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TO THE

HUNDRED AND SEVENTY-FIRST VOLUME OF THE

QUARTERLY REVIEW.

Acropolis of Athens, the, 122-our
knowledge of the remains of ancient
Athens-books reviewed, 123--classi-
cal archæology, 125-Pausanias a
traveller, 126-mythological discus-
sions, 127-historical sketch, 128-
131-Cimon's walls, 131-139-age of
Peisistratus, 132-137-reconstruc-
tion of temple, &c., of Athena, 132-
134, 139 archaic female figures,
135-137-Athenian potters, 137-139
-age of Olympian Pericles, 141
-Artemis Brauronia, 142, 143-
other cults, 143-Temple of Escu-
lapius, 144-Theatre of Dionysus,
146-148-the Elgin Marbles, 149.
See Dörpfeld.

Alcuin, a poem of, 445.
Alfred the Great, 310, 443.
Alliance, the Triple (1854), 336–338.
Amalteo, epigram of, 296.
Army, Prussian and English, 341.
Arnold, Matthew, anticipated, 313-
on Butler's 'Analogy,' 325.
Ascham, Roger, 442, 456.
Austria, attitude of, 1859, 339—with
Prussia, 346-takes arms, 360.
Baber on W. China, 205, 225 seqq.
Balzac, analysis of his works, 57-69.
Basilisk, the, 441.
Bavaria, 1866, 365.

Beaunis, hypnotic experiments, 251.
Becket, school of, 442-at Cahors, 490.
Benedek, Field-Marshal, 51, 361.
Bernheim, Dr., 234-244.

Betham-Edwards, Les Causses, 472, 485.
Bible, the, 170.

Bibliomaniacs, early, 447, 448.

Binet on Animal Magnetism,' 234.
Birds, 503-531-organization of, 504-
506-falcon of Henry IV. of France,
504-eggs and nests, 506-508-cuckoo
and horn-bill, 507, 508-taught to
speak, 509-stand between beasts and
reptiles, ib.-works reviewed: Salvin
and Godman's, 510; Seebohm's,
ib.; Oates's, ib.- Sharpe's Hume
collection, 511, 512-geographical
distribution of, 512, 517-peculiar
grouse, 513-secretary bird, 514-
peacocks and pheasants, ib.-Trago-
pans, ib. Honduras turkey, ib.-
mocking-bird, ib.-hoazin, 516
brush-turkey, ib.-bower-bird, ib.-
lyre-bird, 517-tooth-billed pigeon,
Vol. 171.-No. 342.

517-bird of paradise, ib.-huia-bird,
ib.-owl-parrot, ib.-crooked - bill
plover, ib.- Kea parrot, 518
oceanic birds, 518, 519-migration,
521 seqq.,
see Heligoland - great
bustard, 525, 526-spoon-bill, 526
-golden eagle, ib. capercailzie,
ib.-kite, 527-great auk, ib.-
Labrador duck, ib.-Mauritius star-
ling, ib.- dodo, ib.- solitaire, ib.
-Epiornis, 506, 529-Mantel's rail,
517, 528-harpagornis, 528-fossil,
528, 529-classification of, 529–531.
Bismarck, policy of, 29-insulting me-
morial of, 33-Immediats-Bericht,'
35- the Imperial scheme, 39
founder of the German Empire, ib.
-Memorial of 1888, 44, 56-Kaiser
Wilhelm's confidence in, 46—and
Freytag's Reminiscences, 56-early
life of, 332, 333 - on the rivalry
between Prussia and Austria, 339
-Prime Minister, 341-his policy,
342- Schleswig-Holstein, 346-on
English statesmen, 347-349-Vienna
despatch, 351- conference with the
Duke of Oldenburg, 352 terms
proposed to Denmark, ib.-general
astuteness, 353, 365-Italian policy,
353, 355-breach with Austria, 355
-removes Augustenburg, 355, 358
-advice to a lady, 360-a German
Parliament, 361 -a 'new Consti-
tution,' 364.

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Bolingbroke, and bribery, 173-and the
Jacobites, 175-letter to Marchmont,
176-a 'brilliant knave,' 179-and
the 'National Party,' 194 seqq.-
and the 'secession,' 196-on a Place
Bill, 198-a Broad-bottom Ministry,
200-religion of, 301.

Bötticher, Die Akropolis, &c., 122, 123.
Bourget, P., Œuvres Compl., 57, 84-87.
Braid, and mesmerism, 241-his nine
propositions, 242-cases and sug-
gestion,' 243.
243 his Neurypnology,
ib.-pamphlet of 1853, 254.
Braunis on Somnambulism, 234.
Broad-bottom Ministry, a, 200.
Brunetière, Le Roman Naturaliste, 57
-on Flaubert, 71-his demand on
writers, 78.

Brutus, the ghost seen by, 99—Sir W.
Scott on, 100.

Bryce, James, M.P., 'The American

Commonwealth,' 260-on the 'poli-
ticians,' 263, 276-on the Tweed
Ring, 279-on the Irish vote, 282.
Buchanan, Sir A., and Bismarck, 349.
Bunsen, and the King, 331-views
towards Russia, 335-recalled, 336.
Buol, Count, 334-336.

Burleigh, Lord, to his son, 310.
Byron's Diary, 386-on Swift, 394.
Carnarvon, Earl of, Editor of 'Chester-
field's Letters,' 287, 297, 303, 305
-scholarship of, 295.

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Catalogues, earliest Library, 445, 446.
Cavour at Baden-Baden, 338.
Caxton, 443-list of printing, 452.
Charcot, Dr., on hysteria mesmerism,
244-and pressensation, 256.
Charles I. on the scaffold, 465.
Chatham's, Lord, Letters, 310, 311.
Chaucer, on 'Romaunce,' 453 - on
fairies, 107, 108, 111-his caricatures,
455-first English novelist, 460.
Cheefoo Convention, 244.
Chesterfield, on France, 89-on the
First Minister, 177-on Walpole,
194-on the Convention of 1739, 196,
198-and the Whigs, 199-Letters
of, 287-328-Burke's notice of, 289
-the 'Gentleman's Magazine,' ib.—
Crawford's Remarks,' ib.-Pratt's
'Pupil of Pleasure,' 290-Cowper,
Johnson, Dickenson, 291-Chester-
field on lying, 291, 292-History of,
292-Maty's Memoirs,' 293-editor's
blemishes, 294-297-Letters to Bp.
of Waterford, 299-religious opinions,
300-302-moral teaching, 302, 303,
304, 328-letters, 305, 306, 307-309,
315-319, 322-not for publication,
311, 312, 326-an aristocrat, 311, 327
-French proclivities, 312, 326-on
Italian literature, 312, 313 on the
English, 313-on Philistinism, ib.—
on women, 314, 315-Sainte-Beuve
on, 317-his theory and aim, 323,
324-the charm of Chesterfield, 325,
326-style, 326, 327-his models,
327--Life of Chesterfield needed, 328.
Christian, King, 345, 346.

Christian of Augustenburg, 358.
Chungking a Treaty port, 212 seqq.
Cimon and the Acropolis, 131.
Clarendon, Lord, to Bernstoff, 352.
Coleridge on Shakespeare, 91-Tread
gently,' 118.

Dante prohibited, 448.

Daudet, A., Euvres Compl., 57, 81-83.
'Days near Paris,' by Hare, 472.
De la Suggestion, &c., 234.
Dionysus, Theatre of, 125, 144, 146.
Dog and Gun, 419-438

-

works re-
viewed, 419- partridge shooting,
ib.-driving, 419-421-H. H. on the

-

power of will, 421, 422-kennel man-
agement, 422-424 education of
dogs, 424, 425-sagacity, ib.-spa-
niels, retrievers, &c., 424, 425, 431,
432, 434-when to shoot over a no-
vice,' 426-gun-shyness, 427, 428–
mutual confidence between man and
dog, 429, 433-setters allowed to re-
trieve, two instances, 430, 431, 433-
collies' intelligence, 431-teaching of
tricks condemned, 433-dogs and
thorns, 434-a learned dog, 435-
shooting in Brittany, 436-a country
view, 437.

Dörpfeld, Dr., at Athens, 126-recon-
struction of temple, 132, 140-on the
Propylæa of Mnesicles, 141, 142—
on the Greek theatre, 146.
Dupanloup and Renan, 371, 372, 376.
Eliot, George, a child, 470.
Elliotson, Dr. (Mesmerism), 241.
English, the universal tongue, 49.
Erechtheum, the, 132, 140, 142.
Eton College, 1440-1884, by H. C. M.
Lyte, 1-27-ninth Jubilee, 1-per-
manency of stamp, 1, 2-Winchester,
1, 2, 7-Tiverton, 2-on books about
schools, ib.-and English education,
3-Eton books, ib.-learning in me-
dieval England, 3, 4, 6- rise of
'English undefiled,' b.-barbarism
of English Latin, ib.- 14th and 15th
century foundations, ib.-Wykeham,
6,7-Winchester imitated at Eton, 7

-'commensales' of two kinds, ib.—
discipline, ib.-Wykeham's influence
on Henry VI., 8-Eton Charter of
Foundation and endowment, 8, 9—
character of Henry VI., 8-by Bishop
Stubbs, 9-opening of the school, ib.
-the Amicabilis Concordia, 10-plan
of buildings, 10, 11-nearly merged
in St. George's, Windsor, 11-under
Edward IV., 12-Henry VIII., ib.
-Provost Lupton's additions, ib.-
Cox, tutor to Edward VI., 13 — Sa-
vile and his printing press, ib.-the
library, 14-Hales, Fellow of the
College, 13, 14-under the Puritans,
14-buildings under the Restoration,
14, 15 alterations by Provost
Godolphin, 15-the chapel, 16, 17—
schooldays of great men, 17, 18-
George III., 19—some head masters,
ib., see Keate-flogging at Eton, 20
-Hawtrey, 22, 24-College Library,
23-Commission of 1861, 25-reform,
1864-1871, ib.-sports, &c., ib.-pre-
sent condition of, 27-reflection on
the changes at, ib.
Eugénie, Empress, 363.
Evelyn to Pope, 447.
Exner's China, 205, 224.

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the

Féré, Ch., animal magnetism, 234.
Feuillet, Octave, novelist, 83.
Fiction, French, 57. See Realism, &c.
Fiction, Penny, 150. See Penny, &c.
Flaubert, Euv. Compl., 57-Lettres à
G. Sand, ib.-analysis of, 69-77.
Flogging at Eton, &c., 13, 20.
Foxe's Book of Martyrs,' 457.
France, Provincial: list of works on,
472 our ignorance of, 472-475-
Arthur Young's advice, 473-key to,
475-Murray's 'Handbooks,' 475,
476-Joanne's works, 476-Hare's,
476-478-Picardy and Champagne,
478-480-glass-works at St. Gobain,
482-484 - cottage life, 484
Morvan, 485-Autun, b.- Lyons,
486-'Roof of France,' 486, 488-
Provence, 487-Pont du Gard, ib.-
Nîmes, ib.-a hotel at Le Vigan, ib.
-the silkworm, 488-the Aveyron,
489, 490-paradoxes, 491-patois,
ib.-love of country, ib.-homes,
493, 494-provincial capitals, 494-
the mayor of the commune, 495-
pleasantness of life in, 497-aspira-
tions, 498 peasant types, ib.
La Pucelle's country, 502-the 'soul
and body' of France, ib.
Frederick William IV. of Prussia, 330
-incapacity of, 337-dies, 340, 345
-his wife's papers, 48.
Freytag's Reminiscences, 28-56-the
Crown Prince and the German Em-
pire, 28, 37, 38, 42, 44 ' unser
Fritz,' 28 answers to book, 29-
liberal policy of the Crown Prince,
29, 30-key to Freytag's criticism, 30
-French war, 32 retrospective
history, 32, 33-Freytag at head-
quarters, 1870, 33-character of his
book, 33, 34-Morier incident, 34-
a splendid battle-picture, 35-37—
Diary of the Emp. Frederick, 37,
38-Freytag's burgher sympathies,
40-Crown Prince's views and work,
40, 41-third German army, 41—
follows the Crown Prince, 42-Frey-
tag's hallucinations, 42, 43 - the
Crown Prince, 44-his personality,
45, 46-his offices, 47-his tastes, &c.,
48, 50, 52-his death, 47-policy to-
wards S. Germany, 44, 45-Frey-
tag's impressions, 41, 46-the Reptile
Press, 46, 53-after the war, 46-
Socialist legislation, ib. — Freytag's
pettiness, 49, 50 account of the
Crown Prince in 1870, 50-capture
of the Gaisberg, 52-ignored cha-
racteristics, 1889, ib. suggestive
method, 53, 54-culmination, 55-
judgment, 56.

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Furness' 'Variorum Shakespeare,' 91.

Gablenz, Gen., march on Jutland, 348
-proposal for the Duchies, 362.
Gastein, King William at, 344.
Gautier, Th., criticism of, 71.
Géographies-Joanne,' 472, 476.
George Sand, 75 passim.
Ghosts, modern, 99, 100.
Gibbon on Bolingbroke, 301.
Gill's River of Golden Sand,' 205.
Goethe on Shakespeare, 97-his child-
hood, 468-on reason, 385.

Goltz, Count, and D. de Lhuys, 350-
Bismarck to, on Austria, 354-and
the Council of Feb. 28, 1866, 359—
informs Napoleon III., ib.
Goodall, Provost of Eton, 20.
Goodford, Provost of Eton, 24.
Gortschakoff thunderstruck, 336.
Gottofrey, Prof., to Renan, 373.
Gottorp, House of, 352.
Govone, Gen., at Berlin, 360, 364.
Gray at Eton, 18.

Greek Theatre, 146.

Gregory, Prof., on Somnambulism, 254
-on clairvoyance, &c., 255.
Grostête, Bishop of Lincoln, 442.
Guelf Fund, 30—appropriation of, 46.
Haigh, Mr., on the Attic Theatre, 147.
Hales, John, of Eton, 13.

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Halifax, Lord, essays of, 310.
Hall, Bishop, on romances, 458.
Hamerton, P. G., French and Eng-
lish,' 472-' Variety in France,' 491
character of his work, 496.
Hamlet, criticisms of, 92, 93.
Handbooks, Murray's, 475, 476, 481-

on 'Les Causses' (note), 488.
Hare, Mr., on France, 472-his method,
476, 477-Days near Paris,' 478.
Harrison, J. E., on Athens, 122-
sketch of her book, 125-and Dr.
Dörpfeld, 126-on Pausanias, 126,
127 on mythology, 127 on the
temple of Athena, 140. on the
theatre stage, 147.

Hartington, Marquis of, speech, 532.
Hawtrey, of Eton, 22-contrasted with
Keate, ib.-his work, 22, 23-charac-
teristics, 23, 24-as Provost, ib.
Heidenhain on 'inhibition,' 258.
Heine on democracy, 85-childhood of,
468.
Heligoland, bird migration, 521-524.
Hennequin on literature, 75.
Herald, The Family, 164.
Herodotus on Xerxes, &c., 128.
Hill, Dr. B., on Boswell, 328.
Hohenlohe, Prince, on the Crown
Prince of Prussia, 51.

Holinshed and Shakespeare, 105.
Home Rule in New York, Irish. See
Twenty Years.
Hornby of Eton, 25.

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on the

Hosie, A., on China, 205
'white wax,' 219, 220.
House of Commons, The Work of the,
532-564-obstruction, 532, 535, 536,
550-the newspapers and the De-
bates, 532, 533-new Standing Orders
and morning sittings, 533, 534-aim
of the Radicals, 537-of the Parnel-
lites, 537, 538--their allegiance to a
man and an idea, 538, 539-diffi-
culties of the House for remedying,
539-American Lower House, 539-
541-the Speakers, 541-543, 547-a
contrast, 541-no help from the Glad-
stonians, 543-Grand Committees,
547-American Standing Commit-
tees, 548-the Estimates trusted to
Committees, 549-Sir E. May's opi-
nion, 549, 550-disorderly members,
551-American treatment, 552-ex-
pulsion, 553-work of the Ministers
of the Crown, 554 Independent
Members, ib.-routine work, 555 —
last Session's scheme of legislation,
ib. heads of Departments, !556-
unofficial members, 557-559 - the
House overworked, 559-the first step
for remedy, ib.-on the number of
members, 560-Ireland over-repre-
sented, 560-562-Sir H. Maine's pre-
diction, 562-palliatives' only at
present, 563-the cure of obstruction,
563, 564.

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Hugo, Victor, 'Romantic,' 58, 59 -
'Notre Dame de Paris,' 64 his
'Quasimodo,' &c., 78.
Hume, Allan, a gift of, 511.
Hurlbert, W. H., France, &c., 472—
intemperate language, 479-on the
pain bénit, 480-St. Gobain glass
factory, 482-town of Anzin, 484.
Hutchinson on dog breaking, 419, 422.
Hypnotisme, De Luys, 234-253.
Hypnotisme, Congrès, 234.

Ichang, Treaty port, 210, 223, 232.
Intellectual food of the Mid. Ages, 447.
Irish in New York, The, 260. See
Twenty Years, &c.

Italy, united, 329-affairs of, 353-and
Prussia, 360, 361.

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Ivins on Machine Politics,' 260, 262,
265, 267, 270.

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Karolyi and Bismarck, 355.J
Keate of Eton, 19-22.

Königgratz, Crown Prince at, 52.
'Kronprinz und die deutsche Kaiser-
krone,' 28.

La Comédie Humaine, 57, 61 seqq.
Lamb, C., on A Midsummer Night's
Dream,' 108.

Laughter, Chatham and Chesterfield
on, 311.

Lebon, A., France as it is,' 472, 474—
his colleagues, 475.

Lee, Mrs. E., translation of Jusserand,
440-praise of, ib.

Lee, Rawdon, on the collie, 419-on
canine intelligence, 431.
Lewis, Monk, anecdote of, 401.
Libraries: Eton, 23-Durham, Whitby,
Glastonbury, C. C. Canterbury,
Peterborough, St. Augustine's, Croy-
lands, 446-monastic, 447, 451-pri-
vate, 447-historical, 448-of nobles,
449-of the people, 450.

-

Liégeois, Prof., De la Suggestion et du
Somnambulisme, 234 School of
Nancy, 244.
Light Reading of our Ancestors, The,
439-471 tales and tellers, 439

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Jusserand's volume, 440-romance,
440, 441, 445, 453, 459, 464, 470—
heroes typical, 440, 441-religious
spirit, 441-no rivals, 442-medieval
education, ib. Chaucer's Squire,
ib.-Pace's gentleman, ib.-'pore'
scholars, 443-classics and sciences,
ib.literary bequests, 13th to 15th
cent., ib.-fiction in England, 445,
447, 451-catalogues, 445, 446-
Royal collectors, 447-449-first re-
naissance, 448-chief light literature,
ib.-people's, 450 library of J.
Paston, jun., 451-Caxton, a printer
of fiction, 452-light literature before
1530, 453-Renaissance culture, 461
-a country gentleman in 1617, 462
-love of fiction, 463-the modern
novel brought in by Lyly, 465-lady
readers, 465-467-reverend readers,
468-child world of great poets, 468,
469

of George Eliot, 467, 468 -
tone of the old romances, 470-18th
cent. novels, 470, 471-Jane Welsh
and St. Preux, 471. See Jusserand.
Lilly, prognostications of, 467.
Little, Mr. A., 'Through the Yangtse
Gorges,' 205- his difficulties, &c.,
209-213-on the poppy, 220-222.
Lockhart, Life of Scott, 386.
Loti, P., Pécheur d'Islande, 57, 87.
Lupton of Eton, 12.

Luys, J., Hypnotisme, 234-on hyp-
notic memory, 253.

Lyte, H. C. M., 'Eton College,' 1.

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neutrality of France and Italy, 361.
Mesmerism and Hypnotism, 234-259-
career of the science, 234-best name,
235-Mesmer, 236-primary theories,
career, and death, 236-238-Chaste-
let, 238, 239-Mesmer's Mémoire, 239
-progress of mesmerism, 240, 241

commission of 1825-31, ib.
Elliotson's experiments, 241-242 -
Braid's propositions, 242-specula-
tions, 243-invents the word Hypnot-
ism, ib.―mesmerism in India, 244—
in France, ib.-it becomes popular,
244, 245-leading points of third
epoch, 245 seqq.-methods of inducing
the state, 245--susceptibility, 245-247
-effects produced, 247, 248-phy-
siological and psychological pheno-
mena, 248-253-influence of magnets,
254-no new discovery, 254, 255—
advantage gained, 255-clairvoyance
and intuition, ib.-pressensation, 256
-therapeutics, 256-258-mesmerism
a mystery, 258, 259.

Mill, J. S., buried at Avignon, 487.
Millet, M. René, La France Provin-
ciale, 472, 480.

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on the

Murray, Mr., Byron and Scott, 386-
Handbook of France, 472 -
guide books of, 475, 476.
Mythology of Athens, 122-'Key to
all,' 127.

Nancy, 494-school of mesmerism, 244.
Napoleon III., counts on South Ger-

many, 41-rebuff, ib. — receives the
King of Prussia, 43-policy on the
death of Nicholas, 336-New Year's
Day, 1859, 339-Nov. 5th, 1863, 345

re Schleswig-Holstein, 346 -
Italian policy, 353-favourite pan-
acea, 361-on Venetia, 362-agrees
with Austria, 364-underrates Prus-
sia's power, 361.

National life, test of, 316.
National Party, a, 194, 198–204.
Nature and art, 94, 95.

Nature in Shakespeare's plays, 100.
Neufchâtel, question of, 335.
Newborough, of Eton, and Walpole, 15.
Nicholas, Emp., and Sir H. Seymour,
334-death of, 336.

Nigra, Count, re Venetia, 362.
Occult Sciences, 1440, 450.
Ehlenschläger and fiction, 454.
Olmütz, 'punctation' of, 1850, 332.
Olympia, excavations at, 47.
Osborne, Bernal, on the Duchies, 350.
Osborne, Dorothy, and novels, 465; an
ideal English girl, 467; and Sir W.
Temple, ib.

Pai-la, white wax, 218-the insect, ib.
-transfer and traffic, 219, 220.
Pain bénit, 480.

Palmerston, Lord, on the Schleswig-
Holstein question, 344.
Panatius, the teaching of, 317.
Paris, Congress of, 1855, 336.
Paston, John, jun., 451.

Pausanias, as a traveller, 127– -on the
temple of Hera, 136-on the, Pro-
machos, 139 -on the temple of
Athena, 140-at the Acropolis, 144
-Athens in the days of, 149.

Pelet, Paul, France as it is,' 472, 474.
Penny Fiction, 150-171-modern edu-
cation, 150-Penny Dreadfuls,' 151,
154-various kinds of fiction, 155–157

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copyright complications, 158 —
some sources of inspiration, 158–160—
'typical development,' 160-the J. F.
Smith school, 162-Stanfield Hall,'
&c., ib.-'The London Journal,' 162–
164 The Family Herald,' 165
'Novelettes,' 165, 168-other publi-
cations, 166-169 how to improve
this literary food, 169, 170.
Penrose and Schultz's plan of the
Acropolis, 123, 124.

Pepys, Mrs., 465, 466.
Piers Plowman, 444, 459.
Plato's Republic, 322–324.
Polish insurrection, 342, 343.
Pope and unorthodoxy, 381.
Potters, ancient, 137.

Prince, the Crown, 32 seqq., 356. See
Freytag, Sybel.

Princess, the Crown, 54-56.
Princess Alice, 55.
Printers, early, 452.

-on

Provincial France, 432. See France.
Prussia, the Prince of, attitude towards
Prussia, 335-degradation, 336 -
Regent, 337-character of, ib.-
German unity, 338 studies at
seventy, ib. Unter den Linden,' ib.
-army reforms, 340-King, ib.

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