Governments, earliest, how composed, i. 169.
Graffigny, Madame de, ii. 199.
Gratitude, Rousseau on, ii. 14, 15;
explanation of his want of, ii. 70.
Greece, importance of history of, i. 184, and ib. n.
Greek ideas, influence of, in France in the eighteenth
century, i.
146.
Grenoble, i. 93.
Gretry, i. 292, 296; ii. 323.
Grimm,
description of Rousseau by, i. 206;
Rousseau’s quarrels with, i. 279;
letter of, about Rousseau and Diderot,
i. 275;
relations of, with Rousseau, i. 279;
some account of his life, i. 279;
his conversation with Madame d’Epinay,
i. 281;
criticism on Rousseau, i. 281;
natural want of sympathy between the two,
i. 282;
Rousseau’s quarrel with, i. 285-290;
ii. 65, 199.
Grotius, on Government, ii. 148.
HEBERT, ii. 178;
prevents publication of a book in which
the author professed his
belief in a god, ii.
179.
Helmholtz, i. 299.
Helvetius, i. 191; ii. 65, 199.
Herder, ii. 251;
Rousseau’s influence on, ii. 315.
Hermitage, the, given to Rousseau by Madame d’Epinay,
i. 229 (also
ib. n.);
what his friends thought of it, i. 231;
sale of, after the Revolution, i. 237,
n.;
reasons for Rousseau’s leaving,
i. 286.
Hildebrand, i. 4.
Hobbes, i. 143, 161;
his “Philosophy of Government,”
ii. 151;
singular influence of, upon Rousseau,
ii. 151, 183;
essential difference between his views
and those of Rousseau, ii.
159;
on Sovereignty, ii. 162;
Rousseau’s definition of the three
forms of government adopted
by, inadequate, ii.
168;
would reduce spiritual and temporal
jurisdiction to one political
unity, ii. 183.
Holbachians, i. 337; ii. 2.
Hooker, on Civil Government, ii. 148.
Hotel St. Quentin, Rousseau at, i. 106.
Hume, David, i. 64, 89;
his deep-set sagacity, i. 156, ii. 6,
75;
suspected of tampering with Boswell’s
letter, ii. 98, n.;
on Boswell, ii. 101, n.;
his eagerness to find Rousseau a refuge
in England, ii. 282, 283;
his account of Rousseau, ii. 284;
finds him a home at Wootton, ii. 286;
Rousseau’s quarrel with, ii. 286-291
(also ii. 290, n.);
his innocence of Walpole’s letter,
ii. 292;
his conduct in the quarrel, ii. 293;
saves Rousseau from arrest of French Government,
ii. 295;
on Rousseau’s sensitiveness, ii.
299.
IMAGINATION, Rousseau’s, i. 247.
JACOBINS, the, Rousseau’s Social Contract, their
gospel, ii. 132,
133;
their mistake, ii. 136;
convenience to them of some of the maxims
of the Social Contract,
ii. 142;
Jacobin supremacy and Hobbism, ii. 152;
how they might have saved France, ii.
167.