269, 270.
Goddard, George A., 1, 274.
Godkin, E. L., Life of, quoted, 1, 17, 115 n.;
J.'s opinion of, 284, 285;
Comments and Reflections, 2, 30;
illness of, 160, 161;
his death, 181;
proposed memorial to, 181, 182;
his home life and his "life against the world," 182;
mentioned, 1, 118, 239, 2, 167.
See Contents.
Godkin, Mrs. E. L., 1, 240, 241, 2, 30, 167.
Godkin, Lawrence, 2, 30.
Goethe, Johann W. von, quoted, 1, 54;
Italienische Reise, 91;
Vischer on Faust, 94;
Gedichte, 2, 176;
mentioned, 1, 104, 107.
Goldmark, Charles, 2, 75, 77.
Goldmark, Josephine, 2, 215.
Goldmark, Pauline, 2, 75, 76, 94. See Contents.
Goldmarks, the, 2, 275.
Goldstein, Julius, 2, 339.
Goodwin, William W., 1, 51.
Gordon, George A., 1, 277.
Grand Canyon of Arizona, 2, 238, 239.
Grandfather Mountain, 1, 316, 317.
Grant, Sir Ludovic, 2, 144.
Grant, Percy, 2, 262.
Grant, Ulysses S., 1, 155.
Gray, John C., Jr., 1, 102, 127, 154, 155, 168, 169, 2, 9, 10, 288.
See Contents.
Gray, Roland, 2, 109.
Great Britain, and Venezuela, 2, 26, 27;
and the Boer War, 140, 141.
And see England.
Greeks, the, 2, 225.
Green, St. John, 2, 233.
Greene, T. H., 2, 237.
Gregor, Mrs. Leigh R. (Margaret Gibbens), 1, 338, 2, 106.
And see Gibbens, Margaret.
Gregor, Rosamund, 2, 275 and n.
Grimm, Herman, his Unüberwindliche Mächte, reviewed by J., 1, 103, 104 and n.;
his arrant moralism, 104;
"suckled by Goethe," 104;
J. dines with, 109 ff.;
his costume, 110;
on Homer, 111;
mentioned, 107, 108, 125.
Grimm, Mrs. Herman (Gisela von Arnim), 1, 111, 116.
Grimm Brothers, 1, 107, 110.
Grinnell, Charles E., 2, 10.
Gryon, Switzerland, 1, 321, 322.
Gurney, Edmund, Phantasms of the Living, 1, 267;
his death, 279;
J.'s regard for, 280 and n.;
mentioned, 222, 229 n., 242, 251, 255, 2, 30.
Gurney, Mrs. Edmund, 1, 279, 287.
Gurney, Ephraim W., 1, 76 n., 151.
Gurney, Mrs. Ephraim W. (Ellen Hooper), 1, 76 n.

Habit, Chapter on, in the Psychology, 1, 297.
Halévy, Daniel, Vie de Nietzsche, 2,
336, 340.
Hall, G. Stanley, quoted, 1, 188, 189, 307;
his new Journal, 2, 210, 217;
mentioned, 1, 255, 269, 2, 327.
Hallucinations, Census of. See Census.
Hamilton, Alexander, 1, 5.
Hamilton, Sir W., 1, 189.
Hampton Court, 1, 287.
Hapgood, Norman, 2, 264.
Harris, Frank, The Man Shakespeare, 2, 330, 335, 336.
Harris, William T., 1, 201, 202, 204.
Hartmann, Karl R. E. von, 1, 191, 2, 293.
Harvard Medical School, in the sixties, 1, 71 ff.;
and the Medical License Bill, 2, 67.
Harvard Psychological Laboratory, beginning of, 1, 179 n.;
Münsterberg in charge of, 301, 302.
Harvard Summer School, 2, 4.
Harvard University, beginning of J.'s service in, 1, 165;
courses in philosophy offered by, 191;
Hegelism at, 208;
contrasted with German universities, 217, 218 and n.;
Department of Philosophy, J. on the future of, 317, 318;
J.'s new courses at, 2, 3, 4;
routine business of professors, 45 and n.;
a possible genuine philosophic universe at, 122;
confers LL.D. on J., 173 and n.;
J. resigns professorship at, 220, 266 and n.;
Roosevelt as possible President of, 232 and n.
Havens, Kate, 1, 85 n.
Hawthorne Julian, Bressant, 1, 167.
Hay, John, 1, 251.
Hegel, Georg W. F., Aesthetik, 1, 87;
mentioned, 202, 205, 208, 305.
Hegelianism (Hegelism), at Harvard, 1, 208;
in the Psychology, 304 and n., 305;
mentioned, 2, 237.
Hegelians, 1, 205.
Heidelberg, 1, 137.
Helmholtz, H. L. F. von, Optics, 1, 266;
mentioned, 72, 119, 123, 137, 224, 225, 347.
Helmholtz, Frau von, 1, 347.
Henderson, Gerard C., 2, 275.
Henry, Joseph, 1, 7.
Henry, Colonel (Dreyfus case), 2, 98.
Herder, Johann G. von, 1, 141.
Hering, Ewald, 1, 212.
Hewlett, Maurice, Halfway House, 2, 340.
Heymans, G., Einführung in die Metaphysik, 2, 237 and n.
Hibbert Foundation lectures (Manchester College), 2, 283, 284.
Hibbert Journal, 2, 313, 348,
Higginson, Henry L., takes charge of J.'s patrimony, 1, 233;
and the Harvard Union, 2, 108 and n.;
mentioned, 9, 10, 181, 191, 261, 287, 329.
See Contents.
Higginson, James J., 1, 102, 127.
Higginson, Storrow, 1, 35.
Higginson, T. W., 2, 191.
Hildreth, J. L., 1, 275, 277.
Hildreth, Mrs. J. L., 1, 276.
Hoar, George F., 2, 191.
Hobhouse, L. T., and "The Will to Believe," 2, 207, 209;
mentioned, 282. See Contents.
Hodder, Alfred, 2, 14.
Hodges, George, 2, 276,
Hodgson, Richard, death of, 2, 242, 258;
his work and character, 242;
and Mrs. Piper, 242;
J. investigates Mrs. Piper's claim to give communications from his spirit, 286, 287;
J.'s report thereon, 317, 319, 324;
mentioned, 1, 228, 229 n., 254, 281.
Hodgson, Shadworth H., "Time and Space," 1, 188;
"Theory of Practice," 188;
"Philosophy and Experience," and "Dialogue on the Will," 243-245;
mentioned, 143, 191, 202, 203, 204, 205, 208, 222.
See Contents.
Höffding, Harold, 2, 216.
Holland, Mrs. See Mediums.
Holmes, O. W., 1, 71.
Holmes, O. W., Jr., 1, 60, 73, 76, 80, 154, 155, 2, 10, 51.
See Contents.
Holmes, Mrs. O. W., Jr. (Fanny Dixwell), her "panel" and its inscription, 2, 156 and n., 157.
Holt, Edwin B., 2, 234.
Holt, Henry, 2, 18. See Contents.
Holt, Henry, & Co., J. contracts to write volume on Psychology for, 1, 194.
Homer, 1, 111.
Hooper, Edward W., 2, 156.
Hooper, Ellen, 1, 76 and n.
Hooper, Ellen (Mrs. John Potter), 2, 275.
Hooper, Louisa, 2, 275.
Hopkins, Woolsey R., describes accident to H. James, Senior, 1, 7, 8.
Horace Mann Auditorium, 2, 17.
Horse-swapping, 1, 271.
House of Commons, 1, 345, 346.
Howells, W. D., Indian Summer, 1, 253;
Shadow of a Dream, 298;
Hazard of New Fortunes, 298, 299;
Rise of Silas Lapham, 307;
Minister's Charge, 307, 308;
Lemuel Barker, 308;
Criticism and Fiction, 308;
mentioned, 1, 158, 2, 10.
See Contents.
Howells, Mrs. W. D., 1, 253, 298, 299.
Howison, George H., 1, 239 n., 304, 2, 78.
See Contents.
Hugo, Victor, Les Misérables, 1, 263;
La Légende des Siècles, 2, 63;
mentioned, 1, 90, 2, 51.
Huidekoper, Rosamund, 2, 275.
Humanism, 2, 245, 282.
Humboldt, H. A. von, Travels, 1, 62.
Humboldt, W., letters of, 1, 141.
Hume, David, 1, 187, 2, 18, 123, 165.
Hunnewell, Walter, 1, 68.
Hunt, William M., 1, 24.
Hunter, Ellen (Temple), 2, 258, 262.
Huxley, Thomas H., J. quoted on, 1, 226 n.;
his Life and Letters, 226 n., 2, 248;
mentioned, 2, 218.
Hyatt, Alpheus, 1, 31.
Hyslop, James H., 2, 242, 287.

Ideal, the, 1, 238.
Idealism, Absolute, Royce's argument for, 1, 242.
Immortality, 1, 310, 2,
214, 287.
Imperialism, 2, 74.
Indians, in Brazil, 1, 66, 67, 70.
Indifferentism, 1, 238.
Insane, proposed national society to improve condition of, 2, 273, 274.
Intellectualism, 2, 291, 292.
Italian language, 1, 341, 2, 222.
Italy, 1, 175, 180, 181.

Jacks, L. P., 2, 339, 348.
Jackson Henry, 1, 274, 275.
Jacobi, Friedrich H., 1, 141.
James, Alexander R. (J.'s son), 2, 37, 43, 92. See Contents.
James, Alice (J.'s sister), her diary quoted, 1, 16;
in England with H. James, Jr., from 1885 on, 258;
her illness, 258, 259, 284;
her diary quoted, 259 n.;
quoted, on J.'s European trip in 1889, 289, 290;
her death, 319;
mentioned, 18, 47, 60, 69, 91, 103, 142, 172, 183, 217, 220, 281, 285, 286, 2, 127.
See Contents.
James, Mrs. Catherine (Barber), third wife of W. James I, (J.'s paternal grandmother), "a dear gentle lady," 1, 6;
her house in Albany, 105;
mentioned, 4, 5 n., 7.
James, Garth Wilkinson (J.'s brother), wounded at Fort Wagner, 1, 43, 44, 49;
mentioned, 1, 17, 33, 35, 36, 40, 41, 42, 51, 52, 60, 69, 70, 88, 135 n., 136, 192.
James, Henry, Senior (J.'s father), quoted, on his father, 1, 4,
his grandfather, 5,
and his mother, 5 and n.;
his habit of thought expressed in his description of his mother, 5 n.;
sketch of his life and character, 7-19;
maimed for life by accident, 7, 8;
his discontent with orthodox dispensation, 8;
marries Mary Walsh, 8;
J.'s striking resemblance to, 10;
relations with his children, 10, 18, 19;
J.'s introduction
to his Literary Remains, 10, 13;
letters of, to Emerson, 11;
effect of Swedenborg's works on, 12;
the only business of his later life, 1 2, 13;
J.'s
estimate of, 13;
Henry James quoted on, 14;
letter of, to editor of New Jerusalem Messenger, 14-16;
his directions regarding his funeral service, 16;
Godkin quoted on, 17;
E. W. Emerson quoted on, 17, 18 and n.;
and Miss Emerson, 18 n.;
influence of his "full and homely idiom" on the conversation of his sons, 18;
his philosophy, discussed by J., 96, 97;
his essay on Swedenborg, 117;
letter of, to Henry James, 169;
dangerously ill, 218;
J.'s last letter to, 218-220;
his Secret of Swedenborg, 220;
his death, 221;
J.'s memories of, 221, 222;
his mentality described, 241, 242;
compared with Carlyle, 241;
mentioned, 2, 6, 7, 27, 36, 53, 68, 80, 92, 103, 104, 115 and n., 118, 135 n., 153, 157, 158 and n., 175, 217, 260, 289, 290, 316, 2, 39, 278.
See Contents.
Literary Remains of, edited by J., 1, 4 and n., 5 n., 10, 13, 236, 239, 240, 241.
James, Mrs. Henry, Senior (Mary Walsh), (J.'s mother), her character, 1, 9;
her death, 218;
mentioned, 8, 69, 80, 103, 117, 156, 175, 183, 219, 220. See Contents.
James, Henry, Jr. (J.'s brother), impressions of an elder generation reflected in The Wings of the Dove, 1, 7;
and his mother, 9; his birth, 9;
quoted, on his father, 14;
influence of his father's "idiom" on his speech, 18;
at the Collège de Boulogne, 20;
early secret passion for authorship, 21;
his "meteorological blunder," 21; quoted, on J., as "he sits drawing," 22, 23;
letter of his father to, 169;
his feeling for Europe, 209;
its reaction on him and on J., contrasted, 209, 210;
described by J., 288;
his "third manner" of writing criticized by J., 2, 240, 277-279;
his paper on Boston, 252;
mentioned, 1, 17, 25, 33, 36, 40, 41, 45, 51, 53, 68, 70, 76, 80, 90, 94, 95, 99, 100, 115, 117, 118, 136, 138, 141, 148 n., 174, 175, 177, 178, 180, 218, 219, 240, 258, 260, 262, 269, 283, 284, 286, 287, 289, 290, 319, 2, 10, 35, 61, 62, 84, 105, 106, 110, 161, 167, 168, 169, 170, 192, 193, 215, 224, 250, 280, 315, 333, 335, 338, 341, 350.
See Contents.
Works of: The American, 1, 185;
The American Scene, 2, 264, 277, 299;
The Bostonians, 1, 250, 251, 25 2, 253;
The Golden Bowl, 2, 240;
Notes of a Son and Brother, 1, 10, 11 n., 24, 32, 36, 135 n.;
Partial Portraits, 280;
The Portrait of a Lady, 36;
Princess Cassamassima, 251;
The Reverberator, 280;
Roderick Hudson, 184;
W. W. Story, Life of, 27 n.;
The Tragic Muse, 299;
A Small Boy and Others, 4 n., 8 n., 9, 10, 14, 20, 21, 22, 23;
The Wings of the Dove, 7, 36, 2, 240.
James, Henry, 3d (J.'s son), 1, 275, 278, 279, 282, 329, 330, 336, 343, 2, 30, 31, 84, 129, 143, 145, 147, 159, 324.
See Contents.
James, Hermann (J.'s son), birth of, 1, 234, 235; death of, 247.
James, Margaret M. (J.'s daughter), birth of, 1, 267;
mentioned, 275, 276, 279, 281, 322, 332, 336, 2, 43, 54, 98, 102, 110, 130, 191.
See Contents.
James, Robertson (J.'s brother), in Union army, 1, 43, 44;
mentioned, 17, 33, 41, 43, 52, 60, 69, 70, 81, 136.
James, William, J.'s grandfather, his career, from penury to great wealth, 1, 2, 3;
a leading citizen of Albany, 3;
personal appearance, 3;
anecdotes of, 3, 4;
H. James, Senior, quoted on, 4;
his stiff Presbyterianism and its results, 4;
his will disallowed by court, 4, 6;
marries Catherine Barber, 4.
James, William, (J.'s uncle), 1, 6.
James, William.
His ancestors in America, 1, 1;
recurrence of his father's habit of thought in, 5 n.;
and his mother, 9;
resemblance of, to his father, 10;
quoted, on his father, 13;
influence of his father's "idiom," 18 and n.;
frequent changes of schools and tutors, 19;
in Europe, 1855 to 1858, 19;
at the Collège de Boulogne, and the "Academy" of Geneva, 20;
quoted, on his education, 20;
interest in exact knowledge, 20;
begins study of anatomy at Geneva, 21;
his cosmopolitanism of consciousness, 22;
widely read in three languages, 22;
effect of his early training, 22;
takes up painting, 22-24;
portrait of Katharine Temple, 24;
physique, personal appearance and dress, 24, 25;
temperament and conversation, 26;
"smiting" quality of his best talk, 27;
keen about new things, 28;
disadvantage
of being too encouraging to "little geniuses," 28, 29;
freer criticism of those who had arrived, 29;
influence as a teacher at Harvard, 29, 30;
in Lawrence Scientific School, 31 and n.;
physical condition keeps him out of army in Civil War, 47;
transfers from Chemistry to Comparative Anatomy, 47;
and Jeffries Wyman, 48, 49;
begins course at Medical School, 53;
philosophy begins to beckon, 53;
joins Agassiz's expedition to the Amazon, 54;
his nine months with Agassiz not wasted, 55, 56;
has small-pox at Rio, 60, 61, 63 and n.;
interne at Mass. General Hospital, 71;
again in Medical School, 71-84.
Impaired health causes his visit to Germany, 84, 85;
in Dresden, Berlin and Teplitz, 85, 86;
describes his condition in letter to his father, 95, 96;
returns to U. S., 139;
takes degree of M.D. (1869), 140;
eye-weakness, 140, 141;
scope of his reading, 141, 142 and n., 143;
his note-books, 143, 144;
relation between earlier and later writings, 144 and n.;
morbid depression, 145;
chapter on the "sick soul" the story of his own case, 145-147;
return of resolution and self-confidence, 147, 148;
Instructor in Physiology, 165;
his real subject, physiological psychology, 165, 166;
his deepest inclination always toward philosophy, 166;
H. James, Senior's, letter on the change in J.'s mental tone and outlook, 169, 170;
decides to devote himself to biology, 171;
Europe again, 171;
end of the period of morbid depression, 171;
gives course in Psychology and organizes Psychological Laboratory, 179 and n,;
contributions to periodicals, 180;
on teaching of philosophy in American colleges, 189 ff.
Marries Alice H. Gibbens, 192;
effect of his new domesticity, 193;
importance of his wife's companionship and understanding, 193;
contracts to write a volume on Psychology, 194;
vacations in Keene Valley, 195;
his mode of life there, 195;
a bit of self-analysis, 199, 200;
first work on Psychology, 203, 223;
declines invitation to teach at Johns Hopkins, 203;
in Europe, 1880-83, 208 ff.;
and Henry James, 209, 210;
"reaction" on Europe, 209, 210;
death of his mother, 218, and of his father, 221;
his memories of them, 221, 222;
corresponding member of English Society for Psychical Research, 227;
an organizer and officer of the American Society, 227;
investigates psychic phenomena, 227 ff.;
conducts American Census of Hallucinations, 228, 229;
edits his father's Literary Remains, 236, 239 ff.;
his life at Chocorua, 271, 272, 273.
Abroad in 1889, 286 ff.;
at International Congress of Physiological Psychology, 288, 289, 290;
his new house in Cambridge, 290, 291;
his inclination toward the under-dog, 292, 293, 2, 178;
completion of the Psychology, 1, 293 ff.;
effect of its publication on his reputation, 300;
prepares an abridgment (Briefer Course), 300, 301;
turns his attention more fully toward philosophy, 301;
raises money for Harvard Laboratory, 301, and recommends Münsterberg as its head, 301;
his sabbatical year abroad, 302, 320 ff.;
beginning of his friendship with Flournoy, 320;
receives honorary degree at Padua, 333.
How his mind was moving during the nineties, 2, 2 ff.;
his opinion of psychology, 2;
new courses at Harvard, 3, 4;
outside lecturing, 4;
would devote his thought and work to metaphysical and religious questions, 5;
frustrations, 5, 6;
personal appearance, 6, 7;
his daily round, 7-9;
the Club, 9, 10;
nervous break-down, 10;
D. S. Miller quoted on, 11-17;
attitude toward spelling reform, 18, 19;
and Cleveland's Venezuela Message, 26 ff.;
experiments with mescal, 35, 37;
Chautauqua lectures, 40 ff.;
work on college committees, 45 n.,
at Faculty meetings, 45 n.,
lectures at Lowell Institute, 54 and n., 55;
invited to deliver Gifford Lectures at Edinburgh, 55;
Blood's strictures on his English, 59;
on a proposed Medical License bill, 66 ff.;
on the Spanish War, 73, 74;
corresponding member of Académie des Sciences Morales et Politiques, 75;
a memorable night in the Adirondacks, 75-77.
Effect on his health of misadventures in the Adirondack, 78, 79, 90, 91;
two years of exile and illness, 92 ff.;
an individualist and a liberal, 93;
opposed to Philippine policy of McKinley administration, 93, 94;
his teaching limited to a half-course a year, 171;
lectures and contributions to philosophic journals, 171;
strain on his strength, 171;
the spirit in which he did his work, 172, 173;
receives LL.D. from Harvard, 173 and n.;
replies to Prof. Pratt's Questionnaire, 212-215;
at Philosophical Congress at Rome, 219, 220, 225 ff.;
lectures at Stanford University, 220, 235, 240, 244 and n.;
and the San Francisco earthquake, 220, 246 ff.;
Pragmatism, 220;
resigns his professorship, 220, 266 and n.;
the last meeting of his class, 220, 221, 262.
Declining health, 283, 333;
lectures on Hibbert Foundation at Oxford, 283, 284;
uncompleted projects, 284;
his attitude toward war, 284, 285, and universal arbitration, 285;
tolerance fundamental in his scheme of belief, 286;
his report on "Mrs. Piper's Hodgson control," 286, 287;
last months in Europe, 333 ff.;
farewell to Harvard Faculty, 334;
returns to Chocorua, 350;
the end, 350.
Letters containing moral counsel, or touching upon problems of Belief, 2, 57, 65, 76, 77, 149, 150, 196, 197, 210, 211, 212-215, 269, 326, 344-346;
Conduct, 1, 77-79, 100, 128 ff., 148, 199, 200, 2, 131, 132; Life and Death, 1, 218-220, 309-311, 2, 130, 154.
Works of:—
"Address of the President before the Society for Psychical Research," 2, 30 and n.
"Bain and Renouvier," 1, 186.
Briefer Course (abridgment of the Principles of Psychology), 1, 300, 301, 304, 314.
"Brute and Human Intellect," 1, 180.
"Certain Blindness in Human Beings, A," 2, 5.
Collected Essays and Reviews, 1, 225 n., 2, 20 n., 287, 295 n.
"Confidences of a Psychical Researcher," 2, 327 and n.
"Dilemma of Determinism, The," 1, 237 and n., 238.
"Does Consciousness Exist?" See "Notion de Conscience, La."
"Energies of Men, The," 2, 252, 284.
"Feeling of Effort, The," 1, 207.
"Frederick Myers's Service to Psychology," 2, 151 and n.
"German-American Novel, A." 1, 104 n.
Gifford Lectures on Natural Religion, J. invited to deliver, 2, 55;
preparing for, 85, 92, 93;
delivered, 144 ff.;
success of, 147, 149, 150, 151;
outline of, 150;
published as Varieties of Religious Experience, 169;
mentioned, 75, 96, 97, 105, 108, 111, 115, 127, 134, 2, 162, 164, 165.
And see Varieties of Religious Experience, infra.
"How Two Minds can Know One Thing," 2, 217 and n.
Human Immortality, 2, 180 and n.
"Introspective Psychology, On Some Omissions of," 1, 230.
"Knight-Errant of the Intellectual Life, A," 2, 107 n.
Lowell Institute Lectures, 2, 54 and n., 55.
Meaning of Truth, The, 2, 20 n., 327.
Memories and Studies, 1, 153, 226 n., 229 n., 2, 39 n., 59 n., 107 n., 151 n., 193, 247, 285 n., 287, 327 n.
"Moral Equivalent of War, The," 2, 284.
"Notion de Conscience, La," 2, 226 and n., 267 and n.
"Perception of Space, The," 1, 266 n.
"Perception of Time, The," 1, 266.
"Philosophic Reveries," 2, 339.
"Philosophical Conceptions and Practical Results," 2, 5.
Philosophy, Some Problems of, 1, 144 n., 186.
Pluralistic Mystic, A. (lectures on Hibbert Foundation), 2, 39 n., 300, 311, 313, 322, 324, 325, 326, 339.