Chapter 11

202Lundin, Claes,146Luther,313MMacaulay,70McCarthy, Justin Huntly,123;article inThe Fortnightly Reviewby,183,225Macleod, Fiona,Cathal of the Woodsby,228Maeterlinck,227,305,316Marcus Aurelius,336Marholm, Laura,238,328,330Married,123,156,157,158,159,160,161,162,163,164,165,166,167,168,169,235,236,237Master Olof,99,100,101,102,103,105,136,142,289,298,322Maupassant, Guy de,159,209;Le Horlaby,297Michel-Angelo,251Midsummer,316,342,343Mill, John Stuart,230Modern Drama and the Modern Theatre, On,211,212Moses,260Multiple personalities,283,284Munch, Edvard,240,259,263Murray, Grenville,Les Hommes du Second Empireby,149Musset, Alfred de,214,338;Nuit d'Octobreby,347NNapoleon,313National Director, The,299Naturalism,170,204,205,212,213New Kingdom, The,148,149,157,230,324Newman,51Nietzsche,13,194,231,232,284Nightingale of Wittenberg, The,299Nobel Prize, The,321Nordau, Max,149OOehlenschläger,79,82Old Stockholm,146,147Orfila,248,260Outlaw, The,81,84,85,86,345Ovid,90PPariah,219,220,221,222Paris, In,328Patmore, Coventry,281Paul, Adolf,240Peace movement, The,155,156Peladan, Sar,Comment on devient Mageby,280Pelican, The,316,326People of Hemsö, The,226,227,235Personne, John,Strindberg-Literature and Immoralityamongst Schoolboysby,165Peter Pan,144Philp, Greta Strindberg von,353Pinero, Sir Arthur,206Playing with Fire,219,223,323,326Poe,255,338Poems in Verse and Prose,150,151Przybyszewski, Stanislav,240,258,259,260,262QQuarantine Master's Tales, The,336,337,343,344Queen Christina,299Quesnay, de,230RRahmer, Dr. S., Article inGrenzfragen der Literaturund Medizinby,256Ranft, Herr Albert,326Realism,170,183,212Real Utopias,168Red Room, In the,19,110,111,112,113Red Room, The,137,138,139,140,141,142,143,147,148,157,230,322Reformation, the Protestant,99,291Religion,279Remorse,156,297Renan,Souvenirs d'Enfance et de Jeunesseby,255"Residenz Theater,"203,326Reward of Virtue, The,157Rodin,Le Penseurby,16Rome, In,74,76,77,78,333Rosen, George von,Erik XIV and Karin Månsdotterby,95Rousseau,19,154,209,230,234;Confessionsby,257;Dialoguesby,257;Rêveriesby,257,260"Rune," the formation of the,73Ruskin,281;Modern Paintersby,320SSaga of the Folkungs, The,289,296,297,298,316Saint-Saëns,310Samum,219,220Sand, George,61,346Sardou,170Scenery of Sweden, The,236Schering, Herr Emil,330Schiller,Die Räuberby,58,63;On the Theatre as an Institution for Moral Educationby,62Schnitzler,204;Reigenby,206Schopenhauer,232,237,238Schumann,Aufschwungby,258,259"Schwarzen Ferkel, Zum,"239,240Scott, Sir Walter,47Scribe,170Secret of the Guild, The,142,345Shakespeare,47,82,83,101;Hamletby,106,295,301;Learby,295;Macbethby,295,296,343Shaw, George Bernard,206,233,234,318Sinology,118Sir Bengt's Wife,144,145,146Sketches of Flowers and Animals,227Slippers of Abu Casem, The,316Socialism,167,169,229,230Socrates,213Sophocles,82,310Sorbonne, La,248Speeches to the Swedish Nation,279Spencer,106,230,283Spook Sonata, The,316,326Stage Society, The,204Stagnelius, E.J.,328Stevenson, R.L.,331Stockholm's Skärgård,30,83,99,226Storm,315,326Street riots in Stockholm,66,67,126Strindberg, Anne-Marie Bosse-,316,353Strindberg, August,death of,11;scientific studies of,12,37,60,83,238,239,240,241,244,245;diary of,14;faith in the Bible,14;love of the early morning,15;funeral of,16;birth of,20;parents of,20;ancestry of,20;poverty of,21,75,83,107,117,350;views of, on the family as an institution,22,23;misogyny of;22,124,125,171,184,194,244,344,345;attacks upon women,23,75,76,175,237,347;early home of,24,29;early religious doubts of,25,32,33;early school-days of,27,28;love of nature,29,30,31,32,53,227,228,265;independence of, at school33,34;death of the mother of,35,36,37;interest of, in music,38,53,352;constructs machines,39,40;as "gymnasist,"41;becomes a pietist,42,43,44,45;as private tutor,46,47,48;influence of literature on,47;becomes a freethinker,47;preaches a sermon,49;passes the "student—examen,"50;enters the University of Upsala,51;criticism of academical routine,51,52,53;becomes a schoolmaster,54;studies social conditions,54,55,103,154,155,228,229,230;sympathy of, with the people,56,64,65;contempt of current morals,56,120;takes up the study of medicine,59;comes under the influence of art,60;decides to become an actor,62;makes his début at the Dramatic Theatre,67;tries to commit suicide,69,80,129;composes his first play,69;first attempts to write verse,71;first plays refused,71,72;returns to the University,73;first performance of a play by,76;burns the MSS. of Blotsven,80;passes his Latin examination,81;presents his æsthetic thesis.81;performance of a Viking play by,84;King Charles XV sends for,85;as a painter,90,96,103,236,240;becomes a journalist,92;as an art critic,95;lack of self-confidence of,107;edits an insurance paper,108;financial crash,109;obtains a post as telegraph clerk,114;resumes journalistic work,115;becomes parliamentary reporter and dramatic critic,116;is nominated assistant librarian,118;class-consciousness of,126,127;first marriage of,132;views of, on the sacredness of parenthood,133,134;increasing literary activity of,135;first great dramatic success,142,143;on the tragedy of fatherhood,146,175;historical point of view of,147,148;criticises poetry as a form of literary expression,151;leaves Sweden,152;is prosecuted for blasphemy,157;is cheered by the people in Stockholm,162,163,164;attacks of Conservative press163;is found "not guilty,"164;is denounced by feminists,165;advocates rights of women and marriage reform,167;views of, on spiritual functions of motherhood,168;begins a series of naturalistic plays,171;on the educational value of the theatre,206,207;views of, on theatre reform,214,215,216,217,218;obtains divorce from his first wife,237;second marriage of,242;becomes an alchemist,251;madness of, develops,255;persecutional mania of, becomes acute,265;prepares to die,266;fears detention in an asylum,269;love of, for his child,271,272;is influenced by Roman Catholicism,272,280;religious feeling of,273,279;attitude of, towards theosophy,274,275;recovery of,275;psychic development of,276;fiftieth birthday of,288;resumes the writing of drama,288;as an historical psychologist,289,301;criticism of, as an historian,301,302,303;national celebration of,319,353,354,355;tautology in the writings of,332,333;philological studies of,334;attitude towards animals of,348,349;third marriage of,351;last illness of,353,354;Stronger, The,204,219,222,223,322Studies in the History of Culture,300Sudermann,206Sue, Eugène,Le Juif Errantby,47"Svenska Teatern,"326Swanwhite,304,305,306,351Swedenborg, Emanuel,260,267,272,273,277,280,281,282,283Swedish Academy, The,321,324Swedish Destinies and Adventures,150,300,325Swedish People, The,148,300Swift, Dean,234Sylva Sylvarum,241Symons, Arthur,Studies in Seven Artsby,208TTasso,255,273Tchekhov, Anton,204;The Seagullby,208


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