1
II. EDITORIAL DIFFICULTIES 5
III. REMINISCENCES 9
IV. CHARACTERISTICS 20
V. THE WORLD IN CLOTHES 25
VI. APRONS 31
VII. MISCELLANEOUS-HISTORICAL 34
VIII. THE WORLD OUT OF CLOTHES 37
IX. ADAMITISM 43
X. PURE REASON 47
XI. PROSPECTIVE 52
BOOK II
I. GENESIS 61
II. IDYLLIC 68
III. PEDAGOGY 76
IV. GETTING UNDER WAY 90
V. ROMANCE 101
VI. SORROWS OF TEUFELSDROeCKH 112
VII. THE EVERLASTING NO 121
VIII. CENTRE OF INDIFFERENCE 128
IX. THE EVERLASTING YEA 138
X. PAUSE 149
BOOK III
I. INCIDENT IN MODERN HISTORY 156
II. CHURCH-CLOTHES 161
III. SYMBOLS 163
IV. HELOTAGE 170
V. THE PHOENIX 174
VI. OLD CLOTHES 179
VII. ORGANIC FILAMENTS 183
VIII. NATURAL SUPERNATURALISM 191
IX. CIRCUMSPECTIVE 201
X. THE DANDIACAL BODY 204
XI. TAILORS 216
XII. FAREWELL 219
APPENDIX--TESTIMONIES OF AUTHORS 225
SUMMARY 231
ON HEROES, HERO-WORSHIP, AND THE HEROIC IN HISTORY
LECTURE I
THE HERO AS DIVINITY. Odin. Paganism: Scandinavian
Mythology 239
LECTURE I
|