Hyōgo, Kōbe, Japan,ii:192;Governor of,191.Hypocrisy, in religion,ii:87;in business and religion,109.Ibaraki, a Japanese student,ii:508.Ibn Khallikan,i:234,331.Iceland Spar, prediction concerning,ii:240,241.Ichibata, Japan,ii:15; Buddhist temple at,17,18.Immorality, moral results of,ii:136,137.Immortality, Buddhist conception of, II :473.Improvisation, negro’s talent for,i:353.Inada-Hime, Shintō deity,ii:8,25; statue of,105.Inari, temple to, at Matsue,ii:24; no shrine of, at Yabase,47; representations of,77.Inasa beach,ii:5,6.Individuality, Occidental theories of,ii:40.Industrialism, its effect on good manners,ii:183; on liberty,470,511,512.Ingelow, Jean, her High Tide,ii:499.Inomata, Teizaburō,i:113;ii:291;letters from Hearn to,i:64,65;ii:131–133,146–148,160–162,186,187;his records of Hearn’s Tōkyō lectures,i:137,138;his resolve to study medicine,ii:289,290;text of one of Hearn’s lectures as taken down by,519–529.Ionian Islands,i:3;hatred toward England in,6;ceded to Greece,7.Insects, caging of, in Japan,ii:335;ethical suggestions of the sociology of,514.Irish, similarities between faces of Mongolians and,i:190; language of,190.Ise, Japan,ii:10,29,38;modernization of,297.Isle Dernière, L’.SeeLast Island.Italian, Hearn’s study of,ii:217,218.Italy, Spencer’s theory of the education of the emotions in,i:456;atmospheric influence of,ii:501.Iwami, fox-superstition in,ii:29.Izumo, Japan,ii:6,10,11,13;Hearn’s speech before the educational association of,14;fox-superstition in,29;Hearn plans a permanent home in,270;an alternate name for Koizumi,293.James, Henry,ii:301,396; literary criticisms of,i:432,434;obstacles to his popularity,ii:377.Janet, Paul,ii:235.January customs, Japanese,ii:80.Japan, Hearn’s commission to,i:102;his early impressions of,103,104,107–109,115;ii:35;his work for,i:106;ii:281;rigidities under the charm of,i:107,108;secret of the charm of,108;absence of personal freedom in,108,109;position of foreign teachers in,128;ii:68,275,283,313,316,317;certain duties of subjects of,i:136;Western influences in,149,150;ii:115,154,161,177–179,180,199,219,291,296,485;art of,i:405,406,407,408;ii:3;nature in,3;prices in,4,5,43,66,67,68,69,70;some bathing resorts of,6;music of,15;dances of,21,22,31,268,297,468;country people of,31;prevalence of Shintō in interior of,31,32;food of,32,91,92,103,104,292;law of life in,35;women of,35,36,61,87,88,90,91;difficulties of literary work in,35,60,63,89;literature of,40,41,114,343,344,415;laws regarding marriage with a foreigner in,44,64;frankness of life in,45;protracted labour uncommon in,48,49;cats in,55,56,58,59;English reading-books for students in,79,102,105,106,283,328;celebration of the New Year in,80,81,82;drinking in,82,92,93;earthquakes in,83,84;colourlessness of,89;houses of,93;children of,99,190,191,288,306,307;obstacles to higher education in,103,104,291,292,307,308;disintegration of,144,145,323,478;pay of native officials of,158,259,265,308;need of scientific men in,163,164,275;politics in the public schools of,166;war between China and,175,181,182,185,186,251,258,262,281,511;foreign treaties of,185,186,262;naturalization of foreigners in,191,192;open ports of,199,298,315,341,342;anti-foreign feeling in,201,223,252,258,262,281;decline of education in,216;girls’ and boys’ dress in,253–255,259,260;songs of,267,268;floods in,307;intrigue in,321–323;Occidental indifference to stories of real life of,362,363;demands upon University professors in,370;the educated woman in,416–422;Occidental aggression in,442;mania for organizations in,461;Government service in,470;rapidly changing conditions in,471,502;Hearn’s proposed series of lectures on,487,495,496,499,504,505,506,514,515;travelling of the common people in,502;war between Russia and,515,516,517.Japan, Emperor of,ii:317.See alsoGo-Daigo.Japanese, natural charm of,ii:4,207;their genius for eclecticism,28;unemotional nature of,35,60,63,85,332;strange power of,56;harder side of,61;their fear of foreigners,82;impossibility of friendship with,99,100,159,217;probable future characteristics of,104;their reserve,122,123;their attitude toward nature,125,425,426;their trickiness,201,202;deficiency of the sex instinct among,209,210;development of the mathematical faculty among,210;psychology of,214,215;satire of,217;their loyalty,236,237;an essentially military race,258;their stature,260;their chastity,269;their affected religious indifference,274;their hardihood,292;their longevity,324;management of, impossible to Occidentals,386,387,388.Jeannest, Charles,i:313,357;his Au Congo,354.Jerome, St., his letter to Dardanas, describing an organ,i:166,167.Jesuits, animosity of, toward Hearn,ii:213.Jesus y Preciado, José de,i:334.Jewett, Sarah Orne,ii:301.Jews, ancient life of,i:287;lost musical instruments of,311.Jizō, a festival in honour of,i:126;legend of,ii:6.Johns Hopkins University,ii:496.Johnson, Charles,i:307,312,314,341.Jordan, David Starr, president of Stanford University,ii:496.Josephine, Empress of the French, anecdote of statue of, in Martinique,i:417–419.Journalism, rewards of,i:169,181;demands of,242;restraints of,271,275;Hearn’s desire to escape from,274,276,363,397;literary work and,324;ii:222,480;Hearn’s abandonment of,i:425;his proposal to return to,ii:493,494.Judæa, musical instruments furnished to the Romans by,i:166.Kabit,i:388.Kaka, Japan,ii:6.Kalewala,ii:472,502;its operatic possibilities,i:233,235–237,239,307,308,388;Hearn’s translations from,403.Kalidasa.SeeSakuntala.Kamakura,ii:346.Kano,ii:73,104,119,279;his knowledge of English,66;a teacher of jūjutsu,70.Kanteletar,i:235.Katayama, Mr.,ii:66,68,73,291.Kathā-sarit-sāgara,i:237,402.Kazimirski, A. de Biberstein, his translation of the Koran,i:327.Keats, John,ii:215.Keightley, Thomas, his Fairy Mythology,i:279.Kichijōji, temple of,ii:328.Kihei, Masumoto, his charities,ii:309,327.Kikujirō, Wadamori, his exhibitions of memory,ii:279.Kimi ga yo,ii:236.Kingsley, Charles, his Greek Heroes,ii:102;Airly Beacon,522,523.Kipling, Rudyard,ii:83,190,301,336,337,348,362,363,405,485,491;his morbidness,84;his Jungle Book,187,189,196;his story of Purim Bagat,196;Hearn’s admiration for,319,408,499;his royalties,377;his Day’s Work,408.Kishibojin, worship of,ii:16,17.Kissing, different significance of, in Turanian and Aryan races,ii:263,264.Kiyomasa, Katō, legend regarding,ii:186.Kiyomizu, Kwannon temple at,ii:28;scenery at,30;Inari shrine at,30.Kizuki, Japan,ii:7,11,297;Hearn’s visit to the temple at,i:115,122;ii:9,10,43;deity of,8;society for preserving buildings at,13;an entertainment given to Hearn at,37,38;custom regarding Shōryō-bune in,38,39;Buddhist temple (Rengaji) at,42;revival of Shintō in,47.Kobe, Japan, Hearn’s work in,i:128,129,132,139;disagreeable characteristics of,ii:197,198,199;flood in,307.Kobu-dera, Buddhist temple in Tōkyō,i:142,143.Koeber, Raphael von,ii:284,311,315,316.Koizumi, Iwao, Hearn’s son,ii:516,517.Koizumi, Kazuo, Hearn’s eldest son,i:127,128,150,154;ii:165,166,175,181,190,191,196,198,231,252,255,260,275,276,280,288,291,295,305,306,307,309,351,373,374,426,434,459,460,464,474,483,485,489,490,493,497,503,505,508,516,517;plans for his scientific education,181,270,271;his sensitiveness,300,476,498.Koizumi, Setsu,ii:68,74,77,81,82,90,95,96,97,110,119,128,157,159,181,190,191,192,193,276,278,279,288,295,298,317,329,336,337,386,397,489,491;Hearn’s marriage to,i:116;her notes regarding their life,117,118,119–124,127,138,142–152,155;her study of English,ii:106.Koizumi, Yakumo, Hearn’s Japanese name,i:117;ii:270,292,293,299.Kompert, Leopold, his Studies of Jewish Life,i:287.Kompira, Japan,ii:153,165.Koran, various editions of,i:327.Koteda, Viscount Yasusada, Governor of Izumo,i:119,120:ii:14,18,104.Koteda, Miss,ii:104;her gift to Hearn,i:118;ii:19.Koto-shiro-nushi-no-Kami, legend of,ii:7,8,97;identified with Ebisu, in Matsue,13;in Mionoseki,37.Krehbiel, Henry Edward,i:469;Hearn’s friendship with,55,60;Hearn’s letters to,67,73;text of the letters,84,85,86,165–244,277–289,292–314,320–325,330–339,351–364,367–380,384–388,405–408,409–411;his Fantaisie Chinoise,168,171,187;his musical essays,187;his talks,192;Hearn’s comment on his style,234,240,293,372,373;his work on the New York Tribune,241;his musical criticisms,386.Krehbiel, Mrs. Henry Edward,i:191,223.Krishna,i:316.Kūkedo, visit to cave of,i:121,122.Kumamoto, Japan, Hearn’s removal to,i:124;his life at,125–128;shrines of,ii:65;climate of,66,69,73;Hearn’s fellow teachers at,66,67,70,73;his household at,67,74,81,110;appearance of,69,70,81;the Dai Go Kōtō-Chūgakkō at,70,71,100;students at,70,79;religion in,76;reading books used in,79,102.Kwannon, temple of, at Kiyomizu,ii:28;representations of,77,78.Kyōtō, Japan,ii:130;middle school in,142;Hearn’s fondness for,192;exhibition in,257.Kyūshū, Japan,ii:91;Europeanized,99;students of,129,130.La Beaume, Jules, his translation of the Koran,i:327.La Bédollière, Emile de,i:200.Labrunie, Gérard (Gérard de Nerval),i:254,255,317;Hearn’s desire to translate his Voyage en Orient,362.Lakmé, Delibes’s opera of,i:377.Lamarck, Jean Baptiste de,ii:266.Lang, Andrew,ii:215;his translation of Gautier’s Contes,i:62.La Selve, Edgar,i:353,354.Last Island,i:95;destruction of,96;the scene of Hearn’s Chita,96.Latin races, cruelty of,i:203;probable future absorption of,ii:300,385.Layard, Sir Austen Henry,i:213.Le Duc, Léouzon.SeeLéouzon Le Duc.Lee, Charles,i:168.Le Fanu, Joseph Sheridan, his Bird of Passage,i:201;ii:41.Lefcada.SeeSanta Maura.Le Gallienne, Richard,ii:299.Legends, Greek and Hindoo,i:227,228;Talmudic,287.Leloir, Louis Auguste,i:319,320.Lemaître, Jules Elie François,i:434;ii:491.Léouzon Le Duc, Louis Antoine, his edition of the Kalewala,i:235,236;ii:468,469.Lessing, Gotthold Ephraim,i:211:his Laocoön,269.Letter-writing, different methods of,ii:247,248.Leucadia.SeeSanta Maura.Levkas.SeeSanta Maura.Lewes, George Henry,ii:190,221;his recognition of Spencer,235.Liberty, effect of industrialism on,ii:470,511,512.Life, law of modern,ii:134,135;an intellectual battle,135,136;cost of, to the white races,137;wastefulness of,249.L’Isère, Colombat de.SeeColombat, Marc.Lissajous, Jules Antoine,i:385.Literature, rewards of,i:393,430;Japanese,ii:40,41,344,415;plan for a study of comparative,271;teaching of English,271;German,290;American and English,301,302;Russian and French,302;conditions of success in,351;the personal equation in judgements of,441;seriousness of,463,464;Hearn’s theory of the study of English, in Japan,464;no taste in America for good,472;Hearn’s equipment for, and method of teaching English,480,481–483,486,487;Hearn’s advice about modern,509.Livingstone, David,i:297.Loennrot, Elias, his edition of the Kalewala,i:235,403.Lombroso, Cesare,ii:276,277.London, University of, plan for Hearn to lecture at,i:156.Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth,i:190;his Spanish Student,205,206.Loochoo Islands,ii:91,214;B. H. Chamberlain’s monograph on,273,274.Loti, Pierre, pseud.SeeViaud.Lotus, an article of diet,ii:45,63.Louisiana, some newspapers of,i:204,205.Love, power of,i:315,316;decline of,316;its effect upon literature,326;varying attributes of,438;a Buddhist view of,ii:138.Lowell, Percival,ii:33,117,160,200,310,317;his Soul of the Far East,i:460,461;ii:28,30,39,150,208,479,487,505;his Chosön,i:457,461;ii:30;his papers on Mars,202,203,204,208,479;his Occult Japan,200,204,207,208.Lowell Institute, Boston,ii:496.Loyalty, Japanese ideas of,ii:236,237.Lyall, Sir Alfred Comyns,i:388.Macassar, Celebes,ii:219.Macaulay, Thomas Babington, Baron, his Lays of Ancient Rome as a reading-book in Japanese schools,ii:102.McDonald, Mitchell,i:153;ii:458,459;Hearn’s friendship with,i:109,110;letters from Hearn to,ii:340–342,347–358,361–381,384,385,388–397,403–412,422–436,437–440,442–455;Hearn’s proposal to, regarding a book of short stories,341,342,348,349,350,356;his Highbinder story,348,364;his belief in Hearn’s work,351,375,379,494.Mackintosh, Sir James,ii:136.Magazine work, labour of,i:283,285;some effects of,293;discouragements of,317;Hearn’s willingness to resume,ii:480.Magic, musical, an example of,i:322.Mahabharata,i:402.Mahan, Alfred Thayer,ii:374.Maiko.SeeGeisha.Maine, battle-ship, destruction of,ii:358.Malatesta, Giovanni,i:271.Mallock, William Hurrell,ii:196,301;his opinion of Gautier,i:254,256;his translation of Gautier,257;his morbidness,ii:84.Malta, Island of,i:7;ii:217;Hearn’s recollections of,ii:213,214.Manila, P. I.,ii:213;expedition against,369.