San Francisco, Cal., Hearn’s search for a publisher in,i:246,247.Sanskrit, derivation of Greek and Latin from,i:202.Santa Maura, Island of, Hearn’s birth-place,i:3,7,429;situation and character of,3,4;its influence upon Hearn,4,5.Sanza, Nagoya,ii:42.Sanzo, Tsuda,ii:142,143.Sappho,i:3,238.Sasa, a Japanese priest,ii:7,8.Satire, Japanese,ii:217.Satni-Khamois, Egyptian romance,i:238.Sato, Mr.,ii:68.Sattee, a Hindoo, sent by Hearn to Krehbiel,i:367–370,393.Scandinavia, music of,i:190.Schiefner, Franz Anton, his German translation of Kalewala,i:235.Schlemihl, Peter,ii:443.Schopenhauer, Arthur,i:447,459,460;ii:151,235;basis of his philosophy,266,267.Schurman, Jacob Gould, president of Cornell University,ii:488,492,495.Schwab, Moïse, his translation of part of the Talmud,i:287.Schweinfurth, Georg August,i:310,354.Science, influence of, upon literary style,i:263,264;unsatisfactoriness of,ii:338,339.Scientific education,ii:163,164,275.Scotland, bagpipe and kilt introduced by Romans into,i:182,183.Secret Affinities, Hearn’s translation of the pantheistic madrigal from Gautier’s Emaux et Camées,i:259–261.Sects, religion and,ii:131.Self-interest, the basis of most human relations,ii:188,189.Sensation, hereditary,ii:223,225–227,230,233,234,235,236,237,241,250.Senses, training of the,ii:86.Sensibility, moral and physical,i:434–436.Serpent worship,ii:29.Sex, influence of, on history,i:256;a mystery of,401;standards regarding the relations of,438;Oriental and Occidental views regarding questions of,ii:112,113,114,121,122,123;instincts of, deficient in Japanese,209,210.Shakespeare,ii:520.“Shall” and “will,” Hearn’s use of the words,ii:224,225,246.Shelley, Percy Bysshe,ii:215.Shimane, ken of,i:115.Shimbashi,ii:433;Hearn’s adventures with pickpockets at,391.Shimo-ichi,ii:37,41,46.Shinshū, a sect,ii:27.Shintō,i:112;ascendency of, in Matsue,ii:13,15;nature of,26,27,30;prevalence of, in interior of Japan,31,32;revival of, in Kizuki,47;rituals,59;Hearn’s questions regarding Shintō home-worship in Izumo,71,79.Ships of the Souls.SeeShōryō-bune.Shiva, the Hindoo god of destruction,i:210,211.Shōryō-bune,ii:8,38,39,41.Simpson, Walter, his History of the Gipsies,i:201,202,459.Sinnett, Alfred Percy,i:265.Sistrum, introduced by Egypt into Italy,i:166.Siva.SeeShiva.Skeat, Walter William,i:374.Small-pox, in Martinique,i:422.Smoking, paraphernalia of, in Japan,ii:49–51.Smyrna,i:8.Snake, sacred,ii:29.Socialism, tyranny of,ii:184,185,205,511,512.Societies, literary, Hearn’s opinion of,ii:461–463.Society, the nature of polite,ii:400;injury inflicted upon writers by,451.Society of Authors, London,ii:445,446.Society of Finnish Literature,i:235.Socrates,i:41.Solomon, Song of,i:227.Souls, sacrifice of,ii:410.Souls, velvet, Hearn’s definition of the phrase,ii:326.Soulié, Melchior Frédéric,ii:231.South, difficulty of literary production in,i:194;conceptions of beauty in,211.Spanish-American War,ii:369,373,374,376,379,380,384,385.Specialization, necessity of,i:263.Spencer, Herbert,ii:108,190,207,208,221,236,247;Hearn’s admiration for,i:58;ii:44,409,509;his influence upon Hearn,i:85,86,365,374,375,392,394,430,431,438,459;ii:20,26,221,222;his Sociology,i:312;his essay on musical origination,325;his conservatism regarding further physical evolution,397;his theory of education,456;his criticism of the Mombushō Readers,ii: 105;his theory of moral evolution,137;history of good manners traced by,183;socialism defined by,184,205;on heredity,223,226,228,234;on psychological evolution,231;Darwin and,235;his paper on the Method of Comparative Psychology,249;application of his educational theories,275;his views on eccentricity,277;on war,510.Sphinx, riddle of the,ii:168.Spinoza, Baruch,ii:173.Stamboul, black population of,i:355.Stanford University,ii:476,477;plans for Hearn to lecture at,496.Stauben, Daniel, his Scènes de la Vie Juive,i:287.Steamships, Hearn’s account of the fatal effect of his presence upon,ii:433.Stedman, Edmund Clarence,i:332,446.Stevenson, Robert Louis,ii:190,336, 383,405,509.Strength, misuse of,ii:160,161.Sturdy, E. T.,ii:380.Style, literary, helps to formation of,i:263,264,372,373,374;Hearn’s ambition regarding his own,276,364,374,379,383,393;labour of acquiring an ornamental,324.Success, some requisites of,i:431;ii:135.Suicide, a Japanese,ii:273.Susa-no-o, Japanese deity,ii:8.Susa-no-o-no-Mikoto, Shintō deity,ii:16,25.Swimming, Hearn’s fondness for,i:176,333,334,341;ii:47,63,303,304,448;of Japanese boys at Yabase,48.Swinburne, Algernon Charles,i:432,433;ii:427.Sword-Dance, in Léon dialect,i:305;prose and metrical translations of,305–307.Swords, legends concerning,i:185.Symonds, John Addington,i:220,227;his praise of Whitman,292;his Greek Poets,329;his Wine, Women, and Song,342.Syrinx, musical instrument,i:297.Taillefer,i:191.Taine, Hippolyte Adolphe, his Art in Italy,ii:271.Taka o gami-no-Mikoto,ii:25.Takahashi, Dr.,ii:304.Takahashi, Sakué,ii:330,331.Takaki, Japanese boy,ii:278;head of, on title-page of Kokoro,300.Takamori, Senke,i:115,116;ii:7,9,10,38,145,297;his gift to Hearn,153;courtesy of,180.Takata, Dean,i:150.Talmud,i:237,311;legends of the,287.Tampa, Florida,i:376.Tam-tam,i:411.Tanabe, one of Hearn’s pupils,ii:68;letter from Hearn to,508,509.Tannery murder, Cincinnati,i:51.Taylor, Bayard,i:266,324;ii:215.Taylor, James Monroe, president of Vassar College,ii:504,505.Tennessee, Hearn’s account of an incident in,i:67.Tennōji,ii:297.Tennyson, Alfred, Baron Tennyson,i:221,333;ii:190,221,302;his Princess used as a reading-book in Tōkyō,ii:283,328.Terminus, the god of boundaries,i:184,185.Tetsujirō, Inoue,ii:284,313.Thomas, Theodore,i:180,182.Thought, physiologically considered,ii:244.Ticknor, William D.,i:332,372.Timbuctoo, music of desert nomads of,i:353.Time, value of, II:194;no knowledge of the value of, in Japan,461,463.Times-Democrat (New Orleans);Hearn’s associates on,i:70,71;Hearn’s work on,72,73,176,280,363;letters to, afterward expanded into Chita,96;purpose of its proprietors,288.Tison, Alexander, professor at theUniversity of Tōkyō,ii:284,312,316.Togo-ike, Japan,ii:53.Tōkyō, Hearn’s private life in,i:141–152;ii:295,309,327,329;his dislike of,ii:192,193;the foreign element in,321,456,457;cheap living in,329;appearance of,333,334;climate of,366,372,385;lack of literary inspiration in,378;work done by students in,387;a silk-house at,437,438;Government service in,470.Tōkyō, University of, Hearn becomes Professor of English Literature at,i:136–138;resigns this position,154;ii:368,490,493;students of,ii:282,283,314,315,328,388;the gate to public office,282;Hearn’s work at,283,298,305,306,310,314,327,328,357,427,429,444,481,482,486,487;professors at,284,285,311,312,313,315,316;architecture of,311;one reason for Hearn’s appointment at,313,314.Torio, Viscount, his theories of Western civilization,ii:36,40.Toyokuni,ii:77.Toyoma, Masakazu,i:122;ii:298,328,329.Tradesmen, enviable position of,i:398,399.Translations, from the French, obstacles to publication of,i:247,248,250,251.Trata, La, Greek choral dance,i:385.Trinidad, babies of,i:416,417.Trinity, the Hindoo,i:210.Tropics, difficulty of reproducing the charms of, in literature,i:99;Hearn’s love for the,105,415,420,425,449,469;ii:64,211,213,217,281;nature and human nature in the,i:436;difficulty of literary work in,422,423,424,425,449;heredity in,429.Trübner & Co.,i:325.Trygvesson, Olaf,ii:228.Tunison, Joseph Salathiel,i:288,361,405,411;his comment on Hearn’s work and characteristics,54,55,62,63,64,65,66;Hearn’s friendship with,55;his comment on Hearn’s friendships,56;his book on the Virgilian Legend,351;letter from Hearn to,443,444.Turiault, J., his Etude sur la Langage Créole de la Martinique,i:357.Twins, Japanese,ii:326,327.Tylor, Edward Burnett,ii:8,41,57;an Australian chant quoted by,i:312,313;its construction similar to a Greek chorus,312;his book on anthropology,ii:14.Tyndall, John,ii:235.Typography, Hearn’s interest in,i:50.Uguisi, gift of, to Hearn,i:118,119;ii:19.Ukioye exhibition,ii:382.Undine, philosophy of,ii:508.United States, intellectual sterility in,ii:478;liberty in,511,512;race-hatred in,512.Ushaw, Roman Catholic College,i:34,37.Ushigome.SeeTōkyō.Value, close connection between ideas of weight and,ii:74,75,76.Van Horne, Sir William, his offer to Hearn,ii:505.Varigny, Dr.,ii:467.Vedantic philosophy,ii:236.Venus, Medicean, Ruskin’s comment on,i:31.Venus of Milo,i:227.Verlaine, Paul,ii:187.Very, Mary,ii:441.Viaud, Julien (Pierre Loti),i:72,334,361,431,432;ii:479;his L’Inde sans les Anglais,i:72;ii:491,492;his Mariage de Loti,i:249,377;his Roman d’un Spahi,249,427;his Aziyadé,250;Hearn’s desire to translate some of his novels,362;Hearn’s admiration for,377,378,396,427,452,453;his Un Rêve,434,452,453;his Madame Chrysanthemum,434;his account of the French attack on the coast of Annam,ii:373;offers his services to Spain,385.Vickers, Thomas,i:50,214.Victoria, Queen of England,i:164.Vignoli, Tito,i:292.Villoteau, Guillaume André,i:283;his Mémoire sur la Musique dans l’antique Egypte,285.Virchow, Rudolf,ii:312,316.Vishnu,i:210.