Titles of Articles are printed in heavy type.
Abram, A., English Life and Manners in the Later Middle Ages; Social England in the Fifteenth Century, 140, 145, 146, 149 Agadir incident, 6-8
American Note on British blockade, &c., 158 et seq.
American Presidential Election. See under Presidential Austria-Hungary, 386
Balfour's, Mr., Gifford Lectures, 59; Germanism in philosophy, 59-60; the central contentions in Mr. Balfour's lectures, 61, 69; the ultimate conclusion, 61; Mr. Balfour's love of paradox, 62 et seq.; rational and non-rational causes of belief, 62-4; views on the history of thought, 66; phil- osophy and the changes of modern times, 68; the first meeting of the Synthetic Society, 70-1 ; Naturalism and human reason, 71; natural selection and the higher powers in man, 71; Mr. R. H. Hutton's addition to Mr. Balfour's argument, 72-3; an addition to his argument for Theism, 73-8; the argument of Prof. James Ward in Faith and Science, 79–80; Naturalism and conscience, 81-2 Balkan States, the, and Macedonia, 36 et seq.
Barrès, Maurice, L'Âme Française
et la Guerre, 1, 8, 11-12; on the murder of Jaùres, 11-12 Barrès, Maurice, The Ideas of, 83; the fall of the naturalist school in French literature, 83; Barrès, politician and man of letters, 84; Barrès' philosophy, 85 et seq.; his curiosity: the meaning of the Culte du Moi, 87; his spiritual birth, 87; Sous l'Eil des Bar- bares, 88-9; Barrès' metaphysical romanticism, 90; Un Homme Libre, 91; Le Jardin de Bérénice, 93; the formula of Barrès' tra- ditionalism, 93; his philosophy essentially realist, 94; political activities, 94; succeeds Déroulède
VOL. 223. NO. 456.
as president of the Ligue des Patriotes Français, 94; attitude to Catholicism, 94 et seq.; his influence in the Catholic reaction, 95, 96; influence in France, 99 Barrès, Maurice, Œuvres de, 83 Beaconsfield, Lord, 36, 37 Belgian fugitives into Holland, 269 Bérard, V., La Turquie et L'Hellén- isme Contemporain, 21
Bismarck's peace conditions, 376, 377
Blake, William, 229
Bland, A. E., Brown, P. A., and Tawney, R. H., English Economic History, 140
Bland, J. O. P., The Restoration of Monarchy in China, 100 Board of Trade, the, 53 Byron, Lord, 229
Canning and the Greek insurrection, 29, 30, 35
Carlyle and Kultur, 15 Cassavetti, D. J., Hellas and the Balkan Wars, 21
Chambers of Commerce and the advancement of British trade, 52 Channel Tunnel, the, 237 China, The Restoration of Mon- archy in, 100; China's aloof- ness from Europe's war, 100; Chinese people's persistence of faith in their own system of moral philosophy, 101; the revolution of Young China and the collapse of the Manchu dynasty, 101-2; Yuan Shih-k'ai's struggle for the maintenance of the throne, 102, 108, 109; the establishment of the Republic, 102-3; Republic- anism no remedy for China's economic unrest, 104; Yuan's statecraft, 104 et seq.; his attitude to the arts and sciences of the West, 109, 110; abolition of the classical essay system of examina- tion, 109; abolition of the opium traffic, 110; Yuan's efforts to win the support of scholars, 110 et seq.; direction of affairs by the army the dominating feature of
the situation, III; agitation for return to monarchical system a matter of loaves and fishes, III; opposition to Yuan's accession, III-4; the published opinions of Liang Ch'i-ch'ao, 111-4; Yuan's policy and the needs of the country, 114; the reaction from Repub- licanism, 114; Yuan's capacity for autocratic rulership, 115: difficult problems confronting his statecraft, 115; attitude of the Princes and Manchu dignitaries towards the monarchical move- ment, 115-6; Yuan and the military forces, 116-7; danger of assassination, 117; danger of foreign intervention, 117-8; mon- archical restoration and economic causes, 118; effect of the abolition of the Confucian system of educa- tion, 118-9; the 'expectant' class, 119-20; reorganisation of the pub- lic services, 120; development of China's economic resources, 120 Colonisation, Systematic, 244; the genius of the English people creative and constructive, 244; the steady stream of emigration, 244 a great war is followed by great colonising activity, 245; destruction of life in the present war, 246; displacement of normal social forces, 246; social and economic consequences of the in- creased employment of women, 246; losses in the war, 247; the excess of births over deaths, 248; employment after the war, 248; the disbandment of the army, 249; the gulf between emigration and colonisation, 249; objections to colonisation, 250; the problem from the standpoint of the new colony, 250; colonisa- tion must be systematic, 251: examples of the haphazard and the systematic methods, 251; the Wakefield settlements in Australia and New Zealand, 252-5, 264; requirements of systematic colo- nisation, 255; first essential is land, 255; tropical colonisation, 255-6; North Australia, 256; the temperate countries, 257: West Australia, Canada, Rhodesia, 257-8; conditions surrounding a colony in the making, 258-9; complete local self-government essential, 259-60; systematic colo- nisation undertaken by the State, 260-I ;
colonisation by private
enterprise, 261; trading and colo- nising companies, 261-5; sugges- tions as to working of a colonising company, 262-5; essential condi- tions with regard to land, 263-4 Cox, Harold, Industrial Recon- struction, 393; Political Recon- struction, 195 Crete, 28, 37, 40
Declaration of London, The, 168 de Montmorency, J. E. G., The Psychology of Sumptuary Ideals, 140
East India Company, The, 261, 262 Ellis, Havelock, The Psychology of the English, 223
English, The Psychology of the. See Psychology
Enquête sur la Jeunesse, 1, 8 Europe, reconstruction of, 384 et seq.
Faguet, M. Emile, quoted, 8 Foster, W., The Decline of Parlia- ments, 304
France, The Unity of, I; the fallacy of a New France, 1-2, 3, 16, 20; superficial character of decadence and levity, 2, 9; apparent want of harmony in political and social aims, 2-3; the evolution of the France of to-day, 3 et seq.; Renan on the radical error of Teutonism, 4-5; increasing tendency towards energy of action among young men, 5; Agadir incident: the awakening of the national con- science, 6-8, 12; reaction against the excess of intellectualism, 7-8; resuscitation of intelligence, ac- tivity and probity, 9, 20; lack of unity, 9; apparent triumph of anti-militarism, 9; M. Gustave Hervé the anti-militarist move- ment, 9-11, 17; hypocrisy of the German Socialists, 10-11; the murder of Jaurès, 11-12, 18; Eugenie de Guérin, 12; Charles Peguy, 13-16, 20; Peguy and Carlyle an unlucky parallel, 15; durability of the union, 17 et seq.; military patriotism a source of practical unity, 17; the Comte de Mun, 17-18; intellectual basis of the unity of France, 18; the present unity not a breach of continuity, 19, 20
Free Trade Symposium, A, 284; theoretic equality of treatment between individuals, classes and interests, 285; trade manipula-
tion as peace strategy, 285, 289; influence of Free Trade on our position for war, 286, 297; the greatest profit and the greatest national advantage, 286-8; the case against laissez faire, 286, 287; the shortage of merchant shipping, 287; subsidies, 288-90, 298; manufacture for export, 289, 301; key industries, 290, 299; Indian Railway Company contracts, 290-1; quality of pro- tected products, 291-3; the war's beneficial effects on character, 292; intensive national economy, 293- 4 summary of the argument, 294-5; policy of free imports and the growth of export trade, 296; tariffs as a sumptuary weapon, 300; tariffs and industrial re- covery after the war, 301; State encouragement of production, 302; nature of our new fiscal policy, 302; tariff policy of Germany and America, 302-3; Free Trade and our mercantile marine and navy, 303
French Revolution and emigration, 245 note
George, Mr. Lloyd, and the Ministry
of Munitions, 182, 183
German business activities, spirit of patriotism in, 48
German character, 122, 126, 132, 375 German colonies after the war, 255, 391
Germany, peaceful commercial pene-
tration policy of, 44 (see also under Holland); preparation for dumping by, 44
Gifford Lectures, Mr. Balfour's. See Balfour
Gladstone, Rt. Hon. W. E., 32, 33, 36
Gosse, Edmund, The Unity of France,
Greece. See under Hellenic
Grey, Sir Edward, 379 Gribble, Francis, Luxemburg and the War, 121; The Danger for Holland, 266
Gueshoff, I. E., The Balkan League, 39
Haggard, Sir Rider, conference with Queensland Government on land settlement after the war, 257 Hellenic Factor in the Problem of the Near East, 21; Greece as the nursling of the Entente Powers, 21; sentimental considerations in the policy of Great Britain and
France, 22, 23; persistence of ancient tradition in modern Greece, 22, 23; an infusion of Slavonic blood in the Greek nation, 23; the Greek insurrection, 23 et seq. passim ; Napoleon gives the impulse to the development of nationalism, 24; national senti- ments in the Turkish Empire, 24, 25; the Serbian revolt, 24; rapid decadence of the Turk, 25; Russia and the Eastern Question, 25; Turkish methods of government, 26; elements in the preservation of Greek nationality, 26; the Or- thodox Church under Ottoman
rule, 27; the Philiké Hetairia, 27-8; events of the Greek insurrection, 28; foreign inter- vention, 28; attitude of Russia and Great Britain, 29; the Treaty of London, 30; Navarino, 30; declaration of independence, 31; King Otto, 31-2; a king from Denmark, 32, 33; cession of the Ionian Isles, 32-3; revision of the Constitution, 33-4; parlia- mentary government in Greece, 34; territorial delimitations of Greece, 36 et seq.; Thessaly and Epirus, 36-7; Crete, 37; Lord Beaconsfield's attitude to Greece, 36-37; coup d'état by a Military League 38; the work of Venizelos, 38, 39; Macedonia, 39, 40; military success of the Greeks in the Balkan Wars, 39; Greece's hesitating policy, 40
Hervé, Gustave, 9, 12 passim, 18; La Patrie en Danger, 1, 9 Hogarth, D. G., The Balkans, 21, 31 Holland, The Danger for, 266;
German views as to Holland, 266– 7, 269; military precautions of Holland, 268, 269; state of mind of the Dutch in August 1914, 268-9; the danger in peaceful commercial penetration, 270; feeling against Germans in France, Belgium and the allied countries, 271; neutral attitude to peaceful penetration, 272; the obvious outlets for the Germans, 272; Spain, 272; Switzerland, 272-3; German commercial penetration of Holland, 273-4, 282-3; Dutch grievances against Germany, 274- 5 attitude to Germany during the Franco-German War, 275; Queen Sophie, 275-6; the marriage of Queen Wilhelmina, 276; the Boer War exploited by
Germany: Dutch attitude Britain, 277; Dutch opinion at the time of the outbreak of the present war, 277-9; present attitude, 279, 280-1; conditions in the haut commerce, 279–80; the official attitude, 281; views of the military, 281-2; the danger in Pro-Germanism, 282 Holmes, T. Rice, Ancient Britain and the Invasion of Julius Cæsar, 140, 143
Hooper, W., The Tudor Sumptuary Laws, 140, 153 Hopkinson,
Sir Alfred, Neutral Countries and Sea Commerce, 158 Hoxie, R. F., Scientific Management and Labour, 393, 408 Hughes, Mr., Prime Minister of Australia, 380
Hutton, R. H., 71, 72-3 Huxley, 71-2
Industrial Reconstruction, 393; social conditions of city dwellers, 393-4; contrast between rich and poor, 394, 395; work after the war, 394-5; the Socialists and Capitalism, 395-6; capitalism and material progress, 395-6; improvement in the standard of living, 396; taxation of the rich to subsidise the poor, 397; the problem of wages, 397; trade union action, 397; fallacy of the popular conception of the amount of work to be done, 398; increased output and increased demand, 398; artificial limitation of out- put, 399-401, 413; trade union point of view, 399; importance of good feeling between employer and employed, 401, 405, 413; the wage system, 401-2, 404-5; popular alternative in the ex- tension of State employment, 402-3; the Post Office, 403; profit sharing, 403-4; effect of the stimulus of war, 405-6; fatigue and efficiency, 406-7; possibili- ties of improved working under scientific management, 408; effect of care for the workman's health and happiness, 408-9; Sunday work, 409; length of the work- ing day, 409-11; the three-shift system, 410-12; canteen accom- modation, 412; periodic rest for women workers, 412 Isambert, G., L'Independance grecque et L'Europe, 21
Italian unity and the peace, 389
Johnson, A. H., History of the Worshipful Company of the Drapers of London, 140
Johnson, S. C., A History of Emigra- tion, 244
Kaiser, the escape of, from the French franc-tireurs, 128–9, 130 Kerofilas, C., Eleftherios Venizelos, 21, 38, 39
Laudet, Fernand, Paris pendant la Guerré, I
Luxemburg and the War, 121; attitude of the people to the Germans, 121-2, 123, 132-3: Prussian mentality, 122, 126; the closing of the frontier, 123-4; the invasion, 124-6; the declara- tion of war, 126; unpopularity of the war among local peasants, 127; the task of the Imperial Guard, 128; the exploit of the French franc-tireurs, 128-30; official bulletins and rumours, 130-1; German arrogance, 132; hospital stories, 133-4; the Crown Prince, 134; disaffection stories, 135: speculations as to the future: Luxemburg's loyalty to itself, 136-7, 138; confidence in the Allies, 136-7: the Grand Duchess, 137; the essential factors of nationality present in Luxem- burg, 138; the link between the peoples of Belgium and Luxem- burg, 138-9; effect of the policy of frightfulness,' 139; attitude to clerical government, 139
Macedonia, 36 et seq.
MacNeill, Mr. Swift, on the govern- ment of Greece, 35 Margueritte, P., Contre les Barbares,
Mark, the decline in value of, 271 Marriott, J. A. R., Hellenic Factor in the Problem of the Near East,
Martineau, Dr., 60, 71
Massis, H., La Pensée de Maurice Barrès, 83
Memoranda of the Health of Munition Workers Committee, 393
Mill, John Stuart, 228
Miller, W., The Ottoman Empire, 1801-1913...21
Mills, R. Č., The Colonisation of Australia, 1829-42...244 Mobilisation of Industry for War, The, 172; war and absorption of the common energy, 172; the
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