TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES:

TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES:Page 258 is blank in the original.The initials A.D. are unspaced in the original. The initials B. C. have been changed to B.C. to match.The following spelling variations occur in the text. The names appear as in the original.Abu l'AtahiyaAbu l' AtihiyaAeneidÆneidAelfricÆlfricChekhovTchekovJehudah HaLeviJehudah Ha LeviMac Guckin de SlaneMacGuckin de SlaneMcGuckin de SlaneThe following corrections have been made to the text:Page 19: the assumption that all the intellectual[original has intellecual]Page 29: "[quotation mark missing in original]All kinds of ecstasy, however differentlyPage 40: literature of power in his opinion[original has opinon] is permanentPage 43: restated by the Italian critic Castelvetro[original has Castelevetro]Page 57: Balzac's novel Père[original has Pére] GoriotPage 65: one in prose of Eloise's[original has Eloises's]Page 88: under the titlePoetry and Its Varieties[original has Varities]Page 95: sown with stars, wherever[original has where-ever hyphenated across lines]Page 97: pre-Socratic philosophers[original has philsophers] like ParmenidesPage 108: article on Irish Literature in theBritannica[original has Brittanica]Page 109: says Gosse in his article in theBritannica[original has Brittanica]Page 120: in this care, have time for better things."[quotation mark missing in original]Page 122:New Study of English Poetryby Henry Newbolt[original has Newboldt]Page 130: he is more advanced than[original has that] we arePage 136: others were also absorbed as[original has a] to the differencePage 138: preface to his Mademoiselle[original has Madamoiselle] de MaupinPage 146: former is not wholly intuitive[original has intuitve]Page 168: Shelley, Nietzsche[original has Nietsche], and ButlerPage 178: in the sense of recording his own individuality[original has individualty]Page 185: See his essay on Casanova[original has Cananova] inAffirmationsPage 185: Shelley, Wordsworth, Tennyson, Goethe[original has Gothe] and IbsenPage 186: Wilkinson did not have to seek rhymes[original has ryhmes]Page 209: is[original has ii] attributed to Ibn AlaamidiPage 238: theories of aesthetic[original has esthetic] emotionPage 253: Abu Ali[original has ali] al Qali, 222Page 253: Baqui,[comma missing in original] 211, 214Page 253: Bossuet[original has Bossnet], 87, 228Page 253: Castelvetro[original has Castelevetro], 43, 179Page 253: Coleridge, S. T., 12, 47, 48, 49, 77, 78, 121,[comma missing in original] 173Page 253: Croce, 15, 28, 81, 145, 146, 147, 148, 149, 150[original has 50], 239Page 254: Elliot[original has Elliott], Ebenezer, 88Page 254: Erasmus,[comma missing in original] 43Page 255: Ibn Khallikan[original has Khallikans], 209Page 255: Imru'ul[original has Imru 'ul] Qays, 206, 215, 217[original has 218]Page 255: Khalil,[comma missing in original] Ahmad, 221Page 255: Neilson, William[original has Willian] A., 33Page 255: Newbolt[original has Newboldt], Henry, 171Page 255: Nidhami[original has Nidham] I Arudi, 204Page 256: Nietzsche, 28, 30, 53, 81, 124, 154, 163, 168[original has 166], 171, 181, 189, 242Page 256: Senancour[original has Sénancour], 49Page 257: Tha'alibi[original has Tha 'alibi], 223Page 257: Untermeyer[original has Untermyer], Louis, 118, 158Page 257: Yeats, William Butler, 71, 165[original has extraneous comma]Page 259: Areopagitica[original has Aeropagitica], 122, 178Page 260: Eugénie[original has Eugéne] Grandet, 59Page 260: History of English Poetry,[comma missing in original] 89Page 260: Julius Cæsar[original has Caesar], 56Page 260: Laocoon[original has Laocoön], 62Page 260: Les Misérables[original has Miserables], 58Page 261: Mademoiselle[original has Madamoiselle] de Maupin, 138Mr. Sludge, "the Medium,"[original has quotation marks around the entire title] 125Page 261: Nibelungen[original has Niebelungen] Lied, 102, 154Page 262: Télémaque[original has Télemaque], 86Page 263: Peloponnesian[original has Peloponessian] War, 53, 137[52:A] Wilhelm[original has Wilhem] A. Ambros[193:A]The Function of the Poet.[original has extraneous quotation mark]The index entry for Mark Twain was alphabetized under "Mark". Entry has been moved to its proper place.In the two Indexes, several page number references are incorrect in the original. The following table shows the page number references in the original and the corrected page references. The changes have been made in the Indexes.Index EntryIncorrectpagereferencesCorrectpagereferencesAristotle193, 221191, 220Arnold, Matthew117118Bacon, Francis52—Burke, Edmund120121Butcher, S. H.159160Cicero119120De Quincey, Thomas8788Eaton, Walter P.115116Hegel121122Henley, Walter117118Homer9396Ibsen, Henrik4849Keats, John247—Milton, John49, 23648, 238Morley, John168178Moore, Thomas4948Nicholson, D. H. S.218217Nietzsche166168Plato49, 52, 13248, —, 133Pope, Alexander775Saintsbury, George221220Schofield, W. H.212214Shelley, P. B.29—Spenser, Edmund236235Swinburne, A. C.2923Wordsworth, William29, 30—, 31Wulfstan107, 108108, 109Beowulf108109Birth of Tragedy2930Brand6059Defense of Poetry7374Master Builder5958Poetics221220Wild Duck5958

Page 258 is blank in the original.

The initials A.D. are unspaced in the original. The initials B. C. have been changed to B.C. to match.

The following spelling variations occur in the text. The names appear as in the original.

The following corrections have been made to the text:

Page 19: the assumption that all the intellectual[original has intellecual]Page 29: "[quotation mark missing in original]All kinds of ecstasy, however differentlyPage 40: literature of power in his opinion[original has opinon] is permanentPage 43: restated by the Italian critic Castelvetro[original has Castelevetro]Page 57: Balzac's novel Père[original has Pére] GoriotPage 65: one in prose of Eloise's[original has Eloises's]Page 88: under the titlePoetry and Its Varieties[original has Varities]Page 95: sown with stars, wherever[original has where-ever hyphenated across lines]Page 97: pre-Socratic philosophers[original has philsophers] like ParmenidesPage 108: article on Irish Literature in theBritannica[original has Brittanica]Page 109: says Gosse in his article in theBritannica[original has Brittanica]Page 120: in this care, have time for better things."[quotation mark missing in original]Page 122:New Study of English Poetryby Henry Newbolt[original has Newboldt]Page 130: he is more advanced than[original has that] we arePage 136: others were also absorbed as[original has a] to the differencePage 138: preface to his Mademoiselle[original has Madamoiselle] de MaupinPage 146: former is not wholly intuitive[original has intuitve]Page 168: Shelley, Nietzsche[original has Nietsche], and ButlerPage 178: in the sense of recording his own individuality[original has individualty]Page 185: See his essay on Casanova[original has Cananova] inAffirmationsPage 185: Shelley, Wordsworth, Tennyson, Goethe[original has Gothe] and IbsenPage 186: Wilkinson did not have to seek rhymes[original has ryhmes]Page 209: is[original has ii] attributed to Ibn AlaamidiPage 238: theories of aesthetic[original has esthetic] emotionPage 253: Abu Ali[original has ali] al Qali, 222Page 253: Baqui,[comma missing in original] 211, 214Page 253: Bossuet[original has Bossnet], 87, 228Page 253: Castelvetro[original has Castelevetro], 43, 179Page 253: Coleridge, S. T., 12, 47, 48, 49, 77, 78, 121,[comma missing in original] 173Page 253: Croce, 15, 28, 81, 145, 146, 147, 148, 149, 150[original has 50], 239Page 254: Elliot[original has Elliott], Ebenezer, 88Page 254: Erasmus,[comma missing in original] 43Page 255: Ibn Khallikan[original has Khallikans], 209Page 255: Imru'ul[original has Imru 'ul] Qays, 206, 215, 217[original has 218]Page 255: Khalil,[comma missing in original] Ahmad, 221Page 255: Neilson, William[original has Willian] A., 33Page 255: Newbolt[original has Newboldt], Henry, 171Page 255: Nidhami[original has Nidham] I Arudi, 204Page 256: Nietzsche, 28, 30, 53, 81, 124, 154, 163, 168[original has 166], 171, 181, 189, 242Page 256: Senancour[original has Sénancour], 49Page 257: Tha'alibi[original has Tha 'alibi], 223Page 257: Untermeyer[original has Untermyer], Louis, 118, 158Page 257: Yeats, William Butler, 71, 165[original has extraneous comma]Page 259: Areopagitica[original has Aeropagitica], 122, 178Page 260: Eugénie[original has Eugéne] Grandet, 59Page 260: History of English Poetry,[comma missing in original] 89Page 260: Julius Cæsar[original has Caesar], 56Page 260: Laocoon[original has Laocoön], 62Page 260: Les Misérables[original has Miserables], 58Page 261: Mademoiselle[original has Madamoiselle] de Maupin, 138Mr. Sludge, "the Medium,"[original has quotation marks around the entire title] 125Page 261: Nibelungen[original has Niebelungen] Lied, 102, 154Page 262: Télémaque[original has Télemaque], 86Page 263: Peloponnesian[original has Peloponessian] War, 53, 137[52:A] Wilhelm[original has Wilhem] A. Ambros[193:A]The Function of the Poet.[original has extraneous quotation mark]

Page 19: the assumption that all the intellectual[original has intellecual]

Page 29: "[quotation mark missing in original]All kinds of ecstasy, however differently

Page 40: literature of power in his opinion[original has opinon] is permanent

Page 43: restated by the Italian critic Castelvetro[original has Castelevetro]

Page 57: Balzac's novel Père[original has Pére] Goriot

Page 65: one in prose of Eloise's[original has Eloises's]

Page 88: under the titlePoetry and Its Varieties[original has Varities]

Page 95: sown with stars, wherever[original has where-ever hyphenated across lines]

Page 97: pre-Socratic philosophers[original has philsophers] like Parmenides

Page 108: article on Irish Literature in theBritannica[original has Brittanica]

Page 109: says Gosse in his article in theBritannica[original has Brittanica]

Page 120: in this care, have time for better things."[quotation mark missing in original]

Page 122:New Study of English Poetryby Henry Newbolt[original has Newboldt]

Page 130: he is more advanced than[original has that] we are

Page 136: others were also absorbed as[original has a] to the difference

Page 138: preface to his Mademoiselle[original has Madamoiselle] de Maupin

Page 146: former is not wholly intuitive[original has intuitve]

Page 168: Shelley, Nietzsche[original has Nietsche], and Butler

Page 178: in the sense of recording his own individuality[original has individualty]

Page 185: See his essay on Casanova[original has Cananova] inAffirmations

Page 185: Shelley, Wordsworth, Tennyson, Goethe[original has Gothe] and Ibsen

Page 186: Wilkinson did not have to seek rhymes[original has ryhmes]

Page 209: is[original has ii] attributed to Ibn Alaamidi

Page 238: theories of aesthetic[original has esthetic] emotion

Page 253: Abu Ali[original has ali] al Qali, 222

Page 253: Baqui,[comma missing in original] 211, 214

Page 253: Bossuet[original has Bossnet], 87, 228

Page 253: Castelvetro[original has Castelevetro], 43, 179

Page 253: Coleridge, S. T., 12, 47, 48, 49, 77, 78, 121,[comma missing in original] 173

Page 253: Croce, 15, 28, 81, 145, 146, 147, 148, 149, 150[original has 50], 239

Page 254: Elliot[original has Elliott], Ebenezer, 88

Page 254: Erasmus,[comma missing in original] 43

Page 255: Ibn Khallikan[original has Khallikans], 209

Page 255: Imru'ul[original has Imru 'ul] Qays, 206, 215, 217[original has 218]

Page 255: Khalil,[comma missing in original] Ahmad, 221

Page 255: Neilson, William[original has Willian] A., 33

Page 255: Newbolt[original has Newboldt], Henry, 171

Page 255: Nidhami[original has Nidham] I Arudi, 204

Page 256: Nietzsche, 28, 30, 53, 81, 124, 154, 163, 168[original has 166], 171, 181, 189, 242

Page 256: Senancour[original has Sénancour], 49

Page 257: Tha'alibi[original has Tha 'alibi], 223

Page 257: Untermeyer[original has Untermyer], Louis, 118, 158

Page 257: Yeats, William Butler, 71, 165[original has extraneous comma]

Page 259: Areopagitica[original has Aeropagitica], 122, 178

Page 260: Eugénie[original has Eugéne] Grandet, 59

Page 260: History of English Poetry,[comma missing in original] 89

Page 260: Julius Cæsar[original has Caesar], 56

Page 260: Laocoon[original has Laocoön], 62

Page 260: Les Misérables[original has Miserables], 58

Page 261: Mademoiselle[original has Madamoiselle] de Maupin, 138

Mr. Sludge, "the Medium,"[original has quotation marks around the entire title] 125

Page 261: Nibelungen[original has Niebelungen] Lied, 102, 154

Page 262: Télémaque[original has Télemaque], 86

Page 263: Peloponnesian[original has Peloponessian] War, 53, 137

[52:A] Wilhelm[original has Wilhem] A. Ambros

[193:A]The Function of the Poet.[original has extraneous quotation mark]

The index entry for Mark Twain was alphabetized under "Mark". Entry has been moved to its proper place.

In the two Indexes, several page number references are incorrect in the original. The following table shows the page number references in the original and the corrected page references. The changes have been made in the Indexes.


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