- 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;
- 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;
- 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, 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;
- Bodenstedt: Oriental women, 185;
- 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;
- Brunette versus Blonde, 305, 496, 513, 520, 526, 529
- Bryant, 254
- BÜchner, L.,
4-h-7.htm.html#Page_102" class="pginternal">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;
- ears, 431;
- odours, 445;
- complexion, 460, 464;
- electricity, 464;
- eyelashes, 484;
- eyes, 485;
- hair, 491;
- scalp, 493;
- colour of eyes, 504;
- fresh air, 513
- 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, 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;
- Troubadours, 102;
- no flirtation, 123, 126;
- grandchildren sacrificed, 162;
- lower classes, 176;
- feminine, at thirty, 193, 196;
- killed by ridicule, 243, 265-274, 341, 508
- 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, 526
- Haydn, 198, 206
- Hazlitt, 258
- Head, the deformities of, 328;
- Health: correlated with Beauty in flowers, 8, 10;
- in animals, 46;
- men and women, 178;
- source of Love, 303;
- source of Beauty, 310-317, 331, 534;
- and delicacy, 344;
- exercise, 372;
- lacing, 380;
- sins against, 419;
- and colour, 347, 453, 458;
- and lustre, 469, 477;
- eyelids, 473;
- and sunshine, 500;
- in Italy, 512;
- England, 534;
- America, 538.
- 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;
- Heredity: of genius, 201
- Hetairai, 79
- Higginson, T. W.: sexual likeness, 174;
- American physique, 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
054@60054-h@60054-h-30.htm.html#Page_534" class="pginternal">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;
- 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,” 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;
- Pessimism, erotic, 302, 310
- Petrarch: as a love-poet, 215
- Photographs: why inferior to portraits, 348;
- 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, <
@60054@60054-h@60054-h-29.htm.html#Page_515" class="pginternal">515
- Surgery, cosmetic, 432,
Errors deemed most likely to be the printer’s have been corrected, and are noted here. The references are to the page and line in the original. The following issues should be noted, along with the resolutions. 27.27 | the lover[’]s concentrated affection | Restored. | 53.20 | at their [b/h]oly places | Replaced. | 53.26 | in displaying their beauty.[’/”] | Replaced. | 55.28 | Letourne[a]u, in his Sociologie | Inserted. | 63.1 | ‘the means of causing enmity’[”] | Probable closing. | 64.11 | monog[o/a]my is the only marital relation | Replaced. | 67.26 | mere passion linked with opportunity.[”] | Added. | 133.44 | Prior[-]ity of discovery | Removed. | 138.12 | as a woman of twenty-eight;[”] | Probable closing. | 138.18 | the gay and thoughtless first love.[”] | Added. | 163.9 | B[i/y]ron really feels | Replaced. | 178.19 | their energy[,] courage, and manly prowess | Added. | 205.1 | really attached since[’/”] | Replaced. | 241.18 | Who listens once will listen twice[;] | Added. | 252.39 | was promptly accepted.[”] | Probable closing. | 271.38 | where they do not marry.[’/”] | Replaced. | 273.19 | And power of love.’[”] | Added. | 272.4 | not knowing wh[e/i]ther she was going? | Replaced. | 285.38 | [“]O love, O fire! once he drew | Added. | 288.30 | but the brigh[t]est of all is this | Inserted. | 323.4 | [‘/“]with the ugly Eros | Replaced. | 393.19 | considered fashionable[.] | Added. | 394.26 | under the arm.[”] | Added. | 406.19 | modified to their advantage[.] | Added. | 407.17 | but glycerine [don’t] agree with every one | Sic | 424.43 | have supplanted natural selection[.] | Added. | 459.34 | An emphatic [“]No” is the answer. | Added. | 487.14 | the ancient Egypt[ai/ia]ns | Transposed. | 506.19 | in these words: [“]National vanity | Added. | 516.6 | the central part of the peni[u/n]sula | Inverted. | 521.39 | [“]A woman’ is fine | Added. | 522.3 | said that [“]Nature did never | Added. | 539.6 | in the atmosphere of New England.[”] | Added. | The punctuation of the Index is occasionally irregular, and has been silently standardized. |
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