93;
    • negation of feminine choice, 95;
    • Christianity and love, 97;
    • chivalry, militant and comic, 99;
    • poetic, 101;
    • female culture, 105;
    • Personal Beauty, 107;
    • Spenser on Love, 108;
    • Dante and Shakspere, 109
  • Mediæval Ugliness: causes of, 315
  • Meditation beautifies the face, 480
  • Mental culture: a source of Beauty, 324;
  • Middleton, 167
  • Mill, J. S.: female self-denial, 161;
    • companionship in marriage, 184;
    • woman’s sphere, 194
  • Milliners’ cunning, 387
  • Milton, 107, 198
  • Minnesingers, 103
  • Mitchell, Dr. W.: American physique, 538
  • Mitchell, P. C.: monkeys’ kisses, 228
  • Mixed Moods and Paradoxes of Love, 32, 166, 185
  • Mixture of races (see also Crossing): and Love, 508;
  • Modesty: a source of Coyness, 115;
    • and blushes, 164
  • Monogamy: favours the development of Love, 64;
    • in Egypt, 68
  • Monopoly: an overtone of Love, 30;
    • among savages, 63;
    • in ancient Aryan Love, 74;
    • modern, 133-141;
    • and genius, 213;
    • three are a crowd, 221;
    • in Lenau’s love-letters, 249;
    • masculine and feminine Love, 284, 504
  • Montagu, Lady: on woman, 259
  • Montaigne: on marriage, 259;
    • Italian Beauty, 274
  • Moore, T.: genius and marriage, 197, 200;
    • first love, 204
  • Moral impressions: confounded with æsthetic, 479
  • Mormons, 63
  • Mountains: feelings inspired by, 12
  • Mouth: muscles of, 413;
    • self-made, 420
  • Muscles: development of, 303;
    • use and disuse, 327;
    • the plastic material of Beauty, 384;
    • of an athlete, 403;
    • facial, 417;
    • mouth, 418
  • Music: of male birds, does it charm the females? 50;
  • Nationality: and Beauty, 505;
    • and Love, 266
  • Natural Selection: a cause of Beauty, 42 seq.;
  • Neck, 400
  • Negroes: African, strangers to Love, 55;
  • New York: a silly fashion in, 390;
  • Nordau, Max: love in Germany, 176
  • Norton, C. E.: on Dante, 109
  • Nose, the: shape and size, 436;
    • evolution of, 437;
    • Greek and Hebrew, 440;
    • fashion and cosmetic surgery, 442;
    • important functions of, 445
  • Nose-breathing: importance of, 398, 445
  • Novels: Love in, 11
  • Novelty: and first Love, 140
  • Nudity: cause of man’s, 486
  • Odours: cosmetic value of, 446
  • Old Maids, 190
  • O’Rell, Max: French chaperonage, 269;
    • English degraded women, 531
  • Origin of Love, 85
  • Ornamentation: non-æsthetic, 328
  • Ovid: on tricks of Gallantry, 1;
    • rarity of Beauty in Rome, 88;
    • art of making love, 90;
    • Gallantry, 92;
    • conception of Love, 118;
    • enduring a rival, 129;
    • estimate of, 201;
    • loving two at once, 213;
    • how to cure love, 255, 257, 262
  • Paradoxes of Love, 166-173, 210
  • Parasols, 463
  • Pascal: self-conscious lovers, 220
  • Paternal love, 20;
  • Pepys: Spanish wooing, 278
  • Perfume: personal, 446;
    • cosmetic value of, 446
  • Pessimism, erotic, 302, 310
  • Petrarch: as a love-poet, 215
  • Photographs: why inferior to portraits, 348;
    • why so often bad, 482
  • Physiognomy: comparative, 331;
    • ears, 433;
    • colour of the eyes, 478;
    • variety in, and Love, 508;
    • language of passion, 153
  • Pity and Love, 150
  • Planché: wasp-waists, 379
  • Plato: on Courtship, 78, 295;
    • “Platonic” Love, 80;
    • origin of Love, 85;
    • pre-matrimonial acquaintance, 127;
    • mixed mood of love, 168;
    • irrational love, 218;
    • feminine inferiority, 260;
    • Love and Beauty, 322
  • Pleasure and pain, 168
  • Ploss: love-charms, 251;
    • Germanic marriages, 281
  • Plumpness: inspires Love, 304
  • Polish Beauty, 528
  • Polygamy: among animals, 36;
    • conducive to Jealousy, 63;
    • among Hebrews, 69;
    • in India, 72;
    • neutralizes conjugal love, 181
  • Portraits, 348, 480;
  • Pretty: definition of, 521
  • Pride: in paternal love, 22;
    • in Romantic Love, 31;
    • and vanity, 141-145;
    • in conjugal love, 184;
    • masculine vanity, 215;
    • wounded, cures Love, 263
  • Procrastination, 116
  • Proportion, 338;
  • Proposing, 70, 142, 152, 242, 253
  • Prudery, 125, 388
  • Purchase of wives, 58
  • Puritans: sins of, against Health, 419
  • Quadroons: beauty of American, 321;
    • graceful gait, 361
  • Railway whistles, 434
  • Raleigh: deep love, 224, 258
  • Rank: an enemy of Love, 143, 269
  • Raphael: on Beauty, 512
  • Realism: emotional, desirable in novels, 68
  • Reclam, Prof.: dust in lungs, 445;
  • Richardson, W. B.; the ideal city, 316
  • Right-handedness, 408
  • Roberts, Charles: brunettes and blondes, 529
  • Roberts, J. B.: nasal deformities, 444
  • Rochefoucauld, La: women, love, and friendship, 26;
    • pleasure of love, 196
  • Roman Beauty, 88;
  • Roman Love, 86-92
  • Rousseau: on woman’s Love, 120;
  • Rückert: kissing, 236
  • Ruskin: poetry and science, 9;
    • love of dismal scenery, 13;
    • amorous paradoxes, 167;
    • woman’s work, 291;
    • health and beauty, 311;
    • and utility, 311;
    • happiness essential to beauty, 315;
    • intellect beautifies the features, 324;
    • taste of savages, 330;
    • beauty and utility, 332;
    • degradation and ugliness, 334;
    • wild scenery, 337;
    • symmetry, 338;
    • curvature, 341;
    • colour, 345, 347;
    • moderation, 378;
    • expression in the mouth, 410;
    • virtue and Beauty, 421;
    • Greek features, 440;
    • turban, beauty of, 495;
    • southern Beauty, 501
  • Russian old maids, 193
  • Sappho: as a Love-poet, 81
  • Savages: development of maternal love, 20;
    • parental love, irregular, 21;
    • filial love weak, 22;
    • strangers to Romantic Love, 54;
    • inferior to birds, 54;
    • courtship, 56;
    • regard for beauty, 60;
    • Jealousy and Polygamy, 62, 128;
    • Gallantry, 157;
    • masculine women, 174;
    • notions of Beauty, 179, 328;
    • conjugal attachment, 182;
    • kissing, 229;
    • sense delicacy, 231;
    • inferior to us in Health, 312;
    • taste, 327, 409;
    • tests of Beauty, 331, 485;
    • ugliness of, 333;
    • dancing, 365;
    • muscular development, 371;
    • noses, 437;
    • paint, 458
  • Scalp: movements of, 451
  • Scandinavian complexion, 459, 500
  • Scherer: on mediæval German Love, 105
  • Scherr, J.: on witchcraft trials, 94;
    • Wieland in love, 213;
    • Petrarch, 216;
    • mediæval courtship, 239;
    • mediæval Spanish women, 277
  • Schiller: Minnesingers, 104
  • Schopenhauer: on the Will, 3;
    • æsthetic enjoyment, 13;
    • final cause of colour in animals, 50;
    • love at first sight, 152;
    • self-sacrifice, 161;
    • torments, 169;
    • celibacy and genius, 197;
    • genius and woman’s love, 242;
    • unhappy marriages, 259;
    • theory of Love, 301-310;
    • animal Beauty, 332;
    • masculine and feminine beauty, 343;
    • small feet, 354;
    • the unæsthetic sex, 386;
    • noise and culture, 435;
    • noses and marriage, 436, 443;
    • Germans, 523
  • Schumann, R.: 162;
    • love-affairs, 214;
    • on German Beauty, 526
  • Schweiger-Lerchenfeld: Italian women, 275;
    • Spanish love-making, 278
  • Schwenninger cure for corpulence, 383
  • Scotch Beauty, 537
  • Scott, Sir W.: on Dryden and Love, 89;
    • and marriage, 198, 217;
    • masculine vanity, 252
  • Seeley, Prof.: Goethe on Love, 287
  • Selden: marriage, 261
  • Self-sacrifice: an overtone of Love, 31, 131, 157;
  • Sellar, Prof.: Ovid, 201
  • Seneca: Beauty, 259
  • Sensuality and Romantic Love, 76
  • Service for a wife, 58
  • Sex: the unæsthetic, 386;
    • and education, 541
  • Sexual differentiation, 174, 489, 520, 541
  • Sexual Selection (see also Love and Individual Preference): among animals, 44;
    • primitive men, 59;
    • effect on chest, 394;
    • loss of hair, 403, 486;
    • blushes, 426;
    • ears, 429;
    • noses, 440;
    • complexion, 455;
    • eyes, 464, 465;
    • masculine and feminine, 489;
    • preserves hair on head, 492;
    • action uncertain, 493;
    • versus Natural Selection, 542
  • Shakspere: treatment of Love, 2, 111;
    • invests inanimate objects with human feelings, 3;
    • on Beauty, 32;
    • coyness and modesty, 115;
    • woman’s Love, 120;
    • amorous hyperbole, 162;
    • course of true love, 170;
    • what inspires love in women, 178;
    • marriage of, 198;
    • amorous character of, 201;
    • blind love, 202;
    • lunatic and lover, 218;
    • kissing, 236;
    • winning love, 238;
    • refusals, 241;
    • flattery, 244;
    • unsought love, 254;
    • tests of Love, 255;
    • love never fatal, 255;
    • reason as Love’s physician, 263;
    • hereditary Beauty, 322;
    • feet, 351;
    • the beautiful and the characteristic, 410;
    • poet of Love, 421;
    • blushes, 426;
    • expression in the eyes, 475, 483;
    • love inspired by eyes, 482;
    • Blondes and Brunettes, 496, 497
  • Shelley: paradox of Love, 167;
    • loving and being loved, 196;
    • amorous disposition of, 202, 217
  • Shoes: tight, objections to, 353;
    • improvements in, 363
  • Shoulders, the, 400
  • Simcox, G. A.: on Gallantry, 92;
    • mediæval ugliness, 315;
    • noses, 442
  • Sisterly love, 23
  • Skating: effects on Beauty, 373
  • Skin. See Complexion.
  • Sleep: and noise, 317, 434;
    • refreshing, 398
  • Smoothness, 344, 394, 403, 432, 488, 490
  • Soap: should be used in the face, 452, 462;
    • good and bad, 461
  • Solomon’s Song, 70
  • Sources of Love, 303
  • Southey: woman’s faith, 259
  • Southwell, 167
  • Spanish Beauty: feet, 362;
  • Spanish Love: chivalry, 99;
  • Spencer, Herbert: on primitive paternal love, 21;
    • filial love, 22;
    • analysis of Love, 31, 33;
    • money-marriages, 113;
    • woman’s sphere, 195;
    • origin of kissing, 229;
    • irregular mixture of ancestral qualities in children, 306;
    • individuals versus the species, 308;
    • female savages uglier than male, 312;
    • intellectual and physical beauty, 320;
    • evolution of Beauty, 327;
    • muscular power of savages, 371;
    • laziness of savages, 372;
    • masculine Fashion, 392
  • Spenser: Love and friendship, 108
  • Staël, Mme. de: on Beauty and intellect, 32;
    • Love versus parental dictation, 273
  • Stanton, Mrs. E. C., 97
  • Stature and Beauty, 520
  • Stays: for deformed women, 385
  • Steatopyga, 375
  • Steele: kissing, 227;
    • love-letters, 247
  • Stenches and noises, 435
  • Stendhal: Love and age, 138;
    • Love in France, 176;
    • humiliation poisons Love, 263, 266
  • St. Jerome: on the education of girls, 96
  • Stockings: best kind, 363
  • Suckling: lovers’ pallor, 225
  • Suicide: from Love, 121
  • Sunshine: good for the complexion, 454;
  • Surgery, cosmetic, 432, 443
  • Swift: marriage, 185;
    • love-affairs, 210
  • Swiss, the, 525
  • Symmetry, natural tendency to, in flowers, 10, 73, 180, 216
  • Symonds: on Italian Love, 101;
    • formal code of Love, 106;
    • Petrarch, 216;
    • Shelley, 217
  • Sympathy: and affection, 73;
    • an overtone of love, 31, 145-157;
    • development of, 147;
    • in conjugal love, 183
  • Taine, H.: English Beauty and Love, 532 seq.
  • Taste: æsthetic theories of, 327;
  • Teeth: 409, 411, 415;
  • Tennyson: kissing, 235
  • Tests of Beauty: negative, 330;
    • positive, 338
  • Thackeray: advice to lovers, 126;
    • Love, 168;
    • to women, 252;
    • simpering Madonnas, 315;
    • dark heroines, 498;
    • French physique, 506
  • Thaxter, Mrs.: women and birds, 151
  • Thomson, 218
  • Toe, great, evolution of, 359
  • Topinard: early decrepitude of savages, 312;
    • life prolonged in France, 316;
    • crossing, 318, 320;
    • nose, 437;
    • deformed skulls, 450;
    • dark races, 501;
    • French nation, 508
  • Tourgenieff: on a dog’s love, 17;
    • first love, 204
  • Trollope, A.: American Gallantry, 298
  • Troubadours, 102, 221, 222
  • Trousers, 392
  • Turks, 319
  • Tylor, E. B.: the ape’s gait, 357;
    • arms, 402;
    • negro’s finger-nails, 406;
    • blushing, 427;
    • ears, 433;
    • nose, 437;
    • skulls, 450
  • Tyranny of ugly women, 387, 496
  • Ugliness: follows ill-health in animals, 46;
    • in women, 186;
    • no bar to marriage, 191;
    • mediæval, 314;
    • due to simian resemblance, 331;
    • savage features, 333;
    • degradation, 333;
    • decrepitude and disease, 334;
    • tyranny of, 387;
    • due to indolence, 397;
    • a sin, 400;
    • “beauty-spots,” 452
  • Use and disuse, effect of, on organs, 327
  • Utility and Beauty, 332, 336
  • Veils, 463
  • Vice: destroys Beauty, 418, 478
  • Viragoes, 175, 190
  • Virchow, Prof.: Brunettes and Blondes, 499
  • Virgil: Love-episode, 89
  • Vogt, Carl: sexual divergence, 174;
    • negro’s feet, 356;
    • females and animals, 360;
    • thighs, 371
  • Voice, a musical, 435
  • Voltaire: on ancient and modern friendship, 26;
    • standard of taste, 327
  • Wagner, R.: leading motives, literary application of, 114;
    • analogies between Love and music, 140;
    • feminine devotion, 160;
    • marriage, 198;
    • a musical kiss, 237, 330, 414
  • Waist, 378
  • Waitz: Magyars, 319;
    • Chinese complexion, 454, 457;
    • decrease in number of blondes, 498
  • Walker, A.: 259;
    • woman’s gait, 375;
    • French Beauty, 506
  • Walking, 357, 364
  • Wallace, A. R.: on choice exerted by animals, 43;
    • Natural versus Sexual Selection, 43-50;
    • beauty correlated with health in animals, 46;
    • sources of colour in animals, 48;
    • chest of Amazon Indians, 396;
    • hair on arm, 403
  • Waltz: the dance of Love, 369
  • Warner, Chas. D.: women and birds, 151
  • Wasp-waist mania, the, 379, 494
  • Wealth, vulgar display of, 387
  • White, R. G.: blonde type, 497;
    • Viennese Beauty, 528
  • Wieland: love-affair, 213
  • Wife: capture, 57;
    • purchase, 58;
    • service for, 58;
    • capture and coyness, 114;
    • selling, 289
  • Wilde, Oscar, 392
  • Winckelmann: Greek Beauty, 314, 332;
  • Winning Love, art of: 1, 41, 75, 115, 126, 129, 237-255;
    • brass buttons, 238;
    • confidence and boldness, 239;
    • pleasant associations, 239;
    • perseverance, 241;
    • feigned indifference, 241;
    • compliments, 245;
    • Love-letters, 246;
    • for women, 250;
    • proposing, 253;
    • how to meet coyness, 254;
    • spicing flattery with burlesque, 301
  • Witchcraft, trials for, 94
  • Woe, ecstasy of, 168
  • Woman: weak in impersonal emotions, 16;
    • strong in conjugal and maternal love, 19;
    • inferior to man in Romantic Love, 19, 120;
    • prefers manly to handsome men, 60;
    • position in Egypt, 67;
    • among Hebrews, 69;
    • in India, 72;
    • ancient Greece, 77;
    • Rome, 87;
    • mediæval degradation, 93;
    • proverbs about, 96;
    • oasis of culture, 105;
    • position in France, 107;
    • cruelty to birds, 150;
    • intelligent, 155;
    • in public life, 160, 175;
    • loses Beauty prematurely, 186;
    • employment problem, 195, 290;
    • uniform worship, 237;
    • discourages deep Love, 242;
    • inferior to man, 259;
    • Huxley’s ideal, 261;
    • in mediæval Spain, 277;
    • indifferent to loss of Health, and the consequences, 312;
    • superior in Beauty to man, 342;
    • deplorable conservatism, 367;
    • penalty of indolence, 385;
    • has no sense of beauty, 385, 388, 396, 401, 494;
    • needs no stays, 385;
    • deficient in taste, 386;
    • duped by sly milliners, 387;
    • object of dress, 388;
    • needs æsthetic instruction, 389;
    • riding hat, 392;
    • fashion preferred to good manners, 495
  • Wooing. See courtship
  • Woody, S. E.: electrolysis for removing hairs, 494
  • Wrinkles, 406, 451
  • Zimmermann, O.: Ecstasy of woe, 168
  • Zola, 420