boldness of his observations,i. 245.Saint Pierre, Bernardin de, account of his visit to Rousseau at Paris,ii. 317-321.Sand, Madame G.,i. 81,n.;Savoy landscape,i. 99,n.;ancestry of,i. 121,n.Savages, code of morals of,i. 178-179,n.Savage state, advantages of, Rousseau's letter to Voltaire,i. 312.Savoy, priests of, proselytisers,i. 30,31,33(alsoib.n.)SavoyardVicar, the, origin of character of,ii. 257-280 (seeEmilius).Schiller on Rousseau,ii. 192(alsoib.n.);Rousseau's influence on,ii. 315.Servetus,ii. 180.Simplification, the revolutionary process and ideal of,i. 4;in reference to Rousseau's music,i. 291.Social conscience, theory and definition of,ii. 234,235;the great agent in fostering,ii. 237.Social Contract, the, ill effect of, on Europe,i. 138;beginning of its composition,i. 177;ideas of,i. 188;its harmful dreams,i. 246;influence of,ii. 1;price of, and difficulties in publishing,ii. 59;ordered to be burnt at Geneva,ii. 72,73,104;detailed criticism of,ii. 119-196;Rousseau diametrically opposed to the dominant belief of his day in human perfectibility,ii. 119;object of the work,ii. 120;main position of the two Discourses given up in it,ii. 120;influenced by Locke,ii. 120;its uncritical, illogical principles,ii. 123,124;its impracticableness,ii. 128;nature of his illustrations,ii. 128-133;the "gospel of the Jacobins,"ii. 132,133;the desperate absurdity of its assumptions gave it power in the circumstances of the times,ii. 135-141;some of its maxims very convenient for ruling Jacobins,ii. 142;its central conception, the sovereignty of peoples,ii. 144;Rousseau not its inventor,ii. 144,145;this to be distinguished from doctrine of right of subjects to depose princes,ii. 146;Social Contract idea of government, probably derived from Locke,ii. 150;falseness of it,ii. 153,154;origin of society,ii. 154;ill effects on Rousseau's political speculation,ii. 155;what constitutes the sovereignty,ii. 158;Rousseau's Social Contract different from that of Hobbes,ii. 159;Locke's indefiniteness on,ii. 160;attributes of sovereignty,ii. 163;confederation,ii. 164,165;his distinction betweentyrantanddespot,ii. 169,n.;distinguishes constitution of the state from that of the government,ii. 170;scheme of an elective aristocracy,ii. 172;similarity to the English form of government,ii. 173;the state in respect to religion,ii. 173;habitually illogical form of his statements,ii. 173,174;duty of sovereign to establish civil profession of faith,ii. 175,176;infringement of it to be punished, even by death,ii. 176;Rousseau's Hobbism,ii. 177;denial of his social compact theory,ii. 183,184;futility of his disquisitions on,ii. 185,186;his declaration of general duty of rebellion (arising out of the universal breach of social compact) considered,ii. 188;it makes government impossible,ii. 188;he urges that usurped authority is another valid reason for rebellion,ii. 190;practical evils of this,ii. 192;historical effect of the Social Contract,ii. 192-195.Social quietism of some parts of New Heloïsa,ii. 49.Socialism: Morelly, and De Mably,ii. 52;what it is,ii. 159.Socialistic theory of Morelly,i. 158,159(alsoi. 158,n.)Society, Aristotle on,i. 174;D'Alembert's statements on,i. 174,n.;Parisian, Rousseau on,i. 209;dislike of,i. 242;Rousseau's origin of,ii. 153;true grounds of,ii. 155,156.Socrates,i. 131,140,232;ii. 72,273.Solitude, eighteenth century notions of,i. 231,232.Solon,ii. 133.Sorbonne, the, condemns Emilius,ii. 82.Spectator, the, Rousseau's liking for,i. 86.Spinoza, dangerous speculations of,i. 143.Staël, Madame de,i. 217,n.Stage players, how treated in France,i. 322.Stage plays (seePlays).State of Nature, Rousseau's,i. 159,160;Hobbes on,i. 161(seeNature).Suicide, Rousseau on,ii. 16;a mistake to pronounce him incapable of,ii. 19.Switzerland,i. 330.Tacitus,i. 177.Theatre, Rousseau's letter, objecting to the,i. 133;his error in the matter,i. 134.Theology, metaphysical, Descartes' influence on,i. 226.Theresa (see LeVasseur).Thought, school of, division between rationalists and emotionalists,i. 337.Tonic Sol-fa notation, close correspondence of the, to Rousseau's system,i. 299.Tronchin on Voltaire,i. 319,n.,321.Turgot,i. 89;his discourses at the Sorbonne in 1750,i. 155;the one sane eminent Frenchman of eighteenth century,i. 202;his unselfish toil,i. 233;ii. 193;mentioned,ii. 246,294.Turin, Rousseau at,i. 34-43;leaves it,i. 45;tries to learn Latin at,i. 91.Turretini and other rationalisers,i. 226;his works,i. 226,n.Universe, constitution of, discussion on,i. 311-317.Vagabondlife, Rousseau's love of,i. 63,68.Val de Travers,ii. 77;Rousseau's life in,ii. 91-95.Vasseur, Theresa Le, Rousseau's first acquaintance with,i. 106,107, alsoib.n.;their life together,i. 110-113;well befriended,ii. 80,n.;her evil character,ii. 326.Vauvenargues on emotional instinct,ii. 34.Venice, Rousseau at,i. 100-106.Vercellis, Madame de, Rousseau servant to,i. 39.Verdelin, Madame de, her kindness to Theresa,ii. 80,n.;to Rousseau,ii. 118,n.Village Soothsayer, the (Devin du Village), composed at Passy, performed at Fontainebleau and Paris,i. 212;marked a revolution in French Music,i. 291.Voltaire,i. 2,21,63;effect on Rousseau of his Letters on the English,i. 86;spreads a derogatory report about Rousseau,i. 101,n.;his "Princesse de Navarre,"i. 119;criticism on Rousseau's first Discourse,i. 147;effect on his work of his common sense,i. 155;avoids the society of Paris,i. 202;his conversion to Romanism,i. 220,221;strictures on Homer and Shakespeare,i. 280;his position in the eighteenth century,i. 301;general difference between, and Rousseau,i. 301;clung to the rationalistic school of his day,i. 305;on Rousseau's second Discourse,i. 308;his poem on the earthquake of Lisbon,i. 309,310;his sympathy with suffering,i. 311,312;entreated by Rousseau to draw up a civil profession of religious faith,i. 317;denounced by Rousseau as a "trumpet of impiety,"i. 317,320,n.;his satire and mockery irritated Rousseau,i. 319;what he was to his contemporaries,i. 321;the great play-writer of the time,i. 321;his criticism of Rousseau's Letter on the Theatre,i. 336;his indignation at wrong,ii. 11;ridicule of the New Heloïsa,ii. 34;less courageous than Rousseau,ii. 65;contrast between the two,i. 99,ii. 75;supposed to have stirred up animosity at Geneva against Rousseau,ii. 81;denies it,ii. 81;his notion of how the matter would end,ii. 81;his fickleness,ii. 83;on Rousseau's connection with Corsica,ii. 101;his Philosophical Dictionary burnt by order at Paris,ii. 105;his opinion of Emilius,ii. 257;prime agent in introducing English deism into France,ii. 262;suspected by Rousseau of having written the pretended letter from the King of Prussia,ii. 288;last visit to Paris,ii. 324.Walking, Rousseau's love of,i. 63.Walpole, Horace, writer of the pretended letter from the King of Prussia,ii. 288,n.;advises Hume not to publish his account of Rousseau's quarrel with him,ii. 295.War arising out of the succession to the crown of Poland,i. 72.Warens, Madame de, Rousseau's introduction to,i. 34;her personal appearance,i. 34;receives Rousseau into her house,i. 43;her early life,i. 48;character of,i. 49-51;goes to Paris,i. 59;receives Rousseau at Chambéri, and gets him employment,i. 69;her household,i. 70;removes to Les Charmettes,i. 73;cultivates Rousseau's taste for letters,i. 85;Saint Louis, her patron saint,i. 91;revisited by Rousseau in 1754,i. 216;her death in poverty and wretchedness,i. 217,218(alsoi. 219,n.)Wesleyanism,ii. 258.Women, Condorcet on social position of,i. 335;D'Alembert and Condorcet on,i. 335.Wootton, Rousseau's home at,ii. 286.World, divine government of, Rousseau vindicates,i. 312.Würtemberg, correspondence between Prince of, and Rousseau, on the education of the little princess,ii. 95;becomes reigning duke,ii. 95,n.;seeks permission for Rousseau to live in Vienna,ii. 117.