Rousseau's distrust of,i. 228;his panegyric on,i. 328;manners of, according to Rousseau,i. 330;their complaint of it,i. 331.Genlis, Madame de,ii. 323.Genoa, Rousseau in quarantine at,i. 103;Corsica sold to France by,ii. 102.Germany, sentimental movements in,ii. 33.Gibbon, Edward, at Lausanne,ii. 96.Girardin, St. Marc, on Rousseau,i. 111,n.;on Rousseau's discussions,ii. 11,n.;offers Rousseau a home,ii. 326.Gluck,i. 291,296;Rousseau quarrels with, for setting his music to French words,ii. 323.Goethe,i. 20.Goguet on Society,ii. 127,n.;on tacit conventions,ii. 148,n.;on law,ii. 153,n.Goldoni, Diderot accused of pilfering his new play,i. 275.Gothic architecture denounced by Voltaire and Turgot,i. 294.Gouvon, Count, Rousseau servant to,i. 42.Government, disquisitions on,ii. 131-206;remarks on,ii. 131-141;early democratic ideas of,ii. 144-148;Hobbes' philosophy of,ii. 151;Rousseau's science of,ii. 155,156;De la Rivière's science of,ii. 156,n.;federation recommended by Rousseau to the Poles,ii. 166;three forms of government defined,ii. 169;definition inadequate,ii. 169;Montesquieu's definition,ii. 169;Rousseau's distinction betweentyrantanddespot,ii. 169,n.;his objection to democracy,ii. 172;to monarchy,ii. 173;consideration of aristocracy,ii. 174;his own scheme,ii. 175;Hobbes's "Passive Obedience,"ii. 181,182;social conscience theory,ii. 183-187;government made impossible by Rousseau's doctrine of social contract,ii. 188-192;Burke on expediency in,ii. 192;what a civilised nation is,ii. 194;Jefferson on,ii. 227,228,n.Governments, earliest, how composed,i. 169.Graffigny, Madame de,ii. 199.Gratitude, Rousseau on,ii. 14,15;explanation of his want of,ii. 70.Greece, importance of history of,i. 184, andib. n.Greek ideas, influence of, in France in the eighteenth century,i. 146.Grenoble,i. 93.Grétry,i. 292,296;ii. 323.Grimm, description of Rousseau by,i. 206;Rousseau's quarrels with,i. 279;letter of, about Rousseau and Diderot,i. 275;relations of, with Rousseau,i. 279;some account of his life,i. 279;his conversation with Madame d'Epinay,i. 281;criticism on Rousseau,i. 281;natural want of sympathy between the two,i. 282;Rousseau's quarrel with,i. 285-290;ii. 65,199.Grotius, on Government,ii. 148.Hébert,ii. 178;prevents publication of a book in which the author professed his belief in a god,ii. 179.Helmholtz,i. 299.Helvétius,i. 191;ii. 65,199.Herder,ii. 251;Rousseau's influence on,ii. 315.Hermitage, the, given to Rousseau by Madame d'Epinay,i. 229(alsoib.n.);what his friends thought of it,i. 231;sale of, after the Revolution,i. 237,n.;reasons for Rousseau's leaving,i. 286.Hildebrand,i. 4.Hobbes,i. 143,161;his "Philosophy of Government,"ii. 151;singular influence of, upon Rousseau,ii. 151,183;essential difference between his views and those of Rousseau,ii. 159;on Sovereignty,ii. 162;Rousseau's definition of the three forms of government adopted by, inadequate,ii. 168;would reduce spiritual and temporal jurisdiction to one political unity,ii. 183.Holbachians,i. 337;ii. 2.Hooker, on Civil Government,ii. 148.Hôtel St. Quentin, Rousseau at,i. 106.Hume, David,i. 64,89;his deep-set sagacity,i. 156,ii. 6,75;suspected of tampering with Boswell's letter,ii. 98,n.;on Boswell,ii. 101,n.;his eagerness to find Rousseau a refuge in England,ii. 282,283;his account of Rousseau,ii. 284;finds him a home at Wootton,ii. 286;Rousseau's quarrel with,ii. 286-291 (alsoii. 290,n.);his innocence of Walpole's letter,ii. 292;his conduct in the quarrel,ii. 293;saves Rousseau from arrest of French Government,ii. 295;on Rousseau's sensitiveness,ii. 299.Imagination, Rousseau's,i. 247.Jacobins, the, Rousseau's Social Contract, their gospel,ii. 132,133;their mistake,ii. 136;convenience to them of some of the maxims of the Social Contract,ii. 142;Jacobin supremacy and Hobbism,ii. 152;how they might have saved France,ii. 167.Jansen, his propositions,i. 81.Jansenists, Rousseau's suspicions of,ii. 63;mentioned,ii. 89.Jean Paul,ii. 216,252.Jefferson,ii. 227,n.Jesuits, Rousseau's suspicions of the,ii. 64;the, and parliaments,ii. 65;movement against,ii. 65;suppression of the, leads to increased thought about education,ii. 199.Johnson,ii. 15,98.Kames, Lord,ii. 253.Lamennais, influenced by Rousseau,ii. 228.Language, origin of,i. 161.Latour, Madame,ii. 19,ib. n.Lavater favourable to education on Rousseau's plan,ii. 251(alsoib.n.)Lavoisier, reply to his request for a fortnight's respite,ii. 227,n.Law, not a contract,ii. 153.Lecouvreur, Adrienne, refused Christian burial on account of her being an actress,i. 323.Leibnitz,i. 87;his optimism,i. 309;on the constitution of the universe,i. 312.Lessing, on Pope,i. 310,n."Letters from the Mountain,"ii. 104;burned, by command, at Paris and the Hague,ii. 105.Liberty, English, Rousseau's notion of,ii. 163,n.Life, Rousseau's condemnation of the contemplative,i. 10;his idea of household,i. 41;easier for him to preach than for others to practise,i. 43.Lisbon, earthquake of, Voltaire on,i. 310;Rousseau's letter to Voltaire on,i. 310,311.Locke, his Essay,i. 87;his notions,i. 87;his influence upon Rousseau,ii. 121-126;on Marriage,ii. 126;on Civil Government,ii. 149,150,n.;indefiniteness of his views,ii. 160;the pioneer of French thought on education,ii. 202,203;Rousseau's indebtedness to,ii. 203;his mistake in education,ii. 209;subjects of his theories,ii. 254.Lulli (music),i. 291.Luther,i. 4.Luxembourg, the Duke of, gives Rousseau a home,ii. 2-7,9.Luxembourg, the Maréchale de, in vain seeks Rousseau's children,i. 128;helps to get Emilius published,ii. 62-64,67.Lycurgus,ii. 129,131;influence of, upon Saint Just,ii. 133.Lyons, Rousseau a tutor at,i. 95-97.Mably, De,i. 95;his socialism,i. 184;applied to for scheme for the government of Poland,ii. 324.Maistre, De,i. 145;on Optimism,i. 314.Maitre, Le, teaches Rousseau music,i. 58.Malebranche,i. 87.Malesherbes, Rousseau confesses his ungrateful nature to,ii. 14;his dishonest advice to Rousseau,ii. 60;helps Diderot,ii. 62;and Rousseau in the publishing of Emilius,ii. 62,63;endangered by it,ii. 67;asks Rousseau to collect plants for him,ii. 76.Man, his specific distinction from other animals,i. 161;his state of nature,i. 161;Hobbes wrong concerning this,i. 161;equality of,i. 180;effects of this doctrine in France and in the United States,i. 182;not naturally free,ii. 126.Mandeville,i. 162.Manners, Rousseau's, Marmontel, and Grimm on,i. 205,206;Rousseau on Swiss,i. 329,330;depravity of French, in the eighteenth century,ii. 25,26.Marischal, Lord, friendship between, and Rousseau,ii. 79-81;account of,ii. 80;on Boswell,ii. 98Marmontel, on Rousseau's manners,i. 206;on his success,ii. 2.Marriage, design of the New Heloïsa to exalt,ii. 46-48,ib.n.Marsilio, of Padua, on Law,ii. 145.Men, inequality of, Rousseau's second Discourse (seeDiscourses),dedicated to the republic of Geneva,i. 190;how received there,i. 228.Mirabeau the elder, Rousseau's letter to, from Wootton,ii. 305,306;his character,ii. 309-312;receives Rousseau at Fleury,ii. 311.Mirabeau, Gabriel, Rousseau's influence on,ii. 315.Molière (Misanthrope of), Rousseau's criticism on,i. 329;D'Alembert on,i. 329.Monarchy, Rousseau's objection to,ii. 171.Montaigu, Count de, avarice of,i. 101,102.Montaigne, Rousseau's obligations to,i. 145;influence of, on Rousseau,ii. 203.Montesquieu, "incomplete positivity" of,i. 156;on Government,i. 157;effect of his Spirit of Laws on Rousseau,i. 183;confused definition of laws,ii. 153;balanced parliamentary system of,ii. 163;his definition of forms of government,ii. 169.Montmorency, Rousseau goes to live there,i. 229;his life at,ii. 2-9.Montpellier,i. 92.Morals, state of, in France in the eighteenth century,ii. 26.Morellet, thrown into the Bastile,ii. 57.Morelly, his indirect influence on Rousseau,i. 156;his socialistic theory,i. 157,158;his rules for organising a model community,i. 158,n.;his terse exposition of inequality contrasted with that of Rousseau,i. 170;on primitive human nature,i. 175;his socialism,ii. 52;influence of his "model community" upon St. Just,ii. 133,n.;advice to mothers,ii. 205.Motiers, Rousseau's home there,ii. 77;attends divine service at,ii. 91;life at,ii. 91,93.Moultou (pastor of Motiers), his enthusiasm for Rousseau,ii. 82.Music, Rousseau undertakes to teach,i. 60;Rousseau's opinion concerning Italian,i. 105;effect of Galuppi's,i. 105;Rousseau earns his living by copying,i. 196;ii. 315;Rameau's criticism on Rousseau'sMuses Galantes,i. 211;French,i. 291;Rousseau's letter on,i. 292;Italian, denounced at Paris,i. 292;Rousseau utterly condemns French,i. 294;quarrels with Gluck for setting his, to French words,ii. 323.Musical notation, Rousseau's,i. 291;his Musical Dictionary,i. 296;his notation explained,i. 296-301;his system inapplicable to instruments,i. 301.Naples, drunkenness, how regarded in,i. 331.Narcisse, Rousseau's condemnation of his own comedy of,i. 215.Nature, Rousseau's love of,i. 234-241;ii. 39;state of, Rousseau, Montesquieu, Voltaire, and Hume on,i. 156-158;Rousseau's, in Second Discourse,i. 171-180;his starting-point of right, and normal constitution of civil society,ii. 124. SeeState of Nature.Necker,ii. 54,98,n.Neuchâtel, flight to principality of, by Rousseau,ii. 73;history of,ii. 73,n.;outbreak at, arising from religious controversy,ii. 90;preparations for driving Rousseau out of, defeated by Frederick of Prussia,ii. 90;clergy of, against Rousseau,ii. 106.New Heloïsa, first conception of,i. 250;monument of Rousseau's fall,ii. 1;when completed and published,ii. 2;read aloud to the Duchess de Luxembourg,ii. 3;letter on suicide in,ii. 16;effects upon Parisian ladies of reading the,ii. 18,19;criticism on,ii. 20-55;his scheme proposed in it,ii. 21;its story,ii. 24;its purity, contrasted with contemporary and later French romances,ii. 24;its general effect,ii. 27;Rousseau absolutely without humour,ii. 27;utter selfishness of hero of,ii. 30;its heroine,ii. 30;its popularity,ii. 231,232;burlesque on it,ii. 31,n.;its vital defect,ii. 35;difference between Rousseau, Byron, and others,ii. 42;sumptuary details of the story,ii. 44,45;its democratic tendency,ii. 49,50;the bearing of its teaching,ii. 54;hindrances to its circulation in France,ii. 57;Malesherbes's low morality as to publishing,ii. 61.Optimismof Pope and Leibnitz,i. 309-310;discussed,ii. 128-130.Origin of inequality among men,i. 156. See alsoDiscourses.Paley,ii. 191,n.Palissot,ii. 56.Paris, Rousseau's first visit to,i. 61;his second,i. 63,97,102;third visit,i. 106;effect in, of his first Discourse,i. 139,n.;opinions in, on religion, laws, etc.,i. 185;"mimic philosophy" there,i. 193;society in, in Rousseau's time,i. 202-211;his view of it,i. 210;composes there hisMuses Galantes,i. 211;returns to, from Geneva,i. 228;his belief of the unfitness of its people for political affairs,i. 246;goes to, in 1741, with his scheme of musical notation,i. 291;effect there of his letter on music,i. 295;Rousseau's imaginary contrast between, and Geneva,i. 329;Emilius ordered to be publicly burnt in,ii. 65;parliament of, orders "Letters from the Mountain" to be burnt,ii. 295;also Voltaire's Philosophical Dictionary,ii. 295;Danton's scheme for municipal administration of,ii. 168,n.;two parties (those of Voltaire and of Rousseau) in, in 1793,ii. 178;excitement in, at Rousseau's appearance in 1765,ii. 283;he goes to live there in 1770,ii. 314;Voltaire's last visit to,ii. 323,324.Pâris, Abbé, miracles at his tomb,ii. 88.Parisian frivolity,i. 193,220,329.Parliament and Jesuits,ii. 64.Pascal,ii. 37.Passy, Rousseau composes the "Village Soothsayer" at,i. 212.Paul, St., effect of, on western society,i. 4.Peasantry, French, oppression of,i. 67,68.Pedigree of Rousseau,i. 8,n.Pelagius,ii. 272.Peoples, sovereignty of, Rousseau not the inventor of doctrine of,ii. 144-148;taught by Althusen,i. 147;constitution of Helvetic Republic in 1798, a blow at,ii. 165.Pergolese,i. 292.Pestalozzi indebted to Emilius,ii. 252.Philidor,i. 292.Philosophers, of Rousseau's time, contradicting each other,i. 87;Rousseau's complaint of the,i. 202;war between the, and the priests,i. 322;Rousseau's reactionary protest against,i. 328;troubles of,ii. 59;parliaments hostile to,ii. 64.Philosophy, Rousseau's disgust at mimic, at Paris,i. 193;drew him to the essential in religion,i. 220;Voltaire's no perfect,i. 318.Phlipon, Jean Marie, Rousseau's influence on,ii. 315.Plato, his republic,i. 122;his influence on Rousseau,i. 146,325,n.;Milton on his Laws,ii. 178.Plays(stage), Rousseau's letter on, to D'Alembert,i. 321;his views of,i. 323;Jeremy Collier and Bossuet on,i. 323;in Geneva,i. 333,334,n.;Rousseau, Voltaire, and D'Alembert on,i. 332-337.Plutarch, Rousseau's love for,i. 13.Plutocracy, new, faults of,i. 195.Pompadour, Madame de, and the Jesuits,ii. 64.Pontverre (priest) converts Rousseau to Romanism,i. 31-35.Pope, his Essay on Man translated by Voltaire,i. 309;Berlin Academy and Lessing on it,i. 310,n.;criticism on it by Rousseau,i. 312;its general position reproduced by Rousseau,i. 315.Popelinière, M. de,i. 211.Positive knowledge,i. 78.Press, freedom of the,ii. 59.Prévost, Abbé,i. 48.