CONTENTS.

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CHAPTER PAGE
I. Foreigners 1
II. John Bull up to Date 9
III. Jacques Bonhomme, the Landed Peasant-Proprietor of France 17
IV. Jacqueline, the Fortune of France 27
V. Joseph Prudhomme, the Jog-Trot Middle-Class Frenchman 33
VI. Entertaining Neighbors 47
VII. French Impulsiveness and British Sangfroid Illustrated by Two Reminiscences 53
VIII. English Pharisees and French Crocodiles 57
IX. French and English Social Failures 69
X. High-Life Anglo-French Gibberish as Used in France and England 79
XI. Humor, Wit, and Hibernianism 87
XII. The Mal de Mer 95
XIII. British Philosophy and French Sensitiveness 107
XIV. The French Snob 123
XV. A Success as an Anglophobist. (The Late Marquis de Boissy) 127
XVI. Woman Worship 131
XVII. Faith and Reason 139
XVIII. The Worship of the Golden Calf 153
XIX. Why the French were Beaten in 1870 173
XX. England Works for Herself. The World Owes Her Nothing 177
XXI. The Spirit of Destruction and the Spirit Of Conservatism 183
XXII. Order and Liberty 191
XXIII. The Humors of Politics 209
XXIV. Lords and Senators 225
XXV. What France Has Done to Merit the Respect Of the World 231

ENGLISH PHARISEES AND
FRENCH CROCODILES.


                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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