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"Conservative," first use of the word to de-
scribe the Tory party, i. 28.
Consort, Prince (see Albert).

"Conspiracy to Murder" Bill, ii. 99-103.
Constantine, his journey from York to Rome,
compared with Peel's journey from Rome
to London, ii. 629.

Convict system, ii. 26-28.
Conyngham, Marquis of, i. 9.

Co-operation, History of, ii. 405-411.
Cooke, Mr., and electric telegraph, i. 60.
Cooper, Thomas, description of Feargus
O'Connor in his "Autobiography," i.82-85;
anecdote told by, i. 86, 87; his sufferings
in prison, i. 87.

Copyright question, i. 209.
Corneille, quoted, i. 166, 168.
Corn-laws, the, i. 216-284; sliding scale, i.
217; vested interests, i. 219, 220; Young
England party, i. 219; Anti-Corn-law As-
sociation, i. 222; Manchester movement,
i. 221-223; O'Connell, i. 223; the propa-
ganda of Free-trade, i. 223, 224; Villiers,
i. 224; Cobden, i. 225-231; Bright, i. 228-
231; W. J. Fox and Milner Gibson, i. 231;
dignity of agitation, i. 232, 233; Macaulay
and Free-trade, i. 234, 235; Peel, i. 235-240;
the Irish famine, i. 241, 242; Russell's con-
version, i. 243; Peel's determination to re-
peal Corn-laws, i. 244-246; the announce-
ment in the Times, i. 247; Peel's resigna-
tion, i. 248, 249; withdrawn, i. 251; Peel's
explanation, i. 255; the debate, i. 271; Bill
carried,i. 273; Corn-laws suspended, i. 283.
Cornwall, Barry (see Procter).
Corry, Mr., ii. 360.

"Coster-monger's donkey," ii. 361.
Cottenham, Lord, i. 198.

Coup d'état, the, i. 389, 398.

Cowen, Joseph, speech of, on Queen's titles,
ii. 582.

Cowley, Lord, i. 451; and Walewski's de
spatch, ii. 104; France and Austria, ii.

135.

Craik, Mrs., ii. 655.

Crampton, Mr., sent from Washington, i. 521.
Cranbourne (see Cecil, Lord Robert), Indian
Secretary, ii. 342; resigns, ii. 357; and Re-
form Bill, ii. 359, 361; leap in the dark,
ii. 369; Irish Church, ii. 452, 453 (see Salis
bury).

Cranbrook, Lord, Indian Secretary, ii. 605.
Cranworth, Lord, and penal servitude, ii. 29.
Crawford, Mr. Sharman, and tenant-right, ii.
476.

Crete, insurrection in, ii. 585.
Crimean War-Treaty of Kutchuk Kainard-
ji, i. 453; England's Ultimatum, i. 473;
causes of the war, i. 474-485; popular in
England, i. 481; the Peace Society, i. 481-
483; Silistria, i. 485; Giurgevo, i. 485; in-
vasion of Crimea, i. 486-488; Alma, i. 489-
491; the Special Correspondent, i. 492-494;
suffering of the army, i. 493; Russia sinks
her ships, i. 494; Balaklava, i. 494, 495;
Inkerman, i. 496, 497; Napier, i. 497 – 499;
anger against Prince Consort, i. 498; the
gloomy winter, i.500, 501; Florence Night-
ingale, i. 501, 502; Sebastopol, i. 502, 503;
Roebuck's motion, i. 503, 504; fall of Min-
istry, i. 504; Palmerston Premier, i. 505-
507; peace negotiations. i. 507; death of
Czar, i. 503, 509; Vienna Conference, i, 510,

511; Russell resigns, i. 512; visit of the
Emperor and Empress of French to Eng-
land, i. 512; death of Raglan, i. 512; the
Tchernaya, i. 514; fall of Sebastopol, i. 515,
516; Kars, i. 516; Congress of Paris, i.
517-520; the foreign legions, i. 521; les-
sons of the war, i. 521-523; results of the
war, i. 523, 524; Cochrane's plan for de-
stroying Sebastopol, ii. 189, 190.

Crofton, Sir Walter, his ticket-of-leave sys-
tem, ii. 29, 30.

Croker, John Wilson, christens the Tory the
"Conservative" party, i. 28; and Cochrane,
ii. 189.

Cromwell, Oliver, and the women of Wexford,
i. 193,194; from Irish and English points of
view, ii. 444.

Cross, Mr. (afterward Sir Richard), Home-sec-
retary, 1874, ii. 557; and Artisans' Dwellings
Bill, ii. 571; and foreign policy of Govern-
ment, ii.617.

Cumberland, Ernest Duke of (afterward King
of Hanover), i. 14–20.
Cunard line established, i. 62.
Curran, on Irish discontents, ii. 374.
Custody of Infants Bill, i. 125.
Cyprus, occupied by England, ii. 611.

DAHLMANN, Frederick, i.17.
Daily News, and Irish University Education,
ii.548; and Bulgaria, ii. 591-593; and Glad-
stone, ii. 612.

Daily Telegraph, started, ii. 161.
Dalhousie, Lord, his career as Governor-gen-
eral of India, ii. 42-45; death of, ii. 268.
Dalling, Lord, on Palmerston dismissal, i. 396,
397.

Dalmatia, Duke of (Marshal Soult), i. 13,14.
Damascus, Druse and Maronite feud at, ii. 183-
188.
Dante, ii. 136.

Danton, prophecy of, i. 335.

Danube, navigation of, and Congress of Paris,

i. 518.

Danubian principalities, i. 446, 477, 478; and
Congress of Paris, i. 520.

Dardanelles, question of, i. 478-481; and Treaty
of Paris, i. 518.

Darwin, Charles, i. 526; ii. 631-633.
Davis, Jefferson, President of the Southern
Confederation, i. 387; ii. 191; and letters of
marque, ii. 192; captured, ii. 222; Gladstone
and, ii. 226; Times and, ii. 226, 227.
Davis, J. C. B., and Washington Commission,
ii. 514, 515.

Deasy, Fenian, rescue of, ii.384, 385.
Debt, national, and Crimean War, i. 521.
Defoe, Daniel, his "Colonel Jack," ii. 21.
Deir el Kamer, massacre at, ii. 187.
Delhi, ii. 33-37; siege of, ii. 55, 56; capture of,
ii. 70,71; murder of the princes, by Hodson,
ii. 71-73; King of, transported, ii. 78.
Demosthenes, i. 555; effective argument of, ii.
233; the essential characteristic of his ora-
tory, ii. 271; on the policy of the Atheni-
ans, ii. 307.

Denman, Lord, and O'Connell trial, i. 198; Act
for Amending Law of Evidence, ii. 118.
Denmark, Prince William George of, made
King of Greece, ii. 133-135; and Schleswig-
Holstein question, ii. 244-247; war with Aus-
tria and Prussia; ii. 247-253; and Russell,
ii. 339.

Derby, Edward, late Earl of, i. 29; character
of, i. 31; unsuccessful attempt to form a
Ministry. i. 355; his first Administration in
1852, i. 409-411; and Protection, i. 411-413;
fails to form a Ministry, i. 430, 505; his
motion condemning the proceedings of
the British authorities in China, ii. 13; on
Palmerston, the "true Protestant," ii. 19;
failure of his India Bill, ii. 87; mentioned,
ii. 92; his new Administration, ii. 110; con-
trasted with Lord Stanley, ii. 112; drops
Conspiracy Bill, ii. 114; and Disraeli's Re-
form Bill, ii. 138; fall of Ministry, ii. 146;
against repeal of Paper Duty, ii. 163; Amer-
ican Union, ii. 226; Garibaldi, ii. 263; and
Argyle, ii. 298, 299; mentioned, ii. 339; forms
a new Ministry in 1866, ii. 340-342; men-
tioned, ii. 348; and reform. ii. 351; "leap
in the dark," ii. 369; Manchester prison-
ers, ii. 385; illness and resignation, ii. 428,
429; and Irish Church, ii. 453; his last
speech in the House of Lords against the
second reading of the Irish Church Bill,
ii. 470; his death, ii. 470; character and
career, ii. 470, 471.

Derby, Lord, Foreign Secretary, 1874, ii. 577;
and Suez Canal, ii. 579; and Herzegovina,
ii. 595; and Andrassy Note, ii. 588, 589;
and Berlin Memorandum, ii. 590; and Eu-
ropean Conference, ii. 597-599; anxious to
resign, ii. 603; and Russia, ii. 604; and San
Stefano Treaty, ii. 604; resigns, ii. 605.
Devonshire, Duke of, i. 367.

Dickens, Charles, i. 81; as a reporter, i. 186;
on O'Connell, i. 186; his "Old Curiosity
Shop," i. 294; his renown, i. 527; une-
4alled success of, i. 549; compared with
Thackeray, i. 549-553; incident in one of
his stories, ii. 284; on Governor Eyre and
the Jamaica Rebellion, ii. 319; his denun-
ciation of public executions, ii. 431; death
of, ii. 479; influence of, ii. 480; his burial
in Westminster Abbey, ii. 480.
Diderot in Russia, i. 437.

Dilke, Sir Charles, and Republicanism, ii. 526
-580; and Arch, ii. 533.
Dilkoosha, palace of, ii.74.

Dillon, J. B., ii. 277.

Dillwyn, Mr., his motion respecting the Irish
Church, ii. 265, 266.

Diogenes and his tub, ii. 135.

Disraeli, Benjamin (afterward Earl of Bea-
consfield), i. 27; first Time in Parliament,
i. 29; on Sheil's eloquence, i. 34-36; his nov-
el of "Sibyl; or, The Two Nations," i. 88;
his challenge to O'Connell, i. 107; and ed
ucation grant, i. 127; on Dr. Newman's se-
cession, i. 143; on O'Connell's eloquence,
i. 186; his description of O'Connell's last
speech in Parliament, i. 201, 202; his de-
nunciations of Sir Robert Peel, i. 217, 218;
and Free-trade, i. 238; educating his party,
i. 238; his "Life of Lord George Bentinck,
quoted, on Corn-law League in 1845, i. 245;
his "Coningsby," quoted, i. 248; on Peel
and O'Connell as speakers, i. 254; his reply
to Peel, i. 255; first success of, i. 256; enters
Parliament, 1837, i. 256; "Vivian Grey,"
i. 256; letter to W. J. Fox on sedition, i.
257; change from Radicalism to Conserv
atism, i. 257, 258; his maiden speech in
the House of Commons, i. 258,259; becom
ing conspicuous, i. 261; his controversy

with O'Connell, i. 261; his savage person-
al attacks upon Peel, i. 263-266, 270-273;
becomes Tory leader, i. 265; his "Life of
Lord George Bentinck," quoted, on the
opportune, i. 264; on Canning, i. 267; on
Prince Consort, i. 269; on Coercion Bill, i.
274; and Bentinck, í. 284; on Peel, i.334,
335; his letter on the Roman Catholic hie-
rarchy in England, i. 347; his opinion of
Lord John Russell's Ecclesiastical Titles
Bill, i. 350; his agricultural distress mo-
tion, the last spasmodic cry of Protection,
i. 354; "there was a Palmerston," i. 397;
accepts office as Chancellor of the Ex-
chequer under Lord Derby, i. 409-412;
his financial statement, i. 412; abandons
Protection, i. 413; Budget of 1852, i. 421-
423; debate on, i. 423; resigns, i. 424; Trea-
ty of Kutchuk Kainardji, i. 456; on coa-
litions, i. 503; and leadership of House, i.
505; indignant question of, i. 511; opposed
to Ministry, i. 512; his novels, i. 556; his
Budget speeches contrasted with G. C.
Lewis's, ii. 6, 7; "Lorcha Arrow," ii. 15 ;
his taunts to Lord Palmerston, ii. 16, 17;
on the Indian Mutiny, ii. 51, 52; his speech
at Slough, ii. 84; mentioned, ii. 92; his
change of attitude in regard to the Con-
spiracy Bill, ii. 104, 107; Chancellor of the
Exchequer again, ii. 110; want of debat-
ing power in Ministry, ii. 113; his Jewish
descent and sympathies, ii. 114, 115; his
"Life of Lord George Bentinck," quoted,
upon the Jews, ii. 115; on Lytton's ora-
tory, ii. 128; tries his hand at a Reform
Bill, ii. 137, 138, 140-143; the attempt a
complete failure, ii. 142; correct estimate
of power of Bright, ii. 139; and Sir James
Graham, ii.145; French invasion scare, ii.
155; on a division in the Lords, ii. 165;
on Lord John Russell's Reform Bill, ii.
172,173; and American War, ii. 226; moves
a vote of censure on Lord Palmerston's
Government, ii. 253-258; his tribute to Cob-
den, ii. 271; address to the electors of Buck-
inghamshire, ii. 274,275; on Parliament of
1865, ii. 277, 278; and Gladstone, ii. 296; his
"Revolutionary Epick," ii. 301-304; and
Jamaica, ii. 320; and Reform Bill, ii. 331-
333; Chancellor of the Exchequer and lead-
er of the House of Commons, ii. 342; Hyde
Park riots, ii. 345; engaged in educating his
party, ii. 348; and reform, ii. 352–354; his
Reform Resolutions, ii. 353-356; the Ten
Minutes' Bill, ii. 356-359; the new Bill, ii.
359-368; Whig clothes, ii. 369, 370; edu-
cating his party, ii. 427, 428; speech at
Edinburgh, ii. 427; his "Vivian Grey,"
quoted, ii. 427,428; invited to form a Gov-
ernment on Lord Derby's retirement, ii.
428; Prime-minister, ii. 429; F. H. Hill
upon, ii. 429; Ministerial changes, ii. 430;
astonishing burst of eloquence on Abys-
sinian expedition, ii. 440; Irish Church, ii.
452, 453; dissolves Parliament, ii. 454; on
Lowe's election for University of Lon-
don, ii. 456; his resignation of office, ii.
460; his speeches against the Disestab-
lishment of the Irish Church, ii. 465, 466;
and Dr. Magee, ii. 467; and Irish Land Act,
ii. 478; and abolition of army purchase, ii.
490; and rural laborers, ii. 531, 533-535;
on the stump, ii. 541, 542; and Home Rule,

ii. 542; and Ir'sh University scheme, ii.
548-549; sent for, but declines to take of
fice, ii. 550; the new Ministry, ii. 557; Pub-
lic Worship Bill, ii. 560, 561, 564, 565; and
Plimsoll, ii. 568-570; his phrase, “there
was a Palmerston," alluded to, ii. 573; and
the East, ii. 574, 575; confronted with Glad-
stone, ii. 575, 576; ambitious ideas, ii. 576,
577; spirited foreign policy," ii. 577, 578;
and Suez Canal, ii. 578, 579; and South Af-
rica, ii. 580; and India, ii. 581; and Em-
press of India Title, ii. 581-584; and Rus-
sia, ii. 584, 585; and Bulgarian massacres,
ii. 591-594; made Lord Beaconsfield, ii.
595 (see Beaconsfield).
Divorce Act, the, ii. 19, 20.
Don Quixote, ii. 244.

Dost Mahomed, i. 152; character of, i. 153;
English distrust of, i. 154; and Burnes, i.
155, 156; Lord Auckland and, i. 158; defeat-
ed, i. 159; surrender of, i. 160, 161; restored
to the throne of Cabul, i. 161.
Doyle, Richard, and Punch, i. 559.
Draper, Dr., his "History of the American
Civil War," quoted, on Trent affair, ii. 203;
on Prince Albert, ii. 208, 209.
Drouyn de Lhuys, M., the French Ambassa-
dor, his withdrawal from London, i. 322;
and Austria, i. 510.

Drummond, Mr. Edward, Peel's secretary,
assassinated, i. 272.

Druses and Maronites, ii. 183–188.
Duelling, abolition of, i. 106, 107.

Dufferin, Lord, sent out to the Lebanon as
English Commissioner, ii. 186; and 1868
Ministry, ii. 462.

Duffy, Charles Gavan, prosecuted, i. 197; and
Young Ireland, i. 304; Prime- minister of
Victoria, i. 314.

"Dukes," the, ii. 293, 327.

Duncannon, Lord, member of Lord Durham's
Reform Committee, i. 47.

Duncombe, Thomas Slingsby, i. 36; and Maz-
zini's letters, i. 210, 211; motion to allow
Baron Rothschild to sit on a Committee,
ii. 123.

Dundonald (see Cochrane).
Dunkellin, Lord, ii. 335, 336.

Dunn, John, and Zulu War, ii. 624.
Durham, Lord (John George Lambton), his
manifesto to the electors of Sunderland,
i. 20; on French and English Canadians, i.
40; chosen to go to Canada, i. 45; charac-
ter of, i. 44-68; his speech on the Reform
Bill, i. 46, 47; his dictatorship of Canada, i.
48-58; quarrel with Brougham, i. 53, 54;
called "Lord High Seditioner" by Times,
i. 54; defended by J.S. Mill, i. 55, 56; death
of, i. 57, 58; an extreme Reformer, i. 77;
mentioned, i. 89; ii. 414.

EASTERN QUESTION. the, i. 433-443; Nicholas
and England, i. 443-450; holy places, i.
450, 453; Treaty of Kutchuk Kainardji, i.
453-457; Russian armies cross the Pruth,
i. 457; Vienna Note, i. 458-461; Sinope, i.
468-471; Crimean War, i. 471-517; the Con-
gress of Paris, i. 517-524; supposed settle-
ment of, ii. 5; Eastern Question "again,"
ii. 585; Danubian principalities, ii. 585,586;
Greek and Slav, ii. 586; Herzegovina ris-
ing, ii. 587, 583; Andrassy Note, ii. 588;
Berlin Memorandum, ii. 589, 590; Salonica,

ii. 590; death of Abdul Aziz, ii. 591; Bul
garian insurrection, ii. 591-594; Servian
War, ii. 597; European Conference pro-
posed, ii. 597-599; Russian War, ii. 600-603;
the Jingoes, ii. 602; the English fleet, ii.
602, 603; Russia and Constantinople, ii. 604;
San Stefano treaty, ii. 604, 605; the Indian
troops, ii. 606; the Berlin Congress, ii. 60€-
611; secret treaties, ii. 611, 612.

East India Company, charter of, with China,
i. 115; force of, in Cawnpore, ii. 57; ex-
tinction of the, ii. 85-89; protest and op-
position, ii. 89-91.

Ecclesiastical Titles Bill, i. 339-349; the
measure introduced, i. 348-353; debates
on, i. 353-355; its only practical result, i.
354; resumption of, i. 355, 356; passed, i.
357; repealed, i. 358; mentioned, i. 413;
and Russell, ii. 339; repeal of, ii. 501.
Echo, on Gladstone, ií. 612.
Edinburgh, Macaulay elected for, i. 414, 415;
Presbytery of, and Lord Palmerston, i. 464.
Education, national, and Melbourne Minis-
try, i. 125-127.

Education Bill, ii. 481-486.

Egypt, and Turkey, i. 133-135; and Czar
Nicholas, i. 446, 447; Viceroy of, visits
England, ii. 425; and Suez Canal, ii. 578,

579.

Electric telegraph, i. 60.

Elgin, Lord, ii. 91; envoy during China War.
ii. 109; and Treaty of Tientsin, ii. 175; in
China, ii. 178-181; justification of, ii. 182,
183; death of, ii. 268.

Eliot, George, as a poet, ii. 647; as a novel-
ist, ii. 649-651.

Elizabeth, Froude's portrait of, ii. 641.
Ellenborough, Lord, Governor-General of
India, i. 175; character of, i. 176, 177;
grandiose phrases of, i. 177; and gates of
Somnauth, i. 181; proclamation of, i. 181,
182; annexation of Scinde, i. 211, 212; de-
spatch to Lord Canning, ii. 82, 83; his res-
ignation, ii. 83; and Derby's India Bill, ii.
87, 88; Indian Secretary, ii. 110; his pas
sionate appeal for Poland, ii. 240.

Ellice, Edward, and Hudson's Bay Company,

ii. 417.

Elliott, Captain, and the opium trade with
China, i. 119.

Elliott, Ebenezer, the Corn-law poet, i. 83,
84.

Elliott, Sir H., ii. 598; transferred to Vienna,
ii. 601.
Elphinstone, General, i. 161-163; accepts Ak-
bar Khan's terms, i. 166; death of, i. 178.
Emanuel, Victor, ii. 154; visit to England,
ii. 155.

Emerson, R. W., saying of, ii. 344.
Enfantin, Père, ii. 157.
Enfield rifle, ii. 35.
Esterhazy, Prince, his diamonds, i. 13.
Eugenie, Empress, visit to London, i. 512;
her invention of crinoline, ii. 228, 229.
Evangelicals and public worship, ii. 560–562.
Evans, Sir de Lacy, ii. 275, 486, 487.
Evelyn, John, saying of, ii. 539.
Ewald, the Orientalist, i. 16.
Ewelme case, ii. 523.
Executions in public abolished, ii. 431.
Exeter, Bishop of, Lord Durham's attack on,
i. 46.

Exeter, Conservative victory at, ii. 552.

Exhibition, the Great, i.332, 358–370; of 1862, | Franchise and Reform Bill, 1866, ii. 327, 328,
ii. 228, 229.

Eyre, Edward John, Governor of Jamaica,
suspended from his functions, ii. 309; char-
acter and career of, ii. 312, 313; his proc-
lamation of martial law, ii. 314; prosecu-
ted, ii. 322-325.

FACTORIES Act, the, i. 132, 133, 203-207, 463.
Fantôme, H.M.S., and Greek Government,
i. 320.

Faraday, Michael, i. 525, 526.

Farquhar, his "Beaux Stratagem," ii. 92.
Fawcett. Mr., and abolition of purchase, ii.
491, 492; and republicanism, ii. 529; and
abolition of tests in Dublin University, ii.
551; and Plimsoll, ii. 568.

Fenian movement, the, ii. 96, 216, 326, 370,
390; antiquity of the name, ii. 375; Glad-
stone and, ii. 447, 448; Mr. Maguire and,

ii. 449.

Field, Cyrus W., his plan for constructing
an electric telegraph 1:ne underneath the
Atlantic, ii. 8, 9, 349, 350.
Fielding, Henry, i. 549.

Finlay, Mr., the historian of Greece, his claim
for compensation against the Greek Gov-
ernment, i. 319, 320.

Fish, Hamilton, and Washington commission,
ii. 515; and indirect claims, ii. 517, 518.
Fishery right question, ii. 216.
Fitzgerald, Seymour, ii. 305.
Fitzgerald, Lord Edward, ii. 373.
Forida, the, ii. 209.

Florida, the, and Geneva Convention, ii. 518.
Forbes, Archibald, war correspondent of the
Daily News, i. 492.

Foreign Enlistment Act, i. 521.
Forster, W. E., recognition of Southern Con-
federacy, i. 193; on Alabama, ii. 211; be-
comes Under-Secretary for the Colonies,
ii. 293; a good debater, ii. 297; in 1868 Min-
istry, ii. 462; Education Bill, ii. 481-486;
and Ballot Bill, ii. 493, 494, 497, 498; and
Liberal leadership, ii. 573.
Fortescue, Chichester, Irish Secretary, ii.
293; and Irish Land tenure, ii. 476.
Fowke, Captain, ii. 228.

Fox, Charles James, and Russell, i. 34; a
friend of W. H. Lambton, i. 45; on Cana-
dian separation, i. 56; and Catherine of
Russia, i. 437; on India, ii. 86; Irish re-
bellion of 1798, ii. 315, 316; and Russell,
ii. 338; from Irish and English points of
view, ii. 444; his principal that Ireland
ought to be governed by Irish ideas, ii.
459; mentioned, ii. 475, 573.
Fox, William Johnson, i. 231; letter of Dis-
raeli to, i. 257.

France, and Tahiti, i. 212, 213; in 1848, i. 316;
Pacifico case, i. 320, 321; coup d'état, i.
389; ambassador recalled, i. 322, 394, 395;
Russia, i. 438; Holy Places, i. 450-453; Cri-
mea, i. 485-501, 512-516; Congress of Paris,
i. 517; Treaty with England and Sweden,
i. 519; China, ii. 108; Austria and Italy, ii.
135-137; commercial treaty with England,
ii. 156-161; Lebanon, i1. 186-188; sympa-
thy with Southern States, ii. 200, 201; Pol-
ish insurrection, ii. 241; and the plébiscite,
ii. 479; war with Prussia, ii. 481, 503-505;
the Republic, ii. 525, 525; and Andrassy
Note, ii. 588.

332.

Francis, John, his attempt on the Queen's
life, i. 108-111.

Franking abolished, i. 63, 64.
Franklin, Sir John, last expedition of, i. 216.
Frederick William of Prussia, marriage of,
to Princess Victoria, ii. 93.

Free trade (see Corn-laws), i. 30, 137; and
O'Connell, i. 188; Sir Robert Peel and the
Corn-law, i. 216-240; Derby and, i. 409,
411, 412; Villiers's Resolution, i. 421, 422;
and Gladstone, i. 430, 431.
Freeman, ii. 638, 639.

Frere, Sir Bartle, and Afghan War, ii. 617;
and South Africa, ii. 620-626.
Friendly Societies Act, ii. 409.
Frost, John, outbreak of, i. 84, 85.
Froude, Richard Hurrell, i. 140.
Froude, J. A., and South Africa, ii. 580; style
as historian, ii. 638–642.
Fuad Pasha, ii. 186.

GALLENGA and Mazzini, ii. 301.
Garibaldi, and Gladstone's Neapolitan pro-
test, i. 432; association in London in aid
of, ii. 99; English admiration for, ii. 156;
his visit to England, ii. 263, 264.
Gamp, Mrs., allusion to, ii. 569.
Gandamak,Treaty of, ii. 618, 619.
Garrison, W. L., breakfast to, ii. 338.
Gavazzi, Father, his lectures against the Pa-
pacy, i. 348.

Genesis, passage in, i. 209.

Geneva, Convention of, i. 502; ii. 516-519.
Genlis, Madame de, i. 335.
George III., King, i.7.
George IV., i. 12, 16.

German Emperor, and Washington Treaty,
i. 216; and Exhibition of 1851, i. 366, 476,
477; and San Juan Question, ii. 519.
Gervinus, i.16.

Ghuznee taken, i. 159.
Gibbon, quoted, i. 528, 531.
Gibraltar, a temporary convict settlement,
ii. 28.

Gibson, Milner, and Free - trade, i. 231; and
"Lorcha Arrow," ii. 15; his amendment to
the second reading of the Conspiracy Bill,
ii. 106; accepts office under Lord Palmer-
ston, ii. 148; and North, ii. 226; defeated,
General Election, 1868, ii. 456.
"Gil Blas," ii. 410-480.
Giurgevo, repulse at, i. 485.
Gladstone, William Ewart, i. 27-29, 33; on
Sheil as a speaker, i. 34-36, 88, 96; and ed-
ucation grant, i. 127,138; on Dr. Newman's
pulpit style, i. 142; on the preaching and
accent of Dr. Chalmers, i. 149; Irish Land
Act, i. 205, 207; his objection to the May-
nooth grant, i. 208, 217; Secretary of State
for the Colonies, i. 251; and Peelite party,
i. 257; and Pacifico case, i. 325, 328; his
attack on Lord Palmerston's policy,i.329,
331; on the death of Peel, i. 332, 426; Ec-
clesiastical Titles Act, i. 351, 355; his pro-
test against the Ecclesiastical Titles Bill,
i. 357; and Kossuth, i. 383, 408; his reply
to Mr. Disraeli, i. 423; commencement of
their long rivalry, i. 424; his early career, i.
425,426; his oratory, i.427-430; his gradual
conversion to Liberalism, i. 430-432; and
Neapolitan quest'on, 1.432; h's many-sided-

Goethe, quoted, i. 140, 522; ballad of, quoted,
i. 541; saying of, i.112; ii. 112, 644, 650.
Goldsmith, Oliver, on Burke, i. 430; his com-
edy of "She Stoops to Conquer," i. 468.
Goojrat, battle of, ii. 44.
Gordon, George William, and the Jamaica
rebellion, ii. 309; character of, ii. 314-334;
trial and execution of, ii. 316–318.
Gorrie, Mr., and Jamaica Commission, ii. 310.
Gortschakoff, Prince, i. 473; and Malakoff, i.
514; his reply to Lord Russell, ii. 243.
Goschen, Mr., becomes Vice-President of the
Board of Trade, ii. 293; and Liberal leader-
ship, ii. 573.

Gosford, Lord, and Canadian rebellion, i. 41.
Göttingen, University of, dismissal of the
seven professors of, by the King of Han-
over, i. 16. 17.

Gough, Lord, and Sikh war, i. 212; defeat at
Chillianwallah, victory of Goojrat, ii. 44.
Goulburn, Mr., and penny-post, i. 69; one of
Peel's executors, i. 333.

Graham, Sir James, speech of, i. 47, 118, 120;
Home secretary, i. 138; his opening of
Mazzini's letters, i. 210, 211; on opening
of ports, i. 243; one of the Peelites, i. 257,
258, 276; opposes Ecclesiastical Titles Bill,
i. 351, 355; Napier dinner, i. 498; resigns,
i. 507; and Canning's despatch, ii.83; Con-
spiracy Bill, ii. 108, 113; passage of arms
with Mr. Disraeli, ii. 145; death of, ii. 267,
268, 294.

ness, i. 433; Treaty of Kutchuk Kainardji,
i. 455, 456; his feelings on war, i. 483, 484;
his resistance to Mr. Roebuck's Motion of
Inquiry, i. 503-506; resigns, i. 507; his bud-
get speeches contrasted with those of Sir
G. Lewis, ii. 7; "Lorcha Arrow" case, ii.
15; his opposition of the Divorce Bill, ii.
19; suspends transportation, ii. 23; Con-
spiracy to Murder Bill, ii. 106-108,113-129;
his mission to the Ionian Islands, ii. 129-
133; and Disraeli's Reform Bill, ii. 142;
Chancellor of the Exchequer, ii. 147; and
French Treaty, ii. 156; undertakes the abo-
lition of the Paper Duty, ii. 162-172; his
condemnation of the conduct of the Lords
in throwing out the measure, ii. 169, 170;
his rash statement respecting the Confed-
erate States, ii. 209, 225; correspondence
with Palmerston on war, ii. 231; his attrac-
tion toward Advanced Liberalism, ii. 262-
266; ominous utterance of, respecting the
Irish Church, ii. 265; on the early death
of some of his colleagues, ii. 268; defeated
at Oxford and returned for South Lanca-
shire, ii. 278, 292; leader of the House of
Commons, ii. 294; face to face with Dis-
raeli, ii. 296; his sensitive earnestness of
temper, ii. 297; attack on, by Lord R. Ce-
cil, ii. 306, 307; introduces a new Reform
Bill, ii. 327; beauty and power of his voice,
ii. 331; Reform, ií. 333-334; resigns, ii. 336,
337; Reform, ii. 340,343; Liberal meeting at
house of, ii. 363,364; and tea-room party, ii.|"Grande Duchesse," quoted, i. 425.
365; and Cairns's Amendment, ii. 366; and Grant, Mr. Robert (see Jews, emancipation
Fenianism, ii. 390,391; Hudson's Bay Com- of).
pany, ii.416,417; on new legislation for Ire-
land, ii. 448-450; declares his opinion that
the Irish Church, as a State institution,
must cease to exist, ii. 450, 451; proposes
a series of Resolutions on the subject, ii.
450-454; defeated in South Lancashire, and
elected Member for Greenwich, ii. 455; and
Ireland's three difficulties, ii. 460; sent for,
ii. 460, 461; and Irish Church Disestablish-
ment, ii. 463-470; and Irish land system,
ii. 471; Irish Land Bill. ii. 476-479; reforms.
ii. 480; Education Bill, ii. 482-486; and
Army Purchase, ii. 486-493; and Ballot, ii.
493-500; and Women's Suffrage, ii. 500;
reaction against, ii. 521; Collier case, ii.
522; Ewelme case, ii. 523; liquor interest,
ii. 523-525; and Dilke and republicanism,
ii. 528; and rural franchise, ii. 535,541; and
Irish Protestants, ii. 542; and Home Rule,
ii. 542-545; and University Education in
Ireland, ii. 545-550; resigns, ii. 550; return
to office, ii. 551; as First Lord of Treasury
and Chancellor of Exchequer, i. 552; dis-
solves Parliament, ii. 552-554, 556, 557; re-
tires from leadership, ii. 558; and Public
Worship Bill, ii. 564, 565; polemical period,
ii. 572; contrasted with Disraeli, ii. 575;
and Bulgaria, ii. 593, 594; and Turkey, ii.
596, 597; and Cyprus, ii. 611; unpopularity
of, ii. 613; dissolution of Parliament, ii. 626-
628; sent for, becomes Minister, i. 629.
Glenelg, Lord, i. 56.

Globe, the, and secret treaty, i. 611.
Gloucester, Duchess of, i. 349.

Grant, Sir Hope, and Indian Mutiny, ii. 75;
China War, ii. 178, 179.

Grant, Sir J. P., sent to Jamaica after Eyre,
ii. 322.

Grant, U. S., takes Vicksburg, ii. 219, 227;
and Alabama claims, ii. 511; and indirect
Alabama claims, ii. 517, 518.

Granville, Lord, succeeds Palmerston, i. 393;
ii. 84; invited by the Queen to form a Min-
istry, ii. 146; the attempt unsuccessful, ii.
147,292; Red River settlement, ii. 417; Colo-
nial Secretary, ii. 462; and Black Sea Ques-
tion, ii. 507-509; Foreign Secretary, ii. 511;
and Mr. Gladstone's resignation of leader-
ship, ii. 558; on situation of Turkey, ii. 589,
590; sent for, ii. 629.

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Grattan, i. 18; his description of Burke, ii.
284; saying of, ii. 449.
Gray, Sir John, prosecuted, i. 197.
Great Exhibition in Hyde Park, i. 358–370.
Great Western, Transatlantic voyage, i. 62.
Greece, and Pacifico case, i. 317-323; and
Turkey, i. 435; and Nicholas, i. 446, 457
English sympathy with, in 1820, ii. 99
overthrow of Otho, ii. 133, 134; and Ionian
Islands, ii. 134; consulate of, at Damascus,
destroyed, ii. 183, 184; massacre of English
tourists by brigands, ii. 479; and Slavs, ii.
586; and Berlin Treaty, ii. 608-610.
Greek Church and Holy Places, i. 450-452.
Green, J. R., mistake of, respecting O'Con-

nell's trial, in his "Short History," i. 200;
his style as an historian, ii. 638.
Greenwood, F., and Suez Canal Shares, ii.
579.

Godkin, Mr. James, on the condition of Ire-Gretna Green, marriage of Lord Durham at,

Goderich, Lord, i. 409.

land, ii. 472.

Godwin's "Caleb Williams," i. 555.

i. 45; marriages made illegal, ii. 32.

Greville, Mr., his description of Queen Victo-

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