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s highest creative efforts, ii. 1; friends at Montmorency, ii. 2; reads the New Heloisa to the Marechale de Luxembourg, ii. 2; unwillingness to receive gifts, ii. 5; his relations with the Duke and Duchess de Luxembourg, ii. 7; misunderstands the friendliness of Madame de Boufflers, ii. 7; calm life at Montmorency, ii. 8; literary jealousy, ii. 8; last of his peaceful days, ii. 9; advice to a young man against the contemplative life, ii. 10; offensive form of his "good sense" concerning persecution of Protestants, ii. 11, 12; cause of his unwillingness to receive gifts, ii. 13, 14; owns his ungrateful nature, ii. 15; ill-humoured banter, ii. 15; his constant bodily suffering, ii. 16; thinks of suicide, ii. 16; correspondence with the readers of the New Heloisa, ii. 19, 20; the New Heloisa, criticism on, ii. 20-55 (see New Heloisa); his publishing difficulties, ii. 56; no taste for martyrdom, ii. 59, 60; curious discussion between, ii. 59; and Malesherbes, ii. 60; indebted to Malesherbes in the publication of Emilius, ii. 61, 62; suspects Jesuits, Jansenists, and philosophers of plotting to crush the book, ii. 63; himself counted among the latter, ii. 65; Emilius ordered to be burnt by public executioner, on the charge of irreligious tendency, and its author to be arrested, ii. 65; his flight, ii. 67; literary composition on the journey to Switzerland, ii. 69; contrast between him and Voltaire, ii. 70; explanation of his "natural ingratitude," ii. 71; reaches the canton of Berne, and ordered to quit it, ii. 72; Emilius and Social Contract condemned to be publicly burnt at Geneva, and author arrested if he came there, ii. 72, 73; takes refuge at Motiers, in dominions of Frederick of Prussia, ii. 73; characteristic letters to the king, ii. 74, 77; declines pecuniary help from him, ii. 75; his home and habits at Motiers, ii. 77, 78; Voltaire supposed to have stirred up animosity against him at Geneva, ii. 81; Archbishop of Paris writes against him, ii. 83; his reply, and character as a controversialist, ii. 83-90; life at Val de Travers (Motiers), ii. 91-95; his generosity, ii. 93; corresponds with the Prince of Wuertemberg on the education of the prince's daughter, ii. 95, 96; on Gibbon, ii. 96; visit from Boswell, ii. 98; invited to legislate for Corsica, ii. 99, _n._; urges Boswell t
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