Projet pour l'Education,i. 96,n.Property, private, evils ascribed toi. 157,185;Robespierre disclaimed the intention of attacking,i. 123,n.Protestant principles, effect of development of,ii. 146-147.Protestantism, his conversion to,i. 220;its influence on Rousseau,i. 221.Rameauon Rousseau'sMuses Galantes,i. 119,211;mentioned,i. 291.Rationalism,i. 224,225;influence of Descartes on,i. 225.Reason, De Saint Pierre's views of,i. 244.Reform, essential priority of social over political,ii. 43.Religion, simplification of,i. 3;ideas of, in Paris,i. 186,187,207,208;Rousseau's view of,i. 220;doctrines of, in Geneva,i. 223-227, alson.;curious project concerning it, by Rousseau,i. 317;separation of spiritual and temporal powers deemed mischievous by Rousseau,ii. 173;in its relation to the state may be considered as of three kinds,ii. 175;duty of the sovereign to establish a civil confession of faith,ii. 176,177;positive dogmas of this,ii. 176;Rousseau's "pure Hobbism,"ii. 177.SeeSavoyard Vicar(Emilius),ii. 256,281.Renou, Rousseau assumes name of,i. 129;ii. 312.Revelation, Christian, Rousseau's controversy on, with Archbishop of Paris,ii. 86-91.Rêveries, Rousseau's relinquishing society,i. 199;description of his life in the isle of St. Peter, in the,ii. 109-115;their styleii. 314.Revolution, French, principles of,i. 1,2;benefits of, or otherwise,ii. 54;Baboeuf on,ii. 123,124,n.;the starting point in the history of its ideas,ii. 160.Revolutionary process and ideali. 4,5.Revolutionists, difference among,i. 2.Richardson (the novelist),ii. 25,28.Richelieu's brief patronage of Rousseau,i. 195,302.Rivière, de la, origin of society,ii. 156,157;anecdote of,ii. 156,157,n.Robecq, Madame de,ii. 56.Robespierre,ii. 123,134,160,178,179;his "sacred right of insurrection,"ii. 188,n.;Rousseau's influence on,ii. 315.Rousseau, Didier,i. 8.Rousseau, Jean Baptiste,i. 61,n.Rousseau, Jean Jacques, influence of his writings on France and the American colonists,i. 1,2;on Robespierre, Paine, and Chateaubriand,i. 3;his place as a leader,i. 3;starting-point, of his mental habits,i. 4;personality of,i. 4;influence on the common people,i. 5;his birth and ancestry,i. 8;pedigree,i. 8,n.;parents,i. 10,11;influence upon him of his father's character,i. 11,12;his reading in childhood,i. 12,13;love of Plutarch,i. 13;early years,i. 13,14;sent to school at Bossey,i. 15;deterioration of his moral character there,i. 17;indignation at an unjust punishment,i. 17,18;leaves school,i. 20;youthful life at Geneva,i. 21,22;his remarks on its character,i. 24;anecdotes of it,i. 22,24;his leading error as to the education of the young,i. 25,26;religious training,i. 25;apprenticeship,i. 26;boyish doings,i. 27;harshness of his master,i. 27;runs away,i. 29;received by the priest of Confignon,i. 31;sent to Madame de Warens,i. 84;at Turin,i. 35;hypocritical conversion to Roman Catholicism,i. 37;motive,i. 38;registry of his baptism,i. 38,n.;his forlorn condition,i. 39;love of music,i. 39;becomes servant to Madame de Vercellis,i. 39;his theft, lying, and excuses for it,i. 39,40;becomes servant to Count of Gouvon,i. 42;dismissed,i. 43;returns to Madame de Warens,i. 45;his temperament,i. 46,47;in training for the priesthood, but pronounced too stupid,i. 57;tries music,i. 57;shamelessly abandons his companion,i. 58;goes to Freiburg, Neuchâtel, and Paris,i. 61,62;conjectural chronology of his movements about this time.i. 62,n.;love of vagabond life,i. 62-68;effect upon him of his intercourse with the poor,i. 68;becomes clerk to a land surveyor at Chambéri,i. 69;life there,i. 69-72;ill-health and retirement to Les Charmettes,i. 73;his latest recollection of this time,i. 75-77;his "form of worship,"i. 77;love of nature,i. 77,78;notion of deity,i. 77;peculiar intellectual feebleness,i. 81;criticism on himself,i. 83;want of logic in his mental constitution,i. 85;effect on him of Voltaire's Letters on the English,i. 85;self-training,i. 86;mistaken method of it,i. 86,87;writes a comedy,i. 89;enjoyment of rural life at Les Charmettes,i. 91,92;robs Madame de Warens,i. 92;leaves her,i. 93;discrepancy between dates of his letters and the Confessions,i. 93;takes a tutorship at Lyons,i. 95;condemns the practice of writing Latin,i. 96,n.;resigns his tutorship, and goes to Paris,i. 97;reception there,i. 98-100;appointed secretary to French Ambassador at Venice,i. 100-106;in quarantine at Genoa,i. 104;his estimate of French melody,i. 105;returns to Paris,i. 106;becomes acquainted with Theresa Le Vasseur,i. 106;his conduct criticised,i. 107-113;simple life,i. 113;letter to her,i. 115-119;his poverty,i. 119;becomes secretary to Madame Dupin and her son-in-law, M. de Francueil,i. 119;sends his children to the foundling hospital,i. 120,121;paltry excuses for the crime,i. 121-126;his pretended marriage under the name of Renou,i. 129;his Discourses,i. 132-186 (seeDiscourses);writes essays for academy of Dijon,i. 132;origin of first essay,i. 133-137;his "visions" for thirteen years,i. 138;evil effect upon himself of the first Discourse,i. 138;of it, the second Discourse and the Social Contract upon Europe,i. 138;his own opinion of it,i. 138,139;influence of Plato upon him,i. 146;second Discourse,i. 154;his "State of Nature,"i. 159;no evidence for it,i. 172;influence of Montesquieu on him,i. 183;inconsistency of his views,i. 124;influence of Geneva upon him,i. 187,188;his disgust at Parisian philosophers,i. 191,192;the two sides of his character,i. 193;associates in Paris,i. 193;his income,i. 196,197,n.;post of cashier,i. 196;throws it up,i. 197,198;determines to earn his living by copying music,i. 198,199;change of manners,i. 201;dislike of the manners of his time,i. 202,203;assumption of a seeming cynicism,i. 206;Grimm's rebuke of it,i. 206;Rousseau's protest against atheism,i. 208,209;composes a musical interlude, the Village Soothsayer,i. 212;his nervousness loses him the chance of a pension,i. 213;his moral simplicity,i. 214,215;revisits Geneva,i. 216;re-conversion to Protestantism,i. 220;his friends at Geneva,i. 227;their effect upon him,i. 227;returns to Paris,i. 227;the Hermitage offered him by Madame d'Epinay,i. 229,230(andib. n.);retires to it against the protests of his friends,i. 231;his love of nature,i. 234,235,236;first days at the Hermitage,i. 237;rural delirium,i. 237;dislike of society,i. 242;literary scheme,i. 242,243;remarks on Saint Pierre,i. 246;violent mental crisis,i. 247;employs his illness in writing to Voltaire on Providence,i. 250,251;his intolerance of vice in others,i. 254;acquaintance with Madame de Houdetot,i. 255-269;source of his irritability,i. 270,271;blind enthusiasm of his admirers,i. 273, alsoib. n.;quarrels with Diderot,i. 275;Grimm's account of them,i. 276;quarrels with Madame d'Epinay,i. 276,288;relations with Grimm,i. 279;want of sympathy between the two,i. 279;declines to accompany Madame d'Epinay to Geneva,i. 285;quarrels with Grimm,i. 285;leaves the Hermitage,i. 289,290;aims in music,i. 291;letter on French music,i. 293,294;writes on music in the Encyclopædia,i. 296;his Musical Dictionary,i. 296;scheme and principles of his new musical notation,i. 269;explained,i. 298,299;its practical value,i. 299;his mistake,i. 300;minor objections,i. 300;his temperament and Genevan spirit,i. 303;compared with Voltaire,i. 304,305;had a more spiritual element than Voltaire,i. 306;its influence in France,i. 307;early relations with Voltaire,i. 308;letter to him on his poem on the earthquake at Lisbon,i. 312,313,314;reasons in a circle,i. 316;continuation of argument against Voltaire,i. 316,317;curious notion about religion,i. 317;quarrels with Voltaire,i. 318,319;denounces him as a "trumpet of impiety,"i. 320,n.;letter to D'Alembert on Stage Plays,i. 321;true answer to his theory,i. 323,324;contrasts Paris and Geneva,i. 327,328;his patriotism,i. 329,330,331;censure of love as a poetic theme,i. 334,335;on Social Position of Women,i. 335;Voltaire and D'Alembert's criticism on his Letter on Stage Plays,i. 336,337;final break with Diderot,i. 336;antecedents of his highest creative efforts,ii. 1;friends at Montmorency,ii. 2;reads the New Heloïsa to the Maréchale de Luxembourg,ii. 2;unwillingness to receive gifts,ii. 5;his relations with the Duke and Duchess de Luxembourg,ii. 7;misunderstands the friendliness of Madame de Boufflers,ii. 7;calm life at Montmorency,ii. 8;literary jealousy,ii. 8;last of his peaceful days,ii. 9;advice to a young man against the contemplative life,ii. 10;offensive form of his "good sense" concerning persecution of Protestants,ii. 11,12;cause of his unwillingness to receive gifts, ii.13,14;owns his ungrateful nature,ii. 15;ill-humoured banter,ii. 15;his constant bodily suffering,ii. 16;thinks of suicide,ii. 16;correspondence with the readers of the New Heloïsa,ii. 19,20;the New Heloïsa, criticism on,ii. 20-55 (seeNew Heloïsa);his publishing difficulties,ii. 56;no taste for martyrdom,ii. 59,60;curious discussion between,ii. 59;and Malesherbes,ii. 60;indebted to Malesherbes in the publication of Emilius,ii. 61,62;suspects Jesuits, Jansenists, and philosophers of plotting to crush the book,ii. 63;himself counted among the latter,ii. 65;Emilius ordered to be burnt by public executioner, on the charge of irreligious tendency, and its author to be arrested,ii. 65;his flight,ii. 67;literary composition on the journey to Switzerland,ii. 69;contrast between him and Voltaire,ii. 70;explanation of his "natural ingratitude,"ii. 71;reaches the canton of Berne, and ordered to quit it,ii. 72;Emilius and Social Contract condemned to be publicly burnt at Geneva, and author arrested if he came there,ii. 72,73;takes refuge at Motiers, in dominions of Frederick of Prussia,ii. 73;characteristic letters to the king,ii. 74,77;declines pecuniary help from him,ii. 75;his home and habits at Motiers,ii. 77,78;Voltaire supposed to have stirred up animosity against him at Geneva,ii. 81;Archbishop of Paris writes against him,ii. 83;his reply, and character as a controversialist,ii. 83-90;life at Val de Travers (Motiers),ii. 91-95;his generosity,ii. 93;corresponds with the Prince of Würtemberg on the education of the prince's daughter,ii. 95,96;on Gibbon,ii. 96;visit from Boswell,ii. 98;invited to legislate for Corsica,ii. 99,n.;urges Boswell to go there,ii. 100;denounces its sale by the Genoese,ii. 102;renounces his citizenship of Geneva,ii. 103;his Letters from the Mountain,ii. 104;the letters condemned to be burned at Paris and the Hague,ii. 105;libel upon,ii. 105;religious difficulties with his pastor,ii. 106;ill-treatment of, in parish,ii. 106;obliged to leave it,ii. 108;his next retreat,ii. 108;account in theRêveriesof his short stay there,ii. 109-115;expelled by government of Berne,ii. 116;makes an extraordinary request to it,ii. 116,117;difficulties in finding a home,ii. 117;short stay at Strasburg,ii. 117,n.;decides on going to England,ii. 118;his Social Contract, and criticism on,ii. 119,196(seeSocial Contract);scanty acquaintance with history,ii. 129;its effects on his political writings,ii. 129,136;his object in writing Emilius,ii. 198;his confession of faith, under the character of the Savoyard Vicar (seeEmilius),ii. 257-280;excitement caused by his appearance in Paris in 1765,ii. 282;leaves for England in company with Hume,ii. 283;reception in London,ii. 283,284;George III. gives him a pension,ii. 284;his love for his dog,ii. 286;finds a home at Wootton,ii. 286;quarrels with Hume,ii. 287;particulars in connection with it,ii. 287-296;his approaching insanity at this period,ii. 296;the preparatory conditions of it,ii. 297-301;begins writing the Confessions,ii. 301;their character,ii. 301-304;life at Wootton,ii. 305,306;sudden flight thence,ii. 306;kindness of Mr. Davenport,ii. 306,307;his delusion,ii. 307;returns to France,ii. 308;received at Fleury by the elder Mirabeau,ii. 310,311;the prince of Conti next receives him at Trye,ii. 312;composes the second part of the Confessions here,ii. 312;delusion returns,ii. 312,313;leaves Trye, and wanders about the country,ii. 312,313;estrangement from Theresa,ii. 313;goes to Paris,ii. 314;writes his Dialogues there,ii. 314;again earns his living by copying music,ii. 315;daily life in,ii. 315,316;Bernardin St. Pierre's account of him,ii. 317-321;his veneration for Fénelon,ii. 321;his unsociality,ii. 322;checks a detractor of Voltaire,ii. 324;draws up his Considerations on the Government of Poland,ii. 324;estimate of the Spanish,ii. 324;his poverty,ii. 325;accepts a home at Ermenonville from M. Girardin,ii. 326;his painful condition,ii. 326;sudden death,ii. 326;cause of it unknown,ii. 326(see alsoib. n.);his interment,ii. 326;finally removed to Paris,ii. 328.Sainte Beuveon Rousseau and Madame d'Epinay,i. 279,n.;on Rousseau,ii. 40.Saint Germain, M. de, Rousseau's letter to,i. 123.Saint Just,ii. 132,133;his political regulations,ii. 133,n.;base of his system,ii. 136;against the atheists,ii. 179.Saint Lambert,i. 244;offers Rousseau a home in Lorraine,ii. 117.Saint Pierre, Abbé de, Rousseau arranges papers of,i. 244;his views concerning reason,ib.;