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Title: The Life of William Ewart Gladstone: Index

Author: John Morley

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INDEX

Aberdare, Lord (Henry Austin Bruce), home secretary (1868), ii. 644;
on Collier affair, ii. 385;
on Ewelmcase, ii. 387;
Licensing bill of, ii. 389-390;
on Alabama case, ii. 409 note;
on Irish University bill, ii. 439;
Gladstone's appreciation of, ii. 462;
president of the council (1873), ii. 463 note, 645;
describes last cabinet meeting (1874), ii. 497;
otherwise mentioned, ii. 421, 504; iii. 386.

—— papers, extract from, on position in 1872, ii. 389.

Aberdeen, Gladstone presented with freedom of, ii. 378.

Aberdeen, 4th Earl of:—
Chronology—on Wellington's anti-reform speech, i. 69;
Gladstone's visit to (1836), i. 137;
at Canada meeting, i. 641;
party meetings, i. 239;
on Maynooth resignation, i. 273;
Gladstone's relations with, i. 280;
estimate of Peel, i. 283;
on Peel's eulogium of Cobden, i. 292;
on freedom in official position, i. 298;
home and foreign policy of, contrasted, i. 367;
learns Gladstone's views of Neapolitan tyranny, i. 390, 393-395;
on Don Pacifico case, i. 395;
Gladstone's Letters to, i. 392, 394 and note, 396, 398, 399 note2, 400, 401 note3, 641, 642;
views on papal aggression question, i. 405, 407;
asked to form a government (1851), i. 405 and note;
leader of Peelites, i. 408;
Reform bill of (1852), ii. 238;
attitude of, towards first Derby administration, i. 417, 419, 429;
on Gladstone's attitude towards Disraeli, i. 432;
on possible heads for Peelite government, i. 443;
Irish attitude towards, i. 444;
undertakes to form a government, i. 445;
Gladstone's budget, i. 464-466;
letter to Prince Albert on Gladstone's speech, i. 468;
letter to Gladstone, i. 469;
attitude towards Turkey in  1828, i. 480;
Crimean war, preliminary negotiations, i. 481-484, 487, 490;
on Gladstone's Manchester speech, i. 483;
on effect of Crimean war, i. 484;
suggests retirement, i. 491-492;
opposes postponement of Reform bill, i. 648;
regrets of, regarding the war, i. 494, 536-537;
defeat of, ii. 653;
Gladstone's consultations with, in ministerial crisis (1855), i. 526, 530-535;
on position of premier, ii. 416;
Gladstone's projected letters to, on Sebastopol committee, i. 542 note;
discourages Gladstone's communicating with Derby, i. 556;
Lewis's budget, i. 560;
Divorce bill, i. 570;
Conspiracy bill, i. 575;
approves Gladstone's refusals to join Derby, i. 578, 586;
uneasiness regarding Gladstone's position, i. 581;
Gladstone's visit to, i. 594;
discourages Ionian project, i. 595;
desires closer relations between Gladstone and government, i. 596;
Arthur Gordon's letter to, i. 604;
Bright's visit to, i. 626 note2;
death of, ii. 87.
Foreign influence of, i. 392, 529;
foreign estimate of, ii. 351; iii. 321.
Gladstone's estimate of, i. 124, 393, 417; ii. 87, 639-644;
his estimate of Gladstone, i. 613; ii. 170, 203;
Gladstone's letters to, i. 425-426, 429, 463, 549; ii. 3.
Palmerston contrasted with, i. 530.
Patience of, with colleagues' quarrels, i. 520;
loyalty to colleagues, ii. 639-640.
Sobriquet of, i. 177.
Trustfulness of, i. 197; ii. 113, 640, 642-643,
Otherwise  mentioned, i. 139, 142 note, 270, 293, 294, 367, 420, 437, 458, 460, 482 note, 520, 539, 543, 548, 584; ii. 184, 194; iii. 228.

Aberdeen, 7th Earl of, iii. 385, 517.

Abeken, H., ii. 332-333 and note.

[578]Abercromby, Sir Ralph, iii. 314.

Abolition, see slave-holding.

Acland, A. H. D., iii. 495 and note.

—— Arthur, i. 54, 59 note, 74.

—— Sir H. W., iii. 421.

—— Sir Thomas, member of W E G, i. 59 note;
brotherhood formed by Gladstone and, i. 99;
advice to Gladstone on Jewish disabilities question, i. 376;
correspondence with Gladstone on popular discontent, ii. 172-174;
on Gladstone's position (1867), ii. 227;
otherwise mentioned, i. 54, 74, 148;
ii. 280, 430, 431;
iii, 495.

Act of Uniformity bill (1872), ii. 410.

Acton, Lord, recommended by Gladstone for a peerage, ii. 430;
correspondence with Gladstone on Vaticanism, ii. 509, 511, 515, 519-521;
compared with Döllinger, ii. 558;
letter on Gladstone's proposed retirement, iii. 172;
elected fellow of All Souls', iii. 421;
Gladstone's letters to, i. 481, 628; ii. 1, 214;
iii. 355-359, 413-416, 422, 456, 457, 544;
criticism of Gladstone, iii. 360-361;
otherwise mentioned, ii. 254, 617;
iii. 103, 351, 462.

Adam, W. P., commissioner of public works, ii. 463 note;
supports Gladstone's Midlothian candidature, ii. 584-585;
otherwise mentioned, ii. 586, 602, 620.

Adams, Charles Francis (American minister), hints withdrawal, ii. 80 and note2, 83;
Evarts coadjutor to, ii. 189;
breakfasts with Gladstone, ii. 212-213;
on Alabama case, ii. 395-396;
work on the arbitration board, ii. 411-412.

Adderley, C. B., quoted, i. 362 note2.

Adullamites, ii. 205, 211, 224, 225.

Advertisements, tax on, i. 459, 462 and note.

Affirmation bill (1883), i. 414 note; iii. 14, 18-20, 107 note, 312.

Afghanistan:—
Cavagnari in, iii. 151.
Reversal of conservative policy in, iii. 10.
Russian action in (1885), iii. 178, 183-185, 208 note.
War with, ii. 583;
Gladstone's references to, ii. 592, 595.

Africa South:—
Cape Colony—
Dutch sympathy in, with Transvaal, iii. 39-40 and note2, 42 note2, 43.
Representatives from, on South African situation, iii. 33.
Cape of Good Hope petition, ii. 545.
Confederation scheme, iii. 22-24, 31.
Frere in, iii. 2, 6.
Native affairs in, committee on, i. 358.
Orange Free State—
Advice from, iii. 32-33.
Sympathy in with Transvaal, iii. 39-40 and note2, 43.
Transvaal—
Administration of, by Great Britain, iii. 31 and note1.
Annexation of (1877), iii. 25;
Boer resistance to annexation, iii. 25-26, 31;
Gladstone's attitude towards, iii. 27;
Hartington's attitude to, iii. 27.
Cabinet abstentions on division regarding, iii. 35.
Commission suggested by Boers, iii. 35;
suggestion accepted, iii. 36 and note1, 40;
constitution of commission, iii. 41;
Boer requests regarding, refused, iii. 41;
parliamentary attack on appointment, iii. 41-42;
Boer attitude towards, iii. 44;
Pretoria convention concluded by, iii. 44-45.
Conventions with, iii. 45 and note.
Forces in, iii. 31, note2.
Midlothian reference to (1879), ii. 595;
(1885), iii. 248.
Misrepresentations regarding Boers, iii. 31.
Native struggles with Boers in, iii. 24.
Rising of, iii. 31-32;
course of hostilities, iii. 34-37;
armistice, iii. 39.
Self-government promised to, iii. 25, 28 and note2, 29, 30 and note2;
promises evaded, iii. 30, 33.
W. H. Smith's view of proceedings in, ii. 601.
Suzerainty question, iii. 45 and note.
Sympathy with, from South African Dutch, iii. 39-40 and note2, 42 note2, 43.

Ailesbury, Lord, ii. 556.

Airey, Sir Richard, i. 651.

Alabama claims—
Arbitration accepted on, ii. 405.
Gladstone's views on, ii. 394, 396-397, 406, 409, 538.
[579]Indirect damages claimed by Sumner, ii. 399, 406-412.
Mixed commission proposed to deal with, ii. 397;
refused by United States, ii. 398;
accepted, ii. 400;
constitution of, ii. 400-401;
work of, ii. 401-405.
Origin of, ii. 393-394.
Parliamentary anxieties regarding, ii. 390.
Soreness regarding, ii. 392.

Albania, i. 605-608.

Albert, Prince, speeches at Suppression of Slave Trade meeting, i. 227;
on Peel's retirement, i. 293;
presented with Gladstone's translation of Farini, i. 403 note;
Gladstone's budget submitted to, i. 464;
on Gladstone's budget speech, i. 469;
unpopularity of, ii. 426, 652;
views on Roebuck committee, i. 537;
estimate of Gladstone, ii. 28;
on Trent affair, ii. 74;
on Danish question, ii. 93, 102;
death of, ii. 89;
Gladstone's estimate of, ii. 90-91;
effect of his death on Gladstone's relations with the Queen, ii. 91;
statue to, at Aberdeen, ii. 100;
otherwise mentioned, i. 242, 274, 541; ii. 14, 92.

Albert Victor, Prince, iii. 322.

Alderson, Baron, i. 381.

Alfred, Prince, ii. 98, 99, 105.

Alexander II., Emperor of Russia, ii. 499.

Alexander III., Emperor of Russia, iii. 116, 117.

Alexandretta, project to seize, ii. 573.

Alexandria, English and French fleets at, iii. 79;
bombardment of, iii. 81, 84, 85.

Alice, Princess, see Louis.

All the Talents ministry, i. 446.

Allon, Dr., ii. 134-135, 255, 458.

Alsace, annexation of, ii. 346-348.

Althorp, Viscount, Gladstone's first intercourse with, i. 101;
dissuades Howick from moving for papers on Vreedenhoop, i. 105;
views on Ashley's factory proposals, i. 106;
Cobbett snubbed by, i. 114;
contrasted with Russell, i. 118;
action of, on tithe collection, i. 133;
Grey opposed by, i. 430;
otherwise mentioned, i. 103, 115, 649; ii. 436; iii. 503.

America:—
British North, ii. 607.
Canada, see that title.
United States, see that title.

American civil war, see under United States.

Annuities bill, ii. 52-53, 125.

Anonymous articles by Gladstone, ii. 345 note1; iii. 415.

Anson, Sir W. (warden of All Souls'), iii. 421.

Anstice, Prof., i. 55-56, 58, 59 note, 65, 74, 162, 134.

Antonelli, Cardinal, ii. 215.

Antony and Cleopatra at Drury Lane, ii. 476.

Aosta, Duke of, ii. 327.

Appointments and honours, Gladstone's care in selections for, ii. 428; iii. 97.

Arabi, iii. 73, 80, 83, 85-86.

Arbitration in Alabama case, ii. 405, 411-412;
soreness at award, ii. 392, 413.

Arbuthnot, George, i. 519; ii. 182, 193.

Argyll, Duke of, on presbyterian view of a church, i. 158 note;
attitude towards Gladstone's budget, i. 466;
on postponement of Reform bill, i. 648;
attitude towards French treaty scheme, ii. 22;
on Paper Duties bill, ii. 33, 37;
ecclesiastical views, ii. 37;
supports Gladstone on estimates struggle, ii. 140;
views on Danish question, ii. 192;
advises dissolution on Reform bill, ii. 209;
in Rome, ii. 217;
the pope's estimate of, ii. 218;
views on annexation of Alsace and Lorraine, ii. 347;
on Alabama case, ii. 403;
views on Gladstone's retirement, ii. 505;
views on J. S. Mill memorial, ii. 543;
on Bulgarian question, ii. 552;
Hawarden, ii. 582;
Indian secretary (1868), ii. 644;
lord privy seal (1880), ii. 653;
letter to Gladstone on outside influence, iii. 4;
views on Transvaal commission, iii. 41;
divergence of views from Chamberlain's, iii. 48-49;
resignation, ii. 654; iii. 90;
on Disturbance Compensation bill, iii. 113;
on franchise disagreement (1884), iii. 127;
suggested to effect conference between leaders on Franchise bill, i. 135;
letter to Gladstone on election address, iii. 220-221;
views on Carnarvon's interview with Parnell, iii. 229 note1;
on Irish situation, iii. 280-281;
refuses Gladstone's invitation to birthday dinner, iii. 322;
on land question, iii. 477;
Gladstone's letters to, i. 652; ii. 45, 73, 76, 288-290, 295, 462, 475, 500, 520, 524, 563, 564, 615, 636;
otherwise mentioned, i. 420, 492, 495, 536, 539, 624, 635-636; ii. 47 notes; ii. 72, 183, 212, 459, 504, 644.

[580]Aristotle, i. 131, 207 note2.

Armellini, iii. 464.

Armenian atrocities, iii. 521, 522.

Armitstead, George, iii. 463 and note, 493, 525, 533.

Armstrong, E. J., ii. 195 and note.

Army:—
Cardwell's work for, ii. 359.
Commander-in-chief, position of in Parliament, ii. 362, 649.
Estimates for (1874), ii. 483.
Purchase abolished, ii. 361-365.
Short service system, ii. 626, 649.
War office, qualifications for, ii. 649.

Arnold, Matthew, views of, on Peter Bell, i. 220;
appointment sought by, ii. 540;
views on copyright, ii. 541;
poem on his father, iii. 483;
estimate of Wordsworth, iii. 448;
on Christianity, iii. 520.

Arnold, Dr. T., sermons of, read by Gladstone, i. 100, 135;
view of the church, i. 158;
attitude towards Newman, i. 165;
on Gladstone's first book, i. 176;
on Jerusalem bishopric, i. 308;
M. Arnold's poem on, iii. 483.

—— Mrs. T., iii. 358.

Ashley, Lord, on factory legislation, i. 106;
on Jerusalem bishopric, i. 308, 309;
votes against Gladstone at Oxford, i. 333.

—— Evelyn, ii. 51 and note, 153, 154, 252.

Asquith, H. H., iii. 495 note.

Athenæum Club, ii. 174.

Athens, i. 605; iii. 91.

Attwood, Thomas, i. 114 note.

Augustenburg, Duke of, ii. 116, 580.

Augustine, Saint, i. 117, 161, 207 note2; ii. 544.

d'Aumale, Duc, ii. 190.

Austin, Charles, i. 229; iii. 464.

Australia, convict transportation to, i. 359 and note.

Austria:—
Alliance with, Gladstone's view of, i. 546.
Berlin memorandum, ii. 549.
Berlin treaty obligation, attitude towards (1880), iii. 9.
Black Sea provisions of Treaty of Paris disapproved by, ii. 350.
Bosnia and Herzegovina transferred to, ii. 576; iii. 82.
Confusion in policy of, ii. 120.
Danubian provinces, quasi-independence of, opposed by, ii. 3.
Eastern question, attitude towards, ii. 549, 571.
Egyptian question, attitude towards, iii. 80, 82.
Excessive expenditure, effects of, ii. 53.
France, peace with, Lord Elcho's motion on, ii. 19 note2
expects aid from, ii. 337;
alliance sought by (1870), ii. 323;
efforts to avert Franco-Prussian war, ii. 326;
neutrality during the war, ii. 344.
Ionian Islands despatch, attitude towards, i. 601.
Italy, tyranny in and war with, i. 390-402, 618, 620 note3; ii. 6 et seq., 641.
Midlothian references to, iii. 8.
Prussia—attitude of, i. 489;
war with, ii. 115, 210 note, 214.
Russia—policy towards, i. 488;
hostility of, ii. 4.
Sadowa, defeat at, ii. 115.
Slowness of, ii. 4.
Tariff negotiations with, i. 267.

Ayrton, A. S., ii. 460-461, 463-464, 651.

d'Azeglio, ii. 17.


Bach's passion music, ii. 582.

Bacon, Lord, cited, ii. 30.

Badeley, ——, i. 380 note2.

Bagehot, W., ii. 62.

Baker, Sir Samuel, iii. 145 note2, 161.

Balfour, A. J., Gladstone's communications with, on Irish situation, iii. 259, 284;
Irish secretary, iii. 374;
on Irish rents, iii. 374;
compared to Halifax, iii. 378;
Irish administration of, iii. 378-379;
Mitchelstown, iii. 381-382;
on adverse bye-elections, iii. 427;
defends Irish policy at Newcastle, i. 428;
replies to Gladstone, iii. 490;
moves vote of censure on Irish administration, iii. 501;
tribute to Gladstone, iii. 510, 530.

Ball, Dr., ii. 264, 269.

Ballot, Gladstone's opposition to (1833), i. 99, 106;
his later views (1870-71), ii. 367-368;
recommended by committee, ii. 367;
government bill (1870), ii. 368-369;
results of, ii. 370.

Balmoral, Gladstone's visits to, ii. 97-106;
Queen's fondness for, ii. 426.

Bangor, bishopric of, i. 260 note1.

Bank Charter Act (1833), iii. 300.

—— of England, Gladstone in conflict with, i. 518-519, 650-651.

Bankruptcy bill (1883), iii. 112.

Banks, abolition of private notes of, desired by Gladstone, ii. 650-651.

[581]Baptist, Chamberlain's article in, iii. 367 and note2.

Baring, Bingham, ii. 534.

—— Sir E., administration of, iii. 119;
advises abandonment of Soudan, iii. 147;
agrees on fitness of Gordon for the work, iii. 149;
warns Granville of difficulties, iii. 149, 151;
telegram to, approved by Gladstone, iii. 150;
procures nomination of Gordon as governor-general of Soudan for evacuation, iii. 152;
gives him an executive mission, iii. 153;
Gordon's request to, regarding Zobeir, iii. 155;
supports request, iii. 157;
forbids Gordon's advance to Equatoria, iii. 162;
advises immediate preparations for relief of Gordon, iii. 163;
position of, iii. 179;
advises abandonment of Khartoum expedition, iii. 180.

—— Sir Francis, Macaulay and Gladstone contrasted by, i. 192-193;
in whig opposition, i. 420 and note1;
estimate of the coalition, i. 449-450 and note1;
refuses to succeed Gladstone, i. 539.

—— T., i. 417.

Barker, Mr., i. 341, 345.

Barrow, ii. 536; iii. 467 note.

Bassetlaw election (1890), iii. 452.

Bath, Lord, ii. 617.

Bathurst, Lord, i. 142 note.

Baxter, W. E., ii. 463 note.

Beach, Sir M. Hicks, colonial secretary, iii. 26;
negotiations with Hartington on Franchise bill, iii. 134, 136;
moves amendment on budget (1885), iii. 200, 206;
views on Spencer's Irish policy, iii. 213;
in debate on the address, iii. 285;
gives notice regarding Irish bill, iii. 287;
on Collings' amendment, iii. 288;
on suggestion of withdrawal of Home Rule bill after second reading, iii. 334;
speech on night of the division, iii. 337-338;
Irish secretary (1886), iii. 362;
denounces Parnell's bill, iii. 369;
repudiates policy of blackmail, iii. 369, 373;
retires from secretaryship, iii. 374.

Beaconsfield, Earl of (Benjamin Disraeli):—
Chronology—Views on slavery, i. 104-105;
Gladstone's first meeting with, i. 122;
on free trade, i. 265;
on Gladstone's Maynooth resignation, i. 279;
taunts Peel with inconsistency, i. 286;
on Peel's party relations, i. 289;
young England group of, i. 304-305;
motion on agricultural distress (1850), i. 354;
supported by Gladstone, i. 354-356;
on Cobden, i. 352;
view of the colonies, i. 361;
Don Pacifico debate, i. 368-369;
Peel's forecast regarding, i. 374;
on Ecclesiastical Titles bill, i. 414;
in Derby's cabinet (1852), i. 416;
on protection (1852), i. 425, 428;
Aylesbury speeches, i. 428-429, 452;
combination of, with Palmerston suggested, i. 431;
attitude towards Peel, i. 432;
on free trade, i. 432;
Herbert's speech against, i. 433, 435 and note;
budget of (1852), i. 435-440, 459;
defeat of, on house duty (1852), iii. 203 note2;
acceptance of defeat, i. 441-442;
remark on coalition government, i. 446;
correspondence with Gladstone on valuation of furniture, i. 457-458;
opposes Gladstone's attempted operation on national debt, i. 472-473;
on Oxford reform, i. 507-508;
willing to yield leadership of Commons to Palmerston, i. 525;
views on Derby's failure to form a ministry, i. 527-528;
leadership of Commons by, discussed, i. 552, 555;
overtures to Genl. Peel, i. 555;
Derby's relations with, i. 555, 561;
conversant of Derby's communications with Gladstone, i. 559;
on Lewis' budget, i. 560, 561;
denounces China war, i. 564;
on ministerial blundering as occasion for international quarrel, i. 576;
animosity against, i. 581;
attitude towards Graham, i. 584, 587;
Herbert's alleged attitude towards, i. 585;
letter to Gladstone, i. 586;
conversation with Vitzthum, i. 591 note;
remark to Wilberforce regarding Gladstone, i. 591 note;
schemes of, regarding government of India, i. 592;
Ionian schemes attributed to, i. 613;
opposes union of the Principalities, ii. 4;
Gladstone's renewed conflicts with, ii. 19;
on Gladstone's efforts for economy, ii. 42;
on excessive expenditure, ii. 48;
estimate of financial statements of, ii. 55;
on Danish question, ii. 118-120;
on Gladstone's franchise pronouncement, ii. 127;
on franchise (1859), ii. 200;
taunts Gladstone on Oxford speech, ii. 203;
[582]on Reform bill (1866), ii. 205;
position in Derby government (1866), ii. 211;
Reform bill of 1867, ii. 223-236;
thirteen resolutions, iii. 300 note4;
cabinet divisions of, iii. 175;
proposals for Ireland, ii. 242;
becomes premier, ii. 244;
on Irish church question, ii. 247;
on the bill, ii. 264, 265 and note, 274, 275, 280;
dissolves, ii. 248;
resigns, ii. 252;
on Irish Land bill, ii. 295;
taunts Gladstone on Irish policy, ii. 297;
on Franco-Prussian question, ii. 329, 335;
on crown prerogative, ii. 864;
watchfulness during 1872, ii. 390;
speech at Manchester, ii. 390;
strikes imperialist note, ii. 391;
on Alabama case, ii. 401, 406, 407;
Irish University question, ii. 435, 414;
action during ministerial crisis, ii. 447-450, 452-456;
Brand's view of position of, ii. 456;
letter at Bath election, ii. 475;
on Gladstone's manifesto, ii. 488;
counter manifesto, ii. 488-489;
on the dissolution (1874), ii, 496;
letters from, on his wife's illness and death, ii. 546-547;
refuses adherence to the Berlin memorandum, ii. 549;
created Earl of Beaconsfield, ii. 550;
speech at Lord Mayor's feast, ii. 558;
at Berlin Congress, ii. 575, 577;
attack on Gladstone's eastern policy, ii. 579;
turn of popular feeling against, ii. 594;
election address (1880), ii. 605-606;
reception of defeat (1880), ii. 612;
Daily Telegraph inspired by, ii. 622;
on mediocrity in cabinets, iii. 3;
apprehensions on Ireland, iii. 47;
peers created by, ii. 429 and note;
death of—tribute from Gladstone, iii. 89.
Deterioration in public life due to, iii. 475.
Eminence of, iii. 89.
Estimate of, ii. 245; iii. 539.
Gladstone's estimate of, i. 356;
Gladstone's antipathy to, i. 429, 432, 435, 436, 508;
contrasted with Gladstone, ii. 392, 561.
Judaism of, ii. 552-553, 558; iii. 475-476.
Novels of, i. 588.
Penetration of, ii. 122, 392; iii. 539.
Parliamentary courage of, i. 188;
debating method of, ii. 189;
parliamentary wit of, iii. 473.
Turkish sympathies of, ii. 349, 558, 563.
Otherwise mentioned, i. 424, 433, 437, 624, 631; ii. 85 note1, 100, 187, 499, 501, 620; iii. 276, 465.

Beard, C, ii. 544.

Beatrice, Princess, ii. 96.

Beaufort, Duke of, on coalition with Peelites, i. 562.

Bedford, Duke of, ii. 229; iii. 241.

Beer duty, ii. 651; iii. 7, 187, 200.

Bekker, Dr., ii. 99.

Belgium:—
Bismarck's threat to, ii. 330.
Franco-Prussian treaty regarding, ii. 340.
Neutrality of, guaranteed (1870), ii. 341, 580.
Severance of, from Holland, ii. 2.

Benedetti, ii. 330-331, 333 note, 340.

Bennett, W. J. E., i. 380 note2.

Benson, Archbishop, iii. 96, 105, 131, 460.

Bentham, Jeremy, i. 82, 144, 156, 200; ii. 60.

Bentinck, Lord George, quarrel with Gladstone, i. 301-302;
protectionist position of, i. 352; iii. 465;
on Irish University bill, ii. 444;
otherwise mentioned, i. 294, 296, 350, 416, 430, 437 and note.

Berber, Gordon's arrival at, iii. 155;
Gordon shows Khedive's firman at, iii. 160;
route by, impossible for relieving force, iii. 163;
fall of, iii. 164;
reconnaissance towards, iii. 165;
railway from Suakin to, iii. 178.

Beresford, Lord, required to support Roman Catholic Relief bill, ii. 649.

—— Major, relations with Disraeli, i. 369;
views on the Peelites, i. 418.

Berlin congress (1878), ii. 575, 577; iii. 82.

—— memorandum (1876), ii. 549.

Berlin treaty (1878), ii. 575-576; iii. 82, 522;
enforcement of, attempted (1880), iii. 8-10.

Bernard, Mountague, i. 628; ii. 401.

Berryer, M., ii. 140 and note, 221.

Bessarabia, ii. 574 and note2, 577.

Bessborough, Lord, presides over Irish Land Commission, iii. 54, 56;
otherwise mentioned, ii. 274, 292, 503.

Bethell, Sir R., see Westbury.

Beugnot's Chute du Paganisme, iii. 387.

[583]Biarritz, Gladstone's visit to, (1891-1892), iii. 463 et seq.;
(1893), iii. 504, 508.

Biblical passages on special occasions, i. 201;
biblical studies, iii. 415-416, 421, 544.

Biggar, J. G., iii. 53.

Biggar, family settlement in, i. 9 note.

Binney, T., ii. 134.

Birmingham:—
Bright celebration at, iii. 111.
Gladstone's visit to (1877), ii. 570;
Gladstone's speech at (1888), iii. 387-389.

Biscoe, F., i. 50, 64, 80.

Bismarck, Prince, Napoleon III. in collision with, ii. 5;
rise of, ii. 114;
French diplomatic overtures reported by, ii. 319;
views on Belgium and Holland, iii. 320;
scorn for France, ii. 320;
hopeful of peace, ii. 322;
anxious for war with France, ii. 323-324, 329, 330-333, 335 note1;
complaint against England, ii. 331;
condensed telegram incident, ii. 332-333;
on Franco-Prussian agreement regarding Belgium, ii. 340;
agrees to arrangement for neutrality of Belgium, ii. 341;
understanding with Russia regarding Black Sea, ii. 350;
interviews with Odo Russell, ii. 352-354;
estimate of Russian diplomacy, ii. 353 note;
on Egyptian question, iii. 79, 80, 89;
French suspicion of (1882), iii. 82;
Gladstone's annoyance with, iii. 121;
antipathy towards England, i. 122;
otherwise mentioned, ii. 356, 492; iii. 235.

Blachford, Lord (Frederick Rogers), i. 54, 59, 307; ii. 171-172.

Blackburn, Lord, ii. 383.

Blackheath, Gladstone's speech at (1871), ii. 380-381;
speech on Bulgarian atrocities (1876), ii. 552, 554.

Black Sea:—
Neutralisation of (1856), i. 550.
Russian claims in (1870), ii. 349-356, 398, 400.

Blakesley, J. W., i. 135.

Blanc, Louis, cited, ii. 79.

Blantyre, Lady, ii. 95.

de Blignières, iii. 119.

Blomfield, Bishop, i. 161, 175, 274.

—— Captain, i. 607.

Board of Trade:—
Cobden offered vice-presidency of (1846), i. 244.
Functions of, formerly, i. 240 note.
Gladstone vice-president of, i. 240-243, 250;
his views on, i. 243-245.

Boccaccio, i. 117.

Boers, see under Africa, South.

Bohn, H. G., ii. 476.

Bonham, F. R., i. 285.

Boniface VIII., Pope, ii. 516.

Bonn Conference, iii. 422.

Boord, T. W., ii. 490.

Booth, General, ii. 530.

Borough Franchise bill (1864), ii. 125-131.

Bosnia:—
Austrian acquisition of, ii. 576, iii. 82.
Revolt in, 548, 567.

Bossuet, i. 134, 159, 382-383; ii. 518;
Gladstone compared with, i. 382-383;
denounced by de Maistre, ii. 518.

Bournemouth, iii. 526.

Bouverie, E. P., ii. 444 note.

Bowen, Lady, i. 607.

Bowen, Lord-Justice, ii. 469, 470.

Boycotting, see under Ireland.

Bradlaugh, opinions of, iii. 11;
claims to affirm, iii. 12 and note;
to take the oath, iii. 13;
hostility  to, iii. 13-14, 465;
elected again (1885), iii. 20;
carries an affirmation law, iii. 20-21.

Braemar, Gladstone's visit to (1892), iii. 493.

Braila, Sir Peter, i. 616.

Bramwell, Baron, ii. 383, 469.

Brancker, T., i. 61-62.

Brand, President, messages from, on South African situation, iii, 32-34, 39;
on Transvaal commission, iii. 41.

—— H. B. W., see Hampden.

Brandreth, W. F., i. 111.

Brasseur, M., ii. 378.

Brassey, Sir Thomas and Lady, iii. 217.

Braybrooke, Lord, i. 223.

Brazil, Alabama case, ii. 405, 412.

Brewster, Sir D., ii. 464.

Bright, John:—
Chronology—Gladstone's first meeting with, i. 257;
elected for Durham, i. 257 note;
Life of Cobden submitted to, i. 282 note;
on Disraeli's agricultural distress motion, i. 354;
Palmerston's view of, i. 367;
Don Pacifico debate, i. 368;
estimate of Graham, i. 408;
on papal aggression question, i. 408, 410;
letter on the Crimean war, i. 494 and note3;
[584]on exclusion of dissenters from universities, i. 505;
Peelites sit with, after resignation from Palmerston cabinet, i. 539 and note;
unpopularity of, i. 542, 548;
on Crimean war, i. 546; ii. 548, 574;
view of the eastern question, i. 547;
repulsed at election (1857), i. 564;
return to parliament (1858), i. 574;
letter to Gladstone, i. 578;
on Indian government, i. 593;
on the 'moral sense and honest feeling of the House,' i. 625, 632;
unpopularity of, in Oxford, i. 630;
suggests commercial treaty with France, ii. 20;
on Paper Duties bill, ii. 34 note, 35;
attacks fortifications scheme, ii. 47;
Gladstone's protest against being classed with, ii. 49; iii. 182;
letter against American war with England, ii. 75;
speech on American civil war, ii. 86;
Reform bill of 1858, ii. 199, 201;
remarks on death of Cobden, ii. 143;
Palmerston's remark on class attacks of, ii. 156;
views on Reform bill of 1866, ii. 201;
advises dissolution, ii. 208;
Reform campaign of 1866, ii. 227;
disapproved by Gladstone, ii. 223;
induced to join Gladstone's cabinet (1868), ii. 254;
president of board of trade, ii. 644;
on Irish Church bill, ii. 264;
views on Irish land question, ii. 282, 290-291, 294; iii. 55;
on Education bill, ii. 305, 309-310;
on civil service reform, ii. 315;
on Belgian neutrality guarantee, ii. 342;
on annexation of Alsace and Lorraine, ii. 347;
on great thinkers, ii. 366;
resignation (1870), ii. 381 note, 644, 650;
at Hawarden (1871), ii. 381-382;
succeeds Childers in the duchy, ii. 463 note;
on the Greenwich seat question, ii. 471;
chancellor of the duchy (1873), ii. 645;
at Hawarden (1873), ii. 474;
on Gladstone's retirement, ii. 505;
radical attitude towards, ii. 630;
chancellor of the duchy (1880), ii. 654;
on the Bradlaugh question, iii. 12, 15;
on Transvaal affairs, iii. 35, 36, note1;
on suspension of Habeas Corpus Act in Ireland, iii. 50;
resigns on bombardment of Alexandria, iii. 83, 90;
explanation in parliament, iii. 85;
Birmingham speech on 'Irish rebels,' iii. 111-112;
on Gladstone's view of Gordon's mission, iii. 177;
at Spencer banquet, iii. 214;
against home rule, iii. 291 note, 294;
again declines to join cabinet, iii. 303 note;
views on exclusion of Irish members from Westminster, iii. 307, 326-327;
disapproves Land bill, iii. 326-327;
conversation with Gladstone on Home Rule and Land bills, iii. 326;
letter to Gladstone, iii. 327;
long demur regarding vote on second reading, iii. 329;
letter to dissentients' meeting, iii. 336;
electioneering against the bill, iii. 342.
Co-operation, faculty for, i. 189.
Forster's estimate of, ii. 123.
Gladstone's appreciation of, ii. 417, 418, 462; iii. 85, 349;
his appreciation of Gladstone, ii. 177-178, 233-234, 505;
Gladstone's letters to, ii. 462, 478, 599; iii. 84, 138.
Granville's estimate of, ii. 283.
Influence of, iii. 326, 336, 342.
Linguistic error of, iii. 476;
otherwise mentioned, i. 423, 447, 626 note2, 631, 632; ii. 128, 202, 203, 205,  224, 226, 230, 235, 260, 446, 481, 485, 495, 498, 504, 563, 600, 617; iii. 13, 100, 288, 311.

Brodie, Sir B., i. 300, 455.

Broglie, Duc de, ii. 356.

Brontë, Charlotte, ii. 538.

Brooks, Mr., i. 441.

Brougham, Lord, loses Liverpool election, i. 20;
Wetherell on, i. 71;
estimates of, i. 75, 117, 133, 149;
on slave-apprenticeship system, i. 146;
view of social reform, i. 156;
estimate of Gladstone, i. 264;
on Conspiracy bill, i. 575;
oratory of, i. 75, 149; ii. 589;
otherwise mentioned, ii. 28, 181.

Broughton, Lord, i. 264, 288 note.

Brown, Baldwin, ii. 134.

Browne, Bp. Harold, iii. 95, 96 note.

Browning, Robert, iii. 417.

Bruce, Sir F. W. A., ii. 18 note.

—— Mrs., ii. 99, 103.

—— Lady Augusta, ii. 100-103.

—— Lord Ernest, i. 242.

—— F., i. 59 note.

—— Henry Austin, see Aberdare.

—— J., see Elgin, Earl of.

Brunnow, Baron, on war with Turkey, i. 479;
in disfavour, i. 486 and note;
[585]on blunders, i. 576;
Gladstone desirous of an interview with, ii. 350-351.

Bryce, James, iii. 495 note, 497 note1.

Buccleuch, Duke of, i. 374; ii. 584, 588.

Buckingham, Duke of, i. 242-243, 254.

Budgets:—
Disraeli's (1852), i. 435-440, 459.
Gladstone's—
his keenness regarding, ii. 55;
(1853), i. 460-472, 646-648; iii.  537;
(1854), i. 514-515;
(1859), ii. 19;
(1860), i. 474; ii. 24 et seq., 635;
(1861), ii. 38-39;
(1863), ii. 66, 67;
(1866), ii. 68, 200;
(1880), iii. 7;
(1885), iii. 187, 200.
Goschen's (1887), iii. 385.
Lewis' (1857), i. 559-562.
Lowe's, ii. 373.
Whigs', i. 459.

Bulgaria:—
Atrocities in (1876), ii. 548, 553, 567.
Division of, into northern and southern, ii. 576, 577 and note1.
Gladstone's first pamphlet on, ii. 552-554;
second, ii. 560, 562.
Resistance of, a breakwater to Europe, i. 477.

Bulgarian Horrors and the Question of the East, The, ii. 552-554.

Buller, C., i. 65.

—— Sir Redvers, cited, iii. 372.

Bulteel, H. B., i. 58.

Bulwer, see Lytton.

Bunsen, Gladstone's book approved by, i. 176;
Gladstone's view of book by, i. 321;
otherwise mentioned, i. 309 and note1.

Buol, Count, i. 602.

Burgon, J. W., i. 503, 506.

Burke, Sir B., ii. 184.

—— Edmund, Gladstone influenced by, i. 203, 208;
attitude towards Turkey, i. 479 note;
Gladstone's estimate of, iii. 280, 469;
Macaulay's estimate of, iii. 280 note;
citations from, in home rule debate, iii. 314;
quoted, i. 25; ii. 51, 61, 366;
otherwise mentioned, i. 265; ii. 295, 424; iii. 125.

—— T. H., murder of, iii. 67 and note, 68, 391 note1, 392.

Burne-Jones, Sir Edward, ii. 559.

Burnett, Mr., i. 341; ii. 477.

Burton, Sir E., cited, iii. 169 note.

Bute, Lord, i. 293.

Butler, Bishop, Gladstone's attitude towards, i. 161, 207 note2; ii. 544; iii. 520-521;
on over-great refinements, i. 210;
on habit, iii. 464.

Butt, Isaac, i. 503,

Buxton, Sir T. F., i. 105, 145.

Byron, i. 159.


Cabinets:—
Angularities a cause of friction in, ii. 419.
Authority of, Gladstone's views on, ii. 396.
Committees in, Gladstone's view of, ii. 289.
Consultation of, on succession to cabinet office, not necessary, iii. 101 note.
Divisions in, iii. 175.
Gladstone's (1868), efficiency of, ii. 255, 414-415;
his estimates of colleagues, ii. 414, 417, 419, 421;
his censure of defaulters, ii. 418-419;
changes in, ii. 463 note;
cabinet of 1880, ii. 653;
of 1886, iii. 296 note2;
of 1892, iii. 495 note.
Mediocrity in, iii. 3.
Peel's view of government by, i. 300.
Responsibility of members of, Gladstone's views on, iii. 113 note, 114.

Caird, Dr., ii. 98.

Cairnes, J. E., cited, ii. 70 note.

Cairns, Lord, on Irish Church bill, ii. 270, 274-280;
on Irish Land bill (1870), ii. 294.

Cambridge:—
Dissenters' disabilities at, ii. 313 note1.
Famous sons of, iii. 476.
Gladstone's early visit to, i. 11;
visit in 1831, i. 80; in 1887, iii. 385;
his solicitude regarding, iii. 486.

—— Duke of, i. 171; ii. 455; iii. 105, 150 note, 524.

Cameron, Mr., i. 78.

Campbell, Lord Chancellor, ii. 33, 37, 39, 635-636.

Campbell-Bannerman, Sir H., Irish secretary (1884), ii. 654;
war secretary (1886), iii. 297 note;
war secretary (1892), iii. 495 note;
on Home Rule bill committee of cabinet, iii. 497 note1.

Canada:—
American relations with, ii. 82, 86.
Assembly in, Gladstone's speech on, i. 360 and note1.
Cession of, to United States suggested, ii. 401 and note2.
Commercial relations with, Gladstone's despatch on, i. 359.
Constitution suspended (1838), i. 144, 641.
[586]Duty on corn from, lowered, i. 255 note.
Ecclesiastical position in, ii. 161.
Fishery questions of, adjusted (1871), ii. 405.
Government of Canada bill (1840), i. 360 and note2.
Revolt of (1837), Molesworth's view of, i. 361 and note5;
Gladstone's opposition to indemnification of rebels in, i. 353 note.
Irish constitution to approximate to, suggestions regarding, iii. 215, 317.
Liberal policy towards, ii. 607.

Cannes (1883), iii. 102-104;
(1897), iii. 523;
(1898), iii. 526.

Canning, Lady, i. 139, 149.

—— Charles John, Earl, offered lordship of the treasury, i. 126;
in parliament, i. 137;
Russell's disapproval of, i. 536;
on Peelites' refusal to join Palmerston, i. 535;
death of, ii. 88;
otherwise mentioned, i. 54, 140, 420 and note2, 539; ii. 193, 194, 317.

—— George, views on slavery, i. 25;
Gladstone's attitude towards, i. 25, 34, 38, 89, 208, 212;
call at Eton, i. 34;
attitude towards reform, i. 69, 70;
Peel's reference to, i. 126;
Peel contrasted with, i. 248;
age of, on entering cabinet, i. 261;
Palmerston a follower of, i. 367;
chancellor and first lord (1827), ii. 463;
wit of, iii. 473;
Wellington's treatment of (1827), iii. 485;
Turgot praised by, iii. 491;
otherwise mentioned, i. 9-10, 20, 21, 298, 372, 419, 420 note2;
cited, ii. 394, 577, 589, 595; iii. 125, 465.

—— Stratford, see Redcliffe.

Cardwell, Lord, withdraws from Oxford election, i. 328-329;
attitude of, towards liberals (1852), i. 419;
Gladstone's budget submitted to, i. 464;
favours dissolution, i. 467;
Russell's disapproval of, i. 536;
refuses to succeed Gladstone, i. 539;
Gladstone's relations with, i. 551, 552, 559;
on Paper Duties bill, ii. 31, 33, 37;
against economy, ii. 94;
estimate of Gladstone's position, ii. 171;
the pope's estimate of, ii. 218;
war secretary (1868), ii. 644;
on Irish land question, ii. 283, 292;
on civil service reform, ii. 315;
on suggested Antwerp expedition, ii. 339;
capacity of, ii. 359;
army reforms of, ii. 359, 626-627;
Gladstone's letter to, on qualifications for war office, ii. 649;
unpopularity of, ii. 389-390;
Gladstone's letter to, on quarrelsome colleagues, ii. 421;
objects to reduction of estimates, ii. 483-484;
peerage, ii. 497;
otherwise mentioned, i. 405 note, 420, 560; ii. 221, 243, 376, 410, 462, 478, 503, 504, 602, 636.

Carey, J., iii. 103.

Carlingford, Lord (Chichester Fortescue), views of, and correspondence with, on Irish land question (1869-70), ii. 283, 288, 290-293;
electoral defeat of (1874), ii. 491;
Irish secretary (1868), ii. 644;
president of board of trade (1870), ii. 644;
president of council (1883), ii. 654;
lord privy seal (1885), ii. 654;
against home rule, iii. 291 note;
otherwise mentioned, ii. 462, 504; iii. 50.

Carlisle, Lord, i. 624.

Carlow election (1891), iii. 458.

Carlton club, Gladstone's membership of, i. 98;
Gladstone insulted at, i. 441;
Gladstone withdraws from, ii. 29.

Carlyle, Thomas, on Gladstone's first book, i. 176 note;
Gladstone contrasted with, i. 195;
Gladstone attracted by, i. 219;
estimate of Gladstone, ii. 229-230;
supports Gladstone on the Bulgarian question, ii. 559;
death of, iii. 98;
Gladstone's estimate of, iii. 98-99, 425;
otherwise mentioned, i. 329; ii. 534, 582.

Carnarvon, 2nd Earl of, i. 75.

—— 4th Earl of, suggests Gladstone for Ionian Islands, i. 594;
on Irish Church bill, ii. 262 note1, 268, 271;
resigns, ii. 574 note1;
on Transvaal annexation, iii. 25;
address to House of Lords on Irish policy, iii. 211, 259;
interview with Parnell, iii. 228-231;
anxieties of, regarding National League, iii. 278;
resigns, iii. 279, 280;
otherwise mentioned, iii. 284, 287.

Carteret, i. 367; ii. 428, 542 note.

Castelcicala, i. 398, 399 note1, 400.

Catholic emancipation, see Roman catholic.

Cavagnari, iii. 151.

Cavendish, i. 380 note2.

—— Lord F., Gladstone's appreciation of, ii. 462;
appointed lord of the treasury, ii. 463 note;
appointed Irish secretary, ii. 654; iii. 66;
murdered, i. 67, 391 note1;
Gladstone's tribute to, i. 69;
otherwise mentioned, ii. 195, 212, 446, 563.

[587]—— Lady F., iii. 69-70.

—— Lord Richard, ii. 232.

Cavour, Count, interested in Gladstone's budget, i. 470; ii. 55;
Gladstone's interview with (1859), i. 618; ii. 5;
England a difficulty to, ii. 6;
dealings with Napoleon iii., ii. 7;
resigns, ii. 8;
Manzoni's estimate of, ii. 11;
development of aims of, ii. 15;
remarks on Italian free trade, ii. 17;
death of, ii. 17 and note3;
prediction of, regarding Prussia, ii. 114, 115;
otherwise mentioned, i. 390, 401, 404, 480; ii. 13, 158, 356, 532; iii. 235, 475, 540.

Cecil, Lord Robert, see Salisbury.

Cephalonia:—
Archbishop of, i. 603-604; ii. 532.
Condition of (1858), i. 599-600, 603-604.
Rising in (1848), i. 600, 603;
Gladstone's despatch on, i. 620 note3.

Chaillé-Long, Colonel C., cited, iii. 169 note.

Challemel-Lacour, iii. 105.

Chalmers, Dr., Gladstone's estimate of, i. 59, 109-110, 170-171;
views on church establishment, i. 169-171;
otherwise mentioned, i. 137, 138.

Chamberlain, Joseph, on Education Act (1872), ii. 308;
supports the resolutions on Turkey, ii. 564;
with Gladstone calling on Cardinal Newman, ii. 570 note;
president of board of trade (1880), i. 240 note; ii. 630, 654;
popularity of, with radicals, iii. 3;
on Transvaal annexation, iii. 28-29;
abstains from voting in Transvaal division, iii. 35;
Argyll uneasy at speeches of, iii. 49;
on suspension of Habeas Corpus Act in Ireland, iii. 50;
communications with Parnell, in. 64;
offers to yield Dilke his post, iii. 99;
Gladstone's correspondence with the Queen regarding, iii. 100-101;
views on liberty of speech for cabinet ministers, iii. 112-114;
social programme of, iii. 173-174;
on Crimes Act, iii. 192;
suggests central board of local government for Ireland, iii. 193;
opposes land purchase for Ireland, iii. 194-195;
resigns, iii. 195;
on conservative repudiation of Lord Spencer's policy, iii. 214-215;
view of Gladstone's election address, iii. 220;
Gladstone's conversation with, iii. 223-226 and notes;
Gladstone's attitude towards (Sept. '85), iii. 222;
antagonism to Hartington, iii. 233, 288;
opposes home rule, iii. 233, 234;
former nationalist leanings of, iii. 233;
Russian and Austrian speech of June 17th, iii. 233-234;
visit to Hawarden, iii. 247;
liberal losses attributed to, iii. 249;
on liberal losses at the elections, iii. 251;
agrarian policy of, iii. 250, 288;
advises leaving Parnell to Conservatives, iii. 267;
Parnell's attitude towards, iii. 275;
alleged desire for Irish secretaryship, iii. 291;
joins the cabinet, iii. 294-295;
local government board, iii. 297 note;
objections to proposed Home Rule bill, iii. 302;
resigns, iii. 302-303;
propounds federation views, iii. 316-317, 327, 339;
opposed to Land bill, iii. 332;
meeting of dissentients in Committee, iii. 335-337;
no terrors for, in dissolution, iii. 339;
Gladstone's comments on, to Acton, iii. 355;
speech at Birmingham, iii. 364, 365, 367;
Gladstone's comments on position of, iii. 366;
at round table conference, iii. 364 note, 367;
article in Baptist, iii. 367 and note2;
gives up conference, iii. 368;
Gladstone's conversation with (Ap. '87), iii. 385;
Gladstone's reply to, on Home Rule bill (May '93), iii. 499-500;
Gladstone's letters to, iii. 92, 133;
otherwise mentioned, iii. 186, 191, 198, 264, 328.

Chancery commission, ii. 650.

Chandos, Lord, i. 628, 630.

Chantrey, Sir F., i. 112.

Chapter of Autobiography, publication of, ii. 249-250.

Charities and income-tax, ii. 65-66.

Charity, sums spent in, iii. 419-420.

Charles I., King, iii. 480-481.

Chartism, i. 276, 358.

Chatham, Lord, i. 223 and note1, 367, 372; iii. 178.

Chester, speech at, on colonial policy (1855), i. 363.

Chevalier, Michel, Gladstone's letters to, ii. 336, 343.

Childers, H. C. E., on estimates (1865), ii. 140;
on civil service reform, ii. 315;
on Russia's Black Sea announcement, ii. 351;
retirement of (1873), ii. 463 note;
on the Greenwich seat question, ii. 472 note;
suggested for war office, ii. 625, 627;
first lord of admiralty (1868), ii. 644;
resigns (1871), ii. 645;
chancellor of the duchy (1872), ii. 645;
retires (1873), ii. 645;
war secretary (1880), ii. 654;
Colley's acknowledgments to, iii. 35  note;
[588]efficiency of, in Egyptian campaign (1882), iii. 83 note;
chancellor of exchequer (1882), iii. 99, 654;
home rule views of, iii. 235, 291 note;
home secretary (1886), iii. 296 note2, 297 note;
otherwise mentioned, ii. 339, 370 note1, 376; iii. 187.

Chillingworth, i. 220.

Chiltern Hundreds, i. 288 note.

China:—
Opium question (1840), i. 225-226;
Gladstone's attitude towards, i. 226-227, 229, 239, 242, 244.
Tai-ping rising in, suppressed by Gordon, iii. 149 note3.
War with (1857), i. 563-564;
(1859-60), ii. 18 and note, 30, 38.

China, collection of, ii. 213, 523 and note.

Chios, Archbishop of, ii. 532.

Christianity, Acton on, iii. 360-361.

Christopher, R.A., i. 536.

Church, Dean, Oxford Movement by, i. 163 note1, 168 note2;
position of, at Oxford (1847), i. 334-335;
estimate of Gladstone, ii. 155, 177;
appointed to St. Paul's by Gladstone, ii. 433;
otherwise mentioned, ii. 430, 860; iii. 69-70, 96, 97.

Church and State (Coleridge), i. 167.

Church Principles, i. 181, 182, 224.

Churches:—
Anglican—
Antagonism of, to liberal party, ii. 307.
Catholic revival in, nature of, i. 159.
Clerical calling, Gladstone's leanings to, i. 81-82, 323-324, 382, 383, 635-641.
Condition of (1831-1840), i. 153.
Convocation, revival of, ii. 162-163.
Crisis in (1882), iii. 97.
Disestablishment—
Gladstone's speech against (1873), ii. 457-458 and note;
his attitude towards (1874), ii. 501-502, iii. 540;
his views on (1891), iii. 471;
Chamberlain's view of, iii. 225.
Evangelical party in, social reforms effected by, i. 156, 163;
Gladstone brought up in, i. 159, 208;
Tractarians in alliance with, i. 167;
anti-slavery work of, i. 200 note.
Gladstone's position regarding, iii. 541-543.
Gorham case, i. 316, 378-381, 632.
Guizot's views on, ii. 538.
Ireland, in, see under Ireland.
Manning's views on outlook for (1846), i. 325.
Orders in, iii. 521.
Palmer's book on, i. 162, 167, 168 note1.
Poetry in, iii. 484.
Preferments in, Gladstone's case with, ii. 430-433.
Rates, abolition of, ii. 161.
Ritualism in, ii. 501, 514.
Roman versus, Gladstone's views on, i. 317-318, 321.
State and—
Gladstone's views on, (1846), i. 324-326;
(1857), i. 570;
(1865), ii. 159-163;
growth of ideas on, i. 182-183;
views modified by Lady Hewley case, i. 322;
supremacy question, i. 381;
Gladstone's view of concessions, ii. 159;
conversation at Biarritz, iii. 470-471.
State in its Relation with the Church, The (1838), i. 172, 175.
Welsh disestablishment question, Chamberlain's article on, iii. 367 and note2;
difficulty of, iii. 471;
advance of (1892-94), iii. 495.
Distinction of, from state, in general view, i. 155.
Gladstone's interest in, i. 152; ii. 507.
Nature of, Gladstone's ideas regarding, i. 87-88, 157-159.
Roman:—
Anglican versus, Gladstone's views on, i. 317-318, 321.
Infallibility dogma of, ii. 378, 511-512, 515, 516, 520.
Jansenists in, i. 325.
Jesuits of, ii. 516.
Neapolitan tyranny connected with, i. 397.
Old Catholic dissenters from, ii. 511, 513.
Papal aggression question (1851), i. 408;
views on, i. 405-410, 414, 415 and note.
Parnell leadership denounced by, iii. 448-449.
Proselytising of, ii. 188, 514.
Religion spoiling morality in, ii. 185.
Secession to, by Newman, i. 317;
by Miss Helen Gladstone, i. 318;
by Hope and Manning, i. 385-387;
second great tide of, i. 378;
[589]Gladstone's views on, i. 312, 321;
Manning's views on, i. 317.
Syllabus (1864)—
importance of, ii. 508;
influence of, on Irish legislation, ii. 511;
contents of, ii. 516;
Gladstone's correspondence with Acton regarding, ii. 520.
Temporal power, Gladstone's views on, i. 403, 404; ii. 512-513, 519; iii. 414;
Vatican decrees in relation to, ii. 508, 517, 519.
Ultramontanes v. liberals, ii. 508-509, 511-513;
basis of ultra-montanism, ii. 518.
Vatican decrees (1870), ii. 502, 509 et seq.;
in relation to temporal power, ii. 508, 517, 519.
Scottish, establishment question, iii. 248, 471.

Churchill, Lady, ii. 98, 102, 104.

—— Lord Randolph, party of, iii. 2, 89, 108 note;
on Dutch sentiment in South Africa, iii. 42 note2;
on franchise extension in Ireland, iii. 142;
on Crimes Act, iii. 188-189;
revolt of, against 'the old gang,' iii. 200-201;
on Irish affairs, iii. 213, 278, 280;
on tory prospects after the defeat, iii. 289;
on Gladstone's chances of forming a government (1886), iii. 297;
on 'reconstruction' of Home Rule bill, iii. 335;
chancellor of exchequer, iii. 362;
resignation, iii. 363, 365-366;
Ulster plan of campaign encouraged by, iii. 371 note;
speaks on budget (1887), iii. 385;
on imprisonment of Irish members, iii. 426;
on Gladstone's reply to Balfour, iii. 502.

Churton, E., i. 111.

Civil Service reform, i. 509-512, 649-650; ii. 314-315.

Clanricarde, Captain, i. 608.

Claremont, i. 242, 243.

Clarendon, Earl of, addresses House of Lords, on Irish policy (1850), iii. 211 note;
attitude towards Gladstone's budget, i. 466, 467;
on British policy preceding Crimean war, i. 481, 485;
efforts for peace, i. 487;
Aberdeen in conflict with, i. 495 and note3;
attitude towards ecumenical council, ii. 510, 512;
satisfies Aberdeen, i. 535;
condemns Peelites' resignation, i. 542;
on Garibaldi's departure, ii. 111;
foreign secretary (1865), ii. 153 note;
the Pope's estimate of, ii. 218;
in Rome, ii. 222;
foreign secretary (1868), ii. 254, 644;
on civil service reform, ii. 315;
foreign policy of, ii. 317-318;
correspondence on reduction of armaments, ii. 321-322;
Alabama case, ii. 397, 399;
death of (1870), ii. 324, 644;
Gladstone's appreciation of, ii. 414, 417; iii. 490;
Granville's estimate of, ii. 417;
otherwise mentioned, i. 481 note, 491, 493, 526, 532, 624, 648; ii. 11, 106, 189, 210, 260, 270, 352, 512.

Clark, Sir Andrew, ii. 279, 423, 446, 462, 498, 504, 563; iii. 101, 102, 159 note, 216, 387, 520.

Clarke, Mr., i. 111.

Classical education, Gladstone's view of, ii. 312, 646-649.

Clémenceau, M., iii. 103.

Clerk, Sir G., i. 420.

Clifford, W. K., ii. 524.

Closure, see under Parliament.

Clough, Arthur H., i. 329.

Clowes, Mr., ii. 552.

Clumber, i. 95, 121; ii. 144.

Clyde, Lord, ii. 359.

Coalition government (1853-59), i. 443 et seq.;
cabinet harmony in, i. 495;
Crimean war's effect on, i. 484, 495, 521.

Coalitions, views on, i. 533.

Cobbett, i. 114; ii. 22.

Cobden, Richard:—
Chronology
free-trade advocacy of, i. 249, 251;
Peel's eulogium on, i. 291-293, 295, 296;
views on colonial government, i. 362;
Don Pacifico debate, i. 368;
on Crimean war, ii. 548;
unpopularity of, i. 542, 548, 630;
view of the eastern question, i. 547;
on proceedings in China, i. 563;
repulsed at election (1857), i. 564;
declines to join Palmerston's government, i. 626;
visit to Hawarden, ii. 18, 20;
French treaty negotiations, ii. 20-21, 46, 77 note3;
experience on expenditure committees, ii. 46;
Gladstone's protest against being classed with, ii. 49; iii. 182;
writes against American war with England, ii. 75;
on Danish question, ii. 113, 119;
death of, ii. 143.
Co-operation, faculty for, i. 189.
Disraeli on, i. 352.
Forster's estimate of, ii. 123.
Gladstone's estimate of, i. 239, 249, 291, 292, 296 note; ii. 143, 213;
Gladstone's confidence in, i. 562.
Graham's estimate of, i. 296.

[590]Life of, cited, 282 and note, 291 note1.
Originality of, ii. 59, 122; iii. 539.
Palmerston's view of, i. 367.
Stanley's estimate of, i. 239.
Otherwise mentioned, i. 232, 244, 278, 423, 447; ii. 13, 23, 37, 58, 120, 156, 189; iii. 431.

—— Club:—
Chamberlain's speech at dinner of (1883), iii. 112-113.
Gladstone's eulogy of Cobden at dinner of (1886), ii. 213.

Cockburn, Chief Justice, ii. 384, 395, 412.

Coercion, see under Ireland.

Colborne, Capt., i. 228.

Cole, Mr., i. 59 note, 135.

Colenso, Bishop, i. 316; ii. 168-169, 313.

Coleridge, S. T., i. 159, 167, 176 note.

—— Lord Chief Justice, recommends Northcote to Gladstone, i. 333 note1;
uneasy regarding Gladstone's views, i. 628;
introduces bill for removing tests, ii. 313;
made lord chief justice, ii. 463 note, 470;
on the Greenwich seat question, ii. 469 and note;
Times libel action tried before, iii. 394.

Colley, Sir George, iii. 31 and note1, 34-38, 42.

Collier, Jeremy, cited, iii. 467.

—— Sir Robert, ii. 383-386.

Collings, Jesse, iii. 288.

Collins, i. 169.

Colonial Society, ii. 401 note2.

Colonies:—
Church in, ii. 168-169.
Disraeli's views on, i. 361; ii. 606;
speech on (1872), ii. 391.
Gladstone's views on, i. 359-361, 363-364, 645.
Home rule (Irish), attitude towards, iii. 323.
Military expenditure for, i. 362 and note1;
reduction of troops in (1870), ii. 360 and note, 374.
Protection adopted by, against England, ii. 132.

Combes, M., iii. 113 note.

Commercial treaties—
French, ii. 20-21, 46;
various (1866), ii. 200.

Companies, Gladstone's bill for regulation of, i. 268.

Concert of Europe, Gladstone's view of, ii. 560, 564, 573, 575; iii. 80, 82.

Condé, cited, i. 188.

Congo debate (1883), iii. 110.

'Conservative,' adoption of name of, i. 422.

Conservative party:—
Changes in (1870-1885), iii. 177.
Church the rallying point of, i. 154.
Closure by guillotine introduced by, iii. 377.
Coercion—
repudiated by, iii. 212-214, 257;
revival of, a last resort for, iii. 278-279, 285;
proposed by, iii. 287;
Salisbury's 'twenty years' proposal, iii. 317.
Electoral losses of (1886-1890), iii. 427.
Factions in, i. 143.
Fourth party among, iii. 2, 89, 108 note.
Franchise extension not inimical to, iii. 129.
Gladstone's early connection with, i. 245 note;
his views on (1885), iii. 221.
Ireland, traditional policy towards, iii. 242-243.
Irish alliance with, iii. 188-190, 200, 203, 258, 260, 269-271, 274, 276, 284.
Liberal aid to, on important measures, iii. 257-258;
liberal seceders' union with, iii. 350.
Nationalist support of, at general election (1885), iii. 244-245.
O'Connell, attitude towards, i. 129, 138.
Lord Spencer's policy, and, iii. 262.
Tory democracy, iii. 173, 201, 240-241.
Whig seceders' fusion with, i. 139.

Consistency, Gladstone's view of, i. 211-212.

Conspiracy to Murder bill, i. 574-576.

Constantinople:—
Meeting of the Powers at (1870), ii. 559.
Patriarch of, ii. 532.

Convocation, revival of, ii. 162-163.

Conway, General, iii. 181.

Copyright, Gladstone's views on, ii. 59, 541.

Cordite vote, iii. 177 and note.

Corfu:—
British retention of, advised, i. 601, 619-620.
Gladstone's arrival at, i. 602;
house at, i. 613.
Petition drawn up by, i. 615.
University at, i. 605.

Corn Laws:—
Gladstone's support of, i. 106, 114, 231-232, 249;
modification of views, i. 252-254, 260-262, 264.
[591]Graham's defence of, i. 114.
Repeal of—
Peel's policy regarding, i. 282-287, 290;
results of, i. 426;
liberal aid to tories for, iii. 257, 284.

Correspondence in the Octagon, ii. 526-547.

Corrie, Messrs., i. 9.

Corry, H., i. 351 note1, 420.

Corrupt Practices bill (1883), i. 97 and note1; iii. 110.

Court gossip, Gladstone's view of, ii. 254.

Cousin, Victor, i. 163; ii. 220-221.

Coutts, Miss Burdett, ii. 168.

Cowan, Sir J., ii. 609; iii. 517 note3, 535 note.

Cowley, Lord, ii. 28.

Cowper, Lord, iii. 65, 324, 362.

—— William (Lord Mount-Temple), i. 234; ii. 154.

Craik, Sir Henry, cited, ii. 302 note.

Cranborne, Lord, see Salisbury.

Cranmer, Archbishop, iii. 466-467.

Craven, Mrs., i. 320, 383.

Crawford, R. W., ii. 207, 210, 233.

Creighton, Bishop, ii. 535.

Crimea, Catherine's seizure of, i. 478.

Crimean war:—
Coalition government wrecked on, i. 484, 495, 521.
Committee on, Roebuck's motion for, i. 521, 523, 537-539, 542.
Course of, i. 494-495, 545-548.
End of, i. 550.
Gladstone's view of, i. 484, 492, 544-546, 652-653;
Gladstone charged with 'starving,' i. 629.
Ignorance of facts of, among politicians, i. 547.
Illusions of, ii. 4.
Income-tax renewal necessitated by, i. 474.
Kinglake's book on, i. 480-481 and note.
Napoleon III. strengthened by, ii. 4.
Newcastle and Herbert, charges against, i. 651-652.
Objects of, i. 545.
Origin of, i. 478.
Popular British opinion on, i. 489-490.
Responsibilities for, i. 481.
Turkish position after, ii. 548.

Croke, Dr., iii. 449.

Cromwell, ii. 287, 555; iii. 480.

Crown:—
Critical wave against, ii. 425-426.
Gladstone's attitude towards, ii. 423-427.
Prerogative of, Gladstone charged with resorting to, ii. 364-365.

Crown Princess, ii. 100, 472.

Crowther, Rev. ——, i. 58-59.

—— —— ii. 217.

Cullen, Cardinal, opposes Irish University bill, ii. 434, 439-440, 443;
Gladstone's meeting with (1877), ii. 571;
mentioned, i. 397.

Cumberland, Duke of, i. 127, 141, 279.

Currie, Sir Donald, iii. 115, 517.

Customs, articles liable to, in various years, ii. 25 and note.

Cyprus:—
British acquisition of, ii. 607.
Convention  regarding, ii.  576, 578; iii. 522.
Gladstone's Midlothian reference to, ii. 592; iii. 27-28.
Seizure of, projected, ii. 573.


Daily News, ii. 495, 625 and note.

Daily Telegraph, ii. 622; iii. 430 and note.

Dale, R. W., ii. 134-135, 304, 305, 570.

Dalhousie, Lord, i. 350; iii. 303 note.

Dalkeith, Lord, ii. 584, 612.

Dalmeny, ii. 588, 609-610; iii. 239, 491.

Dalrymple, Mr., iii. 248.

Dante:—
Gladstone's appreciation of, i. 202, 207 note2, 215, 223; iii. 423-424, 488, 550.
Scartazzini on, iii. 387.

Darbishire, Mr., ii. 136.

Darfur, iii. 146, 149 note3, 157.

Daru, ii. 321-322.

Darwin, ii. 536-537, 562.

Davidson, Bishop, i. 498 note1.

Davis, Jefferson, ii. 72, 79-81.

De Retz, iii. 255.

De Tabley, Lord, ii. 193.

December, important events in Gladstone's life in, ii. 256.

Delane, Mr., i. 153, 624; ii. 270, 439, 552.

Demerara, i. 22-24, 224.

Democracy:—
Fair play a natural tendency of, iii. 308.
Gladstone's feeling for, ii. 77; iii. 123, 125, 133, 203, 610-611; iii. 88;
his efforts against besetting vice of, ii. 250-251;
his faith in, i. 621, 650; iii. 173;
his moulding of opinion of, iii. 537;
their devotion to Gladstone, iii. 89, 90, 250, 330.
Mazzini's work for, iii. 478.
Oxford in relation to, ii. 35.
Spendthrift tendency of, iii. 537.

[592]Denison, Bishop Edward, censure of Hampden opposed by, i. 161.

—— Archdeacon, Gorham case, i. 380 note2;
withdraws support from Gladstone, i. 451;
condemnation of, for heresy, i. 557;
otherwise mentioned, i. 54, 71, 79, 98 note.

—— J. E. (Speaker), ii. 198.

Denmark:—
Gladstone's cruise to (1883), iii. 115-117 (1894), iii. 517;
tribute from, ii. 532.
Schleswig-Holstein question, see that title.

Deputations, i. 256.

Derby, 14th Earl of, abolition, proposals of, i. 102, 105;
advocates reform, i. 143;
joins conservatives, i. 144;
Brougham's estimate of, i. 149;
resigns on Irish church question, i. 154;
Peel's annoyance with, i. 234;
on tariff question, i. 263;
Gladstone's relations with, i. 280;
attitude towards repeal, i. 283;
resigns, i. 285;
on Peel's eulogium of Cobden, i. 291-292;
New Zealand question, i. 298;
on quarrel between Gladstone and Bentinck, i. 301-302;
Graham's attitude towards, i. 368;
invites Gladstone to enter the government, i. 393, 406;
Gladstone declines, i. 407;
views on papal aggression question, i. 406;
reply to Lord Howick in sugar duties' debate, i. 644;
cabinet of three men and a half (1852), i. 416;
supported by the Peelites, i. 424, 428;
attitude towards free trade, i. 425, 429;
Oxford commission, i. 500;
gratitude to Gladstone, i. 434;
resigns on budget defeat, i. 441;
views on Gladstone's budget, i. 472;
attempts to form a ministry (1855), i. 525-526;
fails, i. 527, 528;
communications with Gladstone, i. 551-552, 554, 558, 561;
relations with Disraeli, i. 555, 561;
recommends union with Disraeli and Peelites, i. 562;
vote of censure on Palmerston (1857), ii. 269;
forms second administration (1858), i. 576;
financial policy of, ii. 633;
letter to Gladstone, i. 577;
Bright's views on position of, i. 579;
Reform bill (1859), i. 621; ii. 199;
defeat and dissolution, i. 622; ii. 265;
Gladstone in sympathy with, i. 631;
Gladstone's estimate of, ii. 193;
forms a government (1866), ii. 211;
on Irish railways commission, ii. 243 note;
on Irish church bill, ii. 268, 278;
peers created by, ii. 429;
otherwise mentioned, i. 177, 432, 437 and note, 529, 530, 536, 641; ii. 156 note1, 253, 653; iii. 289 note, 465.

Derby, 15th Earl of, on Reform bill (1866), ii. 202;
on Ireland, ii. 242;
on Luxemburg guarantee, ii. 320, 357 and note;
declines to serve on Alabama commission, ii. 400;
subscribes to Mill memorial, ii. 543;
views on eastern question, ii. 551, 567, 572;
resigns, ii. 574 note1;
declines office with Gladstone, ii. 629;
colonial secretary (1882), ii. 654;
London convention with Transvaal (1884), iii. 45 and note;
declines to join Gladstone's government (1882), iii. 99;
joins as colonial secretary, iii. 100;
Gladstone's letter to, on Ireland, iii. 215;
declares against Home Rule, iii. 291 note, 294;
otherwise mentioned, i. 103, 133, 134, 139, 177, 227, 239, 248, 296, 393, 420; ii. 499; iii. 268, 270.

Devon, Lord, i. 343-344.

Devonshire, Duke of, ii. 243 note; iii. 69, 166, 171.

Dickson, Colonel, ii. 570.

Dilke, Sir Charles, supports the resolutions on Turkey, ii. 564;
declines to join Gladstone's government except with Chamberlain, ii. 630;
president of local government board, ii. 654;
claim of, to cabinet position, iii. 99;
appointed to local government board, iii. 100;
conferences on Franchise bill, iii. 138;
agrees to send Gordon to Soudan, iii. 150;
on Crimes Act, iii. 192;
opposes land purchase for Ireland, iii. 194-195;
resigns, iii. 195;
speech on Irish policy, iii. 264;
for home rule, iii. 291 note.

Dillon, J., iii. 448, 455.

Dillwyn, L., ii. 141.

Dingwall, Gladstone presented with freedom of, i. 476.

Disestablishment, see under Churches.

Disraeli, B., see Beaconsfield.

—— Mrs., ii. 195, 196, 546-547.

Dissenters:—
Affirmation bill opposed by, iii. 20.
Disestablishment speech by Gladstone, effect of, ii. 457-458.
Educational views of (1843 and 1847), ii. 302;
(1870) ii. 303-305;
estrangement of, by Education Act of 1870, ii. 307, 388;
opposition to the Act, ii. 308.
Election of 1874, action in, ii. 495.
[593]Gladstone's relations with (1864), ii. 134-135;
(1868) ii. 255;
(1869) ii. 272;
views on Gladstone's retirement, ii. 505-506.
Home rule, attitude towards, in Wales, iii. 323.
University exclusion of, i. 505-506; ii. 313 and note1.

Dissenters' Chapels bill, i. 208, 330, 331.

Disturbance Compensation bill, iii. 113.

Divorce:—
French law on, i. 567 note.
Gladstone's views on, i. 568-572 and note.
Statistics regarding, i. 572 note.

—— bill (1857), i. 569-573.

Dodson, J. G., ii. 463 note, 654; iii. 291 note.

Döllinger, Dr., Gladstone's visit to (1845), i. 318-320 and note2;
later visit (1874), ii. 513-515;
criticisms from, on Vaticanism, ii. 521;
Acton compared with, ii. 558;
Gladstone's visit to (1886), iii. 351-352;
Salmon's agreement with, iii. 417;
death of, iii. 421;
Gladstone's estimate of, iii. 422-423, 467.

Dollis Hill, iii. 385, 517.

Don Pacifico debate, i. 368-371 and note, 372, 374, 395.

Dongola, iii. 144, 163.

Donnachaidh clan, i. 16.

Douglas, Sir C., i. 419.

Dobrudscha, ii. 574 note2.

Doyle, Francis, at Eton, i. 34, 37, 42-43;
Gladstone's friendship with, i. 39, 54;
Gladstone's letters to, i. 207; ii. 631;
otherwise mentioned, i. 32 note, 59 note, 73, 111, 135, 581; ii. 184.

Dragonetti, the Marquis, ii. 12.

Drayton, i. 132.

Drew, Mrs. (Mary Gladstone), Gladstone's letter to, ii. 473;
accompanies Gladstone to Midlothian, ii. 587;
Acton's letter to, on Middlesex candidature, ii. 617;
engagement of, iii. 280;
Gladstone's letter to, on Robert Elsmere, iii. 356.

Drift, Gladstone's view of, ii. 352.

Dryden, iii. 484.

Duff, Grant, iii. 28 note2.

Dufferin, Lord, urges Turkish intervention in Egypt, iii. 80;
advises abandonment of Kordofan and Darfur, iii. 146;
mentioned, ii. 64, 212, 294, 645; iii. 413.

Dugdale, W. S., i. 150.

Duncan, Mr., ii. 27 note.

Dundonald, Lord, iii. 180 note.

Dunfermline, Lord (Speaker), i. 150.

Dunkellin, Lord, ii. 206.

Dunrobin, i. 476.

Dupanloup, Bishop, ii. 532.

Durham, Lord, i. 144, 178.

Dyke, Sir W. Hart, iii. 279.


Eastern question, see Turkey.

—— Roumelia, ii. 576.

Eastlake, Sir C., ii. 189.

Ecce Homo, ii. 166-167, 172, 173, 533.

Ecclesiastical appointments, i. 153; ii. 122, 430-433.

—— Commission (1835-36), iii. 468.

—— Titles bill, i. 405, 409-415 and note;
effect of Act on whigs, i. 446;
repeal of (1871), ii. 517.

Economy:—
Churchill's efforts for, iii. 365.
Direct taxation conducive to, ii. 62.
Gladstone's efforts for, ii. 42-45, 53, 61, 63-65, 482-484, 498; iii. 110, 507, 508, 537.

Edinburgh, Gladstone's early visit to, i. 10;
reception in (June '86), iii. 343;
Gladstone first lord rector of university, i. 634.

—— Duke of, ii. 378, 455.

Edinburgh Review, Gladstone's anonymous article in, ii. 345.

Education, primary:—
Board school question at Hawarden, ii. 646.
Condition of, in 1869, ii. 302 note.
Controversy on, nature of, ii. 306-307.
Differences regarding, in liberal party, ii. 498.
Dissenters' views on (1843 and 1847), ii. 302;
(1870), ii. 303-305;
estrangement by Act of 1870, ii. 307;
opposition to the Act, ii. 308.
Forster's bill (1870), ii. 298, 301, 303-307, 309-311, 495.
Free, advocated by Chamberlain (1885), iii. 173, 224.
Peel's bill (1843), ii. 299 note.
State aid for, Gladstone's views on, i. 148; ii. 298-300, 310, 311.

—— secondary:—
Classical course, Gladstone's view of, ii. 646-649.
Reform of (1869), ii. 311-312.

Edwards, Jonathan, iii. 477.

Egerton, Sir P., i. 59 note.

—— ii. 146-147 and note.

Egypt:—
Alexandria—English and French fleets at, iii. 79;
bombardment of, iii. 81, 84-85.
[594]Anglo-French control in, iii. 74, 78, 118;
proposal of Anglo-French occupation, i. 76-77.
Annexation idea unfavourably viewed in England, iii. 119.
Army, revolt of, in. 73, 78, 83.
British responsibilities in, ii. 631; iii. 146.
Conference of Constantinople, iii. 81.
Financial position of, iii. 73, 76, 120-122, 170,192,197;
London convention, iii. 122.
Gladstone's prognostication regarding, iii. 72.
Northbrook's mission to, iii. 121.
Reforms in, possible only by evacuation of Soudan, iii. 148.
Soudan, see that title.
Southern frontier of, determined (1885), iii. 180.
Suez Canal:—
Construction of, i. 591-592.
France, attempted agreement with, regarding, iii. 122.
Protection of (1882), iii. 80, 82, 83.
Tel-el-Kebir, iii. 83, 120 note.
Withdrawal from, difficulties of, iii. 120;
Salisbury's policy regarding, iii. 495.

d'Eichthal, Gustave, ii. 538.

Elcho, Lord, ii. 19 note2.

Elections, general:—
(1885) iii. 249-255;
(1886) iii. 345-346;
(1892) iii. 492, 494;
dates of Gladstone's, ii. 608.

Elgin, Lord (J. Bruce), i. 54, 59 note; ii. 18, 194, 636.

Eliot, Lord, i. 236.

Elizabeth, Queen, iii. 480.

Ellenborough, Lord, i. 525, 583, 641.

Ellice, E., i. 222, 237, 467, 493; ii. 194.

Elliot, Arthur, iii. 285.

Elwin, W., i. 553, 555.

Emancipation, see Slave-holding.

Emerson, R. W., i. 176-177 note, 220; ii. 458.

Employers' Liability bill (1893), iii. 504.

Endowed Schools bill (1869), ii. 312.

Epirus, ii. 576.

Errington, W. V., iii. 63.

Esher, Viscount, cited, ii. 624 note.

Essays and Reviews, i. 316; ii. 163-164, 431.

Estcourt, T. G. B., i. 328.

Estimates (see also Expenditure), (1853 and 1860), ii. 24;
(1874-75) ii. 375 note1, 483;
(1892), iii. 507-509.

Eton, Gladstone's career at, i. 26-44;
examines at (1840), i. 229.

Eton Miscellany, i. 34, 37-38.

Eugénie, Empress, ii. 458.

Evarts, W. M., ii. 189.

Eversley, Viscount (speaker), i. 266.

Ewelme appointment, ii. 386-387; iii. 540.

Exchequer and Audit Act (1866), ii. 61.

Expenditure:—
Annual amount of (1860-65 and 1873), ii. 374.
Army and Navy, on (1857-66), ii. 51.
Excess in, Gladstone's efforts against, ii. 42-45, 53, 61, 63-65.
Policy of (1853-59), i. 475.
Spirit of, Gladstone's protest against, ii. 50, 62.

Export trade, growth of (1860-66), ii. 66-67.


Factory legislation, i. 106.

Faguet, cited, ii. 594.

Farini, i. 402-404; ii. 8.

Farquhar, Sir W., i. 162, 473; ii. 165.

Farr, W. W., i. 29.

Farrer, Lord, i. 333 note1.

Fasque, family portraits at, i. 9;
church at, i. 11 note1; purchase of, i. 107;
Helen Gladstone buried at, ii. 604;
T. Gladstone's golden wedding at, iii. 219;
Gladstone's visit to (1891), iii. 462.

Favre, Jules, ii. 356.

Fawcett, H., ii. 302, 444 note, 455, 463 note.

Fechter, C. A., ii. 189 and note, 190.

Fénelon, i. 184, 215.

Fenians:—
Papal rescript, attitude towards, iii. 384.
Parnell's alleged conversation with a spy regarding, iii. 404-405.
Plots by (1867), ii. 241-242.
Temper of (1887), iii. 373.

Ferdinand, King, i. 392, 397, 401.

Ferguson, Dr., ii. 27.

Field, Cyrus, ii. 71, 458.

Fielden, J., i. 114.

Finance (see also Budgets, Expenditure, National Debt, Taxation):—
Egyptian, iii. 170, 192, 197.
Gladstone's masterly statements on, ii. 593; iii. 7;
his principles of, ii. 26, 56-61, 63, 68.
Home Rule bill provisions regarding, see under Ireland.
Pitt's, ii. 627-638.
Popular interest in, i. 458.

Finance bill, ii. 39-40.

Finlay, G., i. 605, 610 note, 614.

[595]Fire insurance duty, ii. 373, 651.

Fish, H., ii. 82, 401-402, 406.

Fisher, Bishop, ii. 535.

Fitzgerald, Lord, i. 259.

Fitzmaurice, Lord E., ii. 463 note.

Fitzroy, Lord C., i. 419; ii. 102.

Fitzwilliam, Lord, iii. 314, 339.

Florence, ii. 8-9; iii. 387.

Follett, Sir W. W., i. 322.

Foreign affairs, British ignorance of, ii. 535-536.

Foreign Enlistment Act (1870), ii. 399 and note, 405.

—— policy:—
Gladstone's views on, ii. 316-318.
Peel's influence on, i. 247.
Popular fickleness regarding, i. 480.

Forster, W. E., on American civil war, ii. 86;
views on liberal party, ii. 123;
vice-president of council (1870), ii. 644;
Education bill of, ii. 298, 301, 303-307, 309-311, 495;
Endowed Schools, bill of, ii. 312;
Ballot bill, ii. 368;
on Alabama case, ii. 403, 408;
on Irish university debate, ii. 444-445;
on Bulgarian question, ii. 549;
Irish secretary (1880), ii. 630, 654;
radical attitude towards, ii. 630;
allows Coercion Act to lapse (1880), iii. 48;
on Lords' rejection of Disturbance bill, iii. 409;
'village ruffian' theory, iii. 49;
seeks coercive powers, iii. 49, 51;
Coercion bill of, iii. 52 and notes, 296 note1;
at Hawarden, iii. 57;
Gladstone's letters to, iii. 58, 66;
condition of Ireland under, iii. 379;
resigns, iii. 65, 90, 654;
on franchise extension in Ireland, iii. 143 note3;
otherwise mentioned, ii. 447 note, 462, 476, 498, 504, 566, 644; iii. 64, 169, 175, 353 and note2.

Fortescue, C., see Carlingford.

Fortnightly Review, iii. 75-76.

Fortunato, i. 398.

Fould, A., ii. 55-56, 221.

Fowler, H. H., iii. 336, 495 note.

—— William, ii. 295.

Fox, General, i. 228.

—— C. J., views of, on emancipation of slaves, i. 104;
estimates of, by Peel and Harrowby, i. 132-133;
motion of, against Lord Sandwich, i. 144;
parliamentary position of, i. 445-446;
protests against British interference in Crimea, i. 478.
Otherwise mentioned, i. 131, 365; ii. 230, 589.

—— Henry, i. 570.

France:—
Alliance with, Gladstone's view of, i. 546; ii. 15.
Alliances sought by (1869), ii. 321, 323.
American war, joint mediation in, urged on England and Russia, ii. 85.
Austria, peace with, Lord Elcho's motion on, ii. 19 note2.
Berlin treaty obligations, attitude towards, iii. 9.
Black Sea affair, ii. 350, 356 and note.
Commercial treaty with:—
suggested by Cobden, ii. 18, 20;
negotiation of, ii. 21, 46;
discussed in cabinet, ii. 21-22;
provisions of, ii. 21 note, 23;
objects of, ii. 22-23;
publication of, in Belgian papers, ii. 27;
results of, ii. 66, 637, 638;
Gladstone's later views on, ii. 66 note.
Commune (1871), ii. 308.
Confusion in policy of, ii. 120.
Crimean war, see that title.
Danubian provinces, policy regarding, ii. 3.
Divorce illegal in (1816-84), i. 567 note.
Don Pacifico case, offer of good offices in, i. 368.
Egypt, action regarding (1881), iii. 73;
understanding with Salisbury, iii. 74;
the joint note, iii. 75-76;
fleet at Alexandria, iii. 79;
fleet withdrawn, iii. 81;
agrees to British advance in Egypt, iii. 82;
declines to take any action, iii. 83;
Salisbury policy frustrated by, iii. 495.
German unity a menace to, ii. 319.
Gladstone's finance admired in, ii. 56;
Gladstone elected foreign associate of institute of, ii. 220 and note;
tribute at his death, iii. 532.
Italian unity aided by, ii. 7-8, 14, see also Napoleon.
Land question in, iii. 477.
Nice and Savoy acquired by, ii. 9, 22, 30, 108.
Orsini affair, representations regarding, i. 574.
Palmerston's attitude towards, i. 367; ii. 47, 49.
Poetry in, iii. 483.
Prussia:—
Treaty with, regarding Belgium, ii. 340.
War with (1870)—British efforts to avert, ii. 326-330, 335-336;
[596]declaration of, ii. 335 and note2;
French miscalculations, ii. 337;
course of, ii. 342-343;
British sympathy after Sedan, ii. 357;
effect of the war on British naval expenditure, ii. 374.
Republic—
recognition of (1871), ii. 345;
statesmen of, iii. 475.
Rome—
occupation of, ii. 107-108, 214, 319, 323;
British attitude towards the occupation, ii. 512;
evacuation of, ii. 217, 512.
Roumania, coolness with Britain regarding, ii. 4.
Schleswig-Holstein question, ii. 116-118.
Tariff negotiations with, i. 267.
Turkish murder of consul at Salonica, ii. 547;
attitude towards Turkey (1881), iii. 74.
Vatican decrees, attitude towards, ii. 510.
Vicissitudes of government in, i. 413.
War with (1812), iii. 471;
war rumoured (1859-60), ii. 43-44, 46-47.
Zenith of the empire, ii. 5.

Franchise extension:—
Anticipations regarding (1885), iii. 172, 201.
Bill of 1860, ii. 200;
bill of 1866, ii. 200-205;
bill of 1867, ii. 223-236, 238, 257.
Boroughs, for, workmen's attitude towards, ii. 125, 139, 198, 211, 227;
Palmerston's views regarding, ii. 128, 200;
household suffrage struggle, ii. 223-236;
liberal aid to tories for (1867), iii. 238, 257.
Counties, for, ii. 200, 475, 481; iii. 124 et seq.
Conservative party the gainers by, iii. 129.
Ireland, see under Ireland.
Gladstone's speech on (1864), ii. 126-130.
Manhood, Chamberlain's pronouncement on, iii. 174.
Reform bill of 1866 restricted to, ii. 200.

Fraser, family of, i. 17 note.

—— Bishop, ii. 432.

—— Sir William, i. 8 and note2, 9 note.

Frederick William, Crown Prince of Prussia, i. 176.

Free trade:—
Disraeli's pronouncement on, i. 432.
Employment in relation to, ii. 57.
External agitation, production of, ii. 227.
French commercial treaty in relation to, ii. 21 note, 24.
Gladstone's speech on (1881), iii. 61.

Freeman, E. A., ii. 365.

Freeman's Journal, ii. 292.

Fremantle, T. F., i. 237.

Frere, Sir Bartle, liberal disapproval of, iii. 2, 6;
responsible for Zulu war, iii. 22;
the Queen's feeling for, iii. 23-24;
enquires liberal policy, iii. 28;
promises Boers self-government, iii. 30;
South African Dutch exasperated by, iii. 43 note;
recalled, iii. 24, 32 note.

Freshfield, J. W., i. 233, 339.

Freycinet, M. de, iii. 75, 79-83.

Frohschammer, J., ii. 525.

Frost, J., i. 400.

Froude, Hurrell, i. 161, 166, 306.

—— J. A., i. 313 note1; ii. 539, 559.

Funerals, ii. 422.

Furse, C. W., ii. 433.


Gaisford, Dr., i. 49.

Gambetta, ii. 335 note1; iii. 75, 77, 78, 82, 465.

Garfield, Mrs., iii. 108.

Garibaldi—
sails from Genoa, ii. 10-11;
enters Naples, ii. 17;
in England, ii. 108-113;
Gladstone's estimate of, ii. 109-110, 114;
Italian estimate of, ii. 113;
Manning's attitude towards, ii. 192;
letters from, ii. 533;
mentioned, ii. 184; iii. 532.

Gaskell, Mrs. Benjamin, i. 160.

—— James Milnes, Gladstone's friendship with, i. 39, 54;
debating society in rooms of, i. 59;
speech on Reform bill, i. 73;
Gladstone's visits to, i. 95; ii. 437;
otherwise mentioned, i. 34, 37, 43, 48, 49, 64, 65, 74, 75, 77, 80, 97, 131, 137, 138, 139, 229, 248.

George III., ii. 428; iii. 181.

Gerasimus, Bishop, i. 604.

Germany (see also Prussia):—
Berlin memorandum, ii. 549, 571.
—— treaty obligations, attitude towards (1880), iii. 9.
Black Sea provisions of Treaty of Paris disapproved by, ii. 350.
Colonial question in, iii. 122.
Egyptian question, attitude towards, iii. 79, 80, 82, 89.
Italian alliance with, iii. 414.
Luxemburg affair, ii. 320, 357 and note.
Poetry in, iii. 483.
[597]Schleswig-Holstein question, ii. 114-118.
Turkish murder of consul at Salonica, ii. 547.
Unification of, ii. 358;
France menaced by, ii. 319.
Vatican decrees, attitude towards, ii. 509.

Gibbon, i. 195; iii. 476.

Gibson, Milner-, Gladstone against, i. 467;
efforts towards peace, i. 547;
return to parliament (1858), i. 574;
in Palmerston government, i. 626;
unpopularity of, in Oxford, i. 630;
on Paper Duties bill, ii. 33, 37-39;
Gladstone supported by, ii. 36, 140, 635-636.

Gladstone, name changed from Gladstones, i. 18 and note2.

—— Agnes (daughter), engagement of, ii. 472-473;
marriage, ii. 475.

—— Anne (sister), i. 17 note1, 160.

—— Helen Jane (sister), i. 17 note1;
Gladstone abroad with, i. 284, 318;
secession to Rome, i. 318, 331;
death, ii. 604.

—— Henry (son), Gladstone's message to, on learning Latin, ii. 94;
at school, ii. 191;
starts for India, ii. 557;
Gladstone's letters to, ii. 586, 598; iii. 296.

—— Herbert (son), Gladstone's letters to, ii. 59 and note, 637; iii. 258;
returned for Leeds, ii. 618;
press interview of (Dec. '85), iii. 264-265;
otherwise mentioned, ii. 474, 477, 614, 617; iii. 1.

—— Sir John (father), political work of, i. 9-10, 20-21, 249;
churches built by, i. 11 and note1;
marriage of, i. 16;
views of, on slave-holding, i. 22-24;
Gladstone's defence of, in the Liverpool Courier, i. 32;
loses Berwick election, i. 43;
political acuteness of, i. 68-69;
criticisms on W. E. Gladstone, i. 74;
Howick's attack on, i. 102;
Fasque bought by, i. 107;
seventieth birthday of, i. 118;
loses Dundee election (1837), i. 141;
disapproves Jamaica journey, i. 148;
transfers Demerara property to his sons, i. 224;
assists Scotch training college scheme, i. 231;
correspondence with Peel regarding his sons, i. 257-258;
views of, on protection, i. 300, 327;
baronetcy of, i. 293, 300;
views on Gladstone's Oxford candidature, i. 330;
on Jewish Disabilities Removal bill, i. 376;
buys portion of Hawarden estates, i. 341;
attitude towards Peel (1849), i. 353;
death of, i. 388;
W. E. Gladstone's relations with, i. 19, 32, 43, 82-83, 98;
W. E. Gladstone's letters to, i. 123, 280, 283-284, 353, 375-376, 635;
letters from, on choice of profession, i. 640;
W. E. Gladstone's estimate of, i. 19, 138.

Gladstone, Mrs. John (mother), W. E. Gladstone's devotion to, i. 95, 128, 131;
death of, i. 131.

—— John (brother), i. 15, 17 note1;
travels of, with W. E. Gladstone, i. 86;
Walsall candidature of, i. 231-232;
parliamentary election of, desired by his father, i. 258;
W. E. Gladstone's letter to, on family differences, i. 388;
illness and death of wife of, ii. 95, 96;
death of, ii. 187.

—— Mary (daughter), see Drew.

—— Robertson (brother), i. 17 note1;
appointed manager of Demerara properties, i. 224;
position of, in Liverpool, i. 258;
at Gladstone's Lancashire candidature (1865), ii. 146;
W. E. Gladstone's letters to, i. 494, 552-553, 626; ii. 62, 130, 456.

—— Stephen (son), ii. 256, 474, 500.

—— Thomas (grandfather), i. 16.

—— —— (brother), slave-holding defended by, i. 24;
attitude towards Reform bill, i. 70 note;
on Gladstone's Oxford candidature, i. 330;
Gladstone's letter to, on offers of a peerage, ii. 494;
otherwise mentioned, i. 17 note1, 68, 258.

—— William Ewart:—
Appearance of (1827), i. 34;
(1840) i. 194;
(1882) iii. 91.
Career, chronological sequence of
1809-1831.
Birth and baptism, i. 7;
childhood, i. 10-14;
at Eton, i. 26-44;
first speech, i. 35;
Oxford, i. 48-85;
tries for the Ireland, i. 61, 329 note.
1832.
Foreign travel, i. 86-88;
impressions in Rome, i. 87;
Newark candidature, i. 88-94, 96-97;
election addresses, i. 90;
first speech as member of parliament, i. 94;
visits to Clumber, Thornes, and Leamington, i. 95;
birthday, i. 97.
1833.
Lincoln's Inn, i. 98;
membership of Oxford and Cambridge club and Carlton club, i. 98 and note;
forms brotherhood with Acland, i. 99;
enters parliament, i. 100;
maiden speech, i. 103;
party votes (1833), i. 106;
visit to Fasque, i. 107.
[598]1834.
Visit to Seaforth and Oxford, i. 111;
at Fasque, i. 116;
treasury appointment, i. 119-120;
opposes admission of dissenters to universities, i. 330.
1835.
Returned for Newark without contest, i. 121;
meets Disraeli at Lord Lyndhurst's, i. 122;
appointed under-secretary for the colonies, i. 123;
contemplates resignation, i. 125;
speech on Irish church, i. 126;
speech at Newark, i. 129;
committee on native affairs at the Cape, i. 358.
1836.
Death of his mother, i. 131;
visit to Drayton, i. 132;
visit to Hawarden, i. 134;
speech on negro apprenticeship, i. 134 and note;
visit to Haddo, i. 137;
committee on waste lands, i. 358.
1837.
Speech at Newark on toleration, etc., i. 138;
presents the Queen with the Oxford address, i. 140;
canvassing at Newark, i. 140;
nominated for Manchester, i. 141;
elected for Newark, i. 141;
at Dundee, Glasgow, Liverpool, Manchester, i. 141;
at Fasque, i. 142;
first interview with Duke of Wellington, i. 143.
1838.
Admitted to consultations on Canadian affairs, i. 144;
speaks on Molesworth's vote of censure, i. 145;
speech on slave apprenticeship system, i. 145-147;
work on educational questions, i. 148;
influenced by Coleridge and Palmer, i. 167-168 note1;
The State in its Relation with the Church, i. 172, 175;
foreign travel, i. 173.
1839.
Opinions on his book, i. 175-181;
work on committees, i. 219;
marriage, i. 223.
1840.
Speech on China question, i. 226;
birth of eldest son, i. 227;
dines at Guizot's, i. 229;
examines at Eton, i. 229;
Scotch training college scheme, i. 230-231, 330;
committee on colonisation of New Zealand, i. 358.
1841.
Church Principles, i. 181;
his brother's Walsall election, i. 231-232;
visits Nuneham and Oxford, i. 235;
speaks on sugar duties, i. 236;
re-elected for Newark, i. 238;
Sir S. Glynne's candidature—Hoylake—Hawarden, i. 239;
vice-president of the board of trade, i. 240-245, 250;
re-elected for Newark, i, 243;
correspondence with Peel on journalistic imputations, i. 245-246;
Jerusalem bishopric, i. 309;
advocates increase in colonial episcopate, i. 330.
1842.
Protection question, i. 249-254;
suggests retirement, i. 253;
tariff reform, i. 255-257;
shooting accident, i. 185;
Glenalmond, i. 231.
1843.
Enters the cabinet, i. 259;
parliamentary success, i. 261;
protection question, i. 262-264;
tariff negotiations with foreign countries, i. 267;
advocates removal of prohibition on export of machinery, i. 267-268;
close relations with Manning and Hope, i. 310;
anxiety regarding Newman's position, i. 310-313;
protests against sentence on Pusey, i. 317.
1844.
Bill for regulation of companies, i. 268;
Telegraph Act, i. 268;
Railway Act, i. 269;
publishes Prayer-Book, i. 314 note;
reply to Ward's Ideal, i. 314-315;
Lady Hewley case, i. 322;
proposes himself as Vatican envoy, i. 271-272;
Maynooth, i. 271-275, 278.
1845.
At Windsor Castle, i. 274-275;
resigns office, i. 276-278, 279;
votes for second reading of Maynooth bill, i. 279;
tariff reform, i. 279;
pamphlet on results of fiscal changes of 1842, i. 280 and note;
on free labour sugar proposal, i. 280;
at Munich, i. 318;
at Baden-Baden, i. 320;
corn law repeal, i. 283-287;
secretary for the colonies, i. 285.
1846.
Colonial clergy questions, i. 358;
recall of colonial governor, i. 359;
out of parliament, i. 287-288;
offended at Peel's eulogium on Cobden, i. 291-292;
conversation with Lord Lyndhurst on conservative party, i. 293-294;
with Jocelyn and Graham, i. 295;
interview with Peel, i. 297-300;
quarrel with Lord G. Bentinck, i. 301-302.
1847.
Oxford candidature, i. 328-332;
election, i. 333;
Jewish Disabilities Removal bill, i. 375-377;
[599]Oak farm and Hawardenvc estate embarrassments, i. 337, 356.
1848.
Special constable against chartists, i. 358;
Oxford D.C.L., i. 377;
on Hampden's appointment as bishop, i. 377.
1849.
Divergences from Peel, i. 353;
mission for his friend, i. 364-365;
Gorham case, i. 378.
1850.
Supports Disraeli's agricultural distress motion, i. 354-356;
Gorham case, i. 378-381 and note;
death of his daughter, i. 381, 387-388;
Australian Colonies bill, i. 362;
Don Pacifico debate, i. 369-371 and note;
death of Peel, i. 371;
question of leadership, i. 373-374;
opposes universities commission, i. 497;
Naples, i. 389-393;
on committee for exhibition medal inscriptions, ii. 539.
1851.
Returns to London, i. 393;
Letters to Lord Aberdeen, i. 392, 391 and note, 396-398, 400-401 and note3;
invited by Stanley to take office, i. 393, 406;
declines, i. 407;
Ecclesiastical Titles bill, i. 409-415;
secession of Manning and Hope, i. 383-386;
death of his father, i. 388;
letter to a Scotch bishop on religious freedom, i. 384, 426.
1852.
First Derby administration, i. 417;
approaches Aberdeen and Graham, i. 417-418;
views on Peelite policy, i. 417-419;
overtures from Russell, i. 421;
supports Derby, i. 424;
on Four Seats bill, i. 424 and note;
re-elected for Oxford, i. 426-427;
equipoise of opinions, i. 431;
defends free trade, i. 433;
overtures from Derby, i. 434;
speech on Disraeli's budget, i. 438-440;
incident at the Carlton, i. 440-441;
New Zealand Government bill, i. 362 and note2, 645;
appointed chancellor of the exchequer, i. 448.
1853.
Difficulties at Oxford, i. 450-452;
re-election, i. 453;
moves to house of chancellor of exchequer, i. 457;
advocates reduction of force in the Pacific, i. 458;
budget, i. 460-472; iii. 537;
attempted operation on national debt, i. 472-473, 646-648;
Latin lessons to his son, i. 464;
illness at Dunrobin, i. 476;
presented with freedom of Dingwall, i. 476;
speech at Inverness, i. 476;
Crimean war, i. 481 et seq.;
speech at unveiling of Peel statue at Manchester, i. 483;
case of Mr. Maurice, i. 454-456;
Oxford reform, i. 500.
1854.
Letter on revival of convocation, ii. 162;
speeches on Oxford reform, i. 503, 509 note2;
civil service reform, i. 509-512, 649;
criticisms of his finance, i. 513-514;
speech on budget, i. 514-515;
conflict with Bank of England, i. 518-519, 650-651;
Savings Bank bill, i. 519;
woods and forests dismissal case, i. 520.
1855.
Ministerial crisis, i. 522-543;
opposes Roebuck's motion, i. 523-524;
joins Palmerston, i. 536;
opposes Roebuck's motion in cabinet, i. 537-538;
resigns, i. 539;
unpopularity, i. 542-543;
efforts for peace, i. 545-548;
at Penmaenmawr, i. 549;
Homeric studies, i. 549-550;
Chester speech on colonial policy, i. 363.
1856.
Communications  with Lord Derby, i. 551-552, 554;
isolation, i. 553;
letter to Bishop Hampden, i. 168;
case of Archdeacon Denison, i. 557.
1857.
Interviews with Lord Derby, i. 558-561;
opposes Lewis' budget, i. 560-562;
co-operation with Disraeli, i. 561;
communications with Cobden, i. 562;
speech on the China war, i. 563;
returned for Oxford unopposed, i. 565;
opposes Divorce bill, i. 570;
encounters with Bethell, i. 570-571;
illness and death of Lady Lyttelton, i. 572-573.
1858.
Opposes Conspiracy bill, i. 575-576 and note;
refuses to join Derby, i. 576-578;
renewed proposal from Derby, i. 583;
refused, i. 585, 590;
motion on the Principalities, ii. 4;
letter from Disraeli, i. 586;
reply, i. 589;
supports Suez Canal scheme, i. 592;
letter to Graham on Indian government, i. 593;
at Haddo, i. 594;
commission to Ionian Islands, i. 594-618;
at Athens, i. 605.
1859.
At Venice, Turin, Vicenza, Verona, Milan, i. 618;
interview with Cavour, i. 618;
[600]defends nomination boroughs, i. 621;
speech on Italian question, ii. 13;
votes with Derby government, i. 625;
joins Palmerston's government, i. 626;
letters on his position, i. 627-628;
trouble at Oxford, i. 628-630;
re-elected for Oxford, i. 630;
budget, ii. 19;
speaks on Italian affairs, ii. 19;
Cobden's visit, ii. 18, 20;
views on French war scare, ii. 43-44;
first lord rector of Edinburgh university, i. 634.
1860.
Budget, i. 474; ii. 24 et seq., 625;
illness, ii. 26-27, 31, 34, 35;
unpopularity, ii. 29, 31;
defeat on Savings Bank bill, ii. 34;
speech on Paper Duty Repeal bill, ii. 34;
chief trains of cabinet business, ii. 36, 635-636;
the fortification scheme, ii. 42, 44-47;
cabinet struggle on question of economy, ii. 42-45;
interview with Palmerston, ii. 45-46;
at Penmaenmawr, ii. 184;
death of Lord Aberdeen, ii. 87.
1861.
Budget, ii. 38-39;
cabinet struggles, ii. 39, 93-96;
correspondence with Sir Wm. Heathcote on finance, ii. 632-635;
attacks and abuse, ii. 48;
American civil war, ii. 70-72, 74-75;
on education, ii. 312, 646;
deaths of Graham and Herbert, ii. 87-88.
1862.
Speech on Italy, ii. 108;
correspondence with Palmerston, ii. 49-50;
panegyric on Prince Consort, ii. 89;
American civil war, ii. 75-77, 79-82;
triumphal reception in the north, ii. 77-79;
Newcastle speech on American war, ii. 79-82;
funeral of Mrs. John Gladstone, ii. 96;
Windsor, i. 96.
1863.
Death of his brother John, ii. 187;
budget, ii. 66, 67;
proposal to extend income tax to charities, ii. 65-66;
speech on Italy, ii. 189;
at Penmaenmawr, ii. 191;
at Balmoral, ii. 97-104.
1864.
At Balmoral, ii. 104-106;
letters on Essays and Reviews judgment, ii. 164;
speech on Mr. Dodson's bill, ii. 313 and note2;
Garibaldi's visit, i. 109-113;
speech on extension of franchise, ii. 126, 238;
correspondence with Palmerston, ii. 127-130;
address from York workmen, ii. 130-131;
Schleswig-Holstein question, i. 116-119;
speeches in Lancashire, ii. 131-133;
relations with protestant dissenters, ii. 134-135;
development in ideas, ii. 121 et seq.
1865.
Cabinet struggles, ii. 140;
criticism of Ecce Homo, ii. 166-167, 172, 173;
elected foreign associate of the Institute of France, ii. 220 and note;
speech on Irish church, ii. 142;
death of Cobden, ii. 143;
letter to his son on ecclesiastical affairs, ii. 159;
defeat at Oxford, ii. 145;
Lancashire candidature and election, ii. 145-147;
speech on conservatism, ii. 178;
letter to Russell on death of Palmerston, ii. 151;
at Glasgow, ii. 154, 155.
1866.
Leader of Commons, ii. 156-157;
tribute to Palmerston, ii. 157;
introduces Reform bill, ii. 200;
disaffection of followers, ii. 202, 205-209;
second reading of Reform bill, i. 203-204;
budget, ii. 68, 200;
votes for abolition of church rates, ii. 161;
against vote of confidence after debate, ii. 207-209;
audiences of the Queen, ii. 209, 211;
declines to speak at Hyde Park demonstration, ii. 212;
speech at Cobden club, ii. 213;
goes to Italy, ii. 213; in Rome, ii.  214-219;
illness, ii. 217.
1867.
Dinner with the Society of Political Economists of France, ii. 221;
household suffrage struggle, ii. 223-236;
disaffection of followers, ii. 224, 225, 227-228, 232-235;
Irish church questions, i. 243;
speech at Newspaper Press Fund dinner, ii. 235.
1868.
Correspondence with Acland on popular discontent, ii. 172-174;
bill on church rates, ii. 161;
Irish church question, ii. 245-248;
election for Greenwich, ii. 251 and note1;
publication of Chapter of Autobiography, ii. 249-250;
candidature in S.-W. Lancashire, ii. 250-251 and note1;
letter from the Queen, ii. 252;
forms a cabinet, ii. 253-255;
speech at Greenwich, ii. 371.
[601]1869.
Colonial Society dinner, ii. 402 note;
letter to General Grey on foreign policy, ii. 316;
Irish church bill preliminaries, ii. 258-263;
bill introduced, ii. 263-264;
committee stage, ii. 266;
struggle with the Lords, ii. 267-271;
Lords' amendments rejected, ii. 272-275;
concessions, ii. 277-278;
proposes acceptance by Commons of modifications, ii. 279;
illness, ii. 276, 279-280;
visit to Walmer Castle, ii. 280, 422;
Irish land question, ii. 287 et seq.;
letter to Bright on principles v. details, ii. 290.
1870.
Irish land bill withdrawn, ii. 294;
Alabama case, ii. 399;
education question, ii. 298, 303-311;
on reduction of armaments, ii. 321-322;
efforts to avert Franco-Prussian war, ii, 326-330;
daily conferences with Granville, ii. 338;
neutrality of Belgium guaranteed, ii. 341-342;
views on annexation of Alsace and Lorraine, ii. 346-348;
Russian claims in Black Sea, ii. 350-352, 355;
difficulties with the court, ii. 360;
army reform, ii. 360 et seq.;
question of commander-in-chief's position, i. 360-361, 649;
Ballot bill, ii. 368-369.
1871.
Views on neutralisation of Alsace and  Lorraine, i. 357;
anonymous article in Edinburgh Review, ii. 345;
instructions to Alabama commission, ii. 404;
abolition of purchase, ii. 361-365;
Ballot bill, ii. 369, 377;
struggles for economy, ii. 374;
visit to Tennyson, ii. 377;
freedom of Aberdeen, ii. 378;
at Balmoral, ii. 378;
at Edinburgh, ii. 379;
funeral of Sir E. Murchison, ii. 380;
speech at Blackheath, ii. 380-381;
conversations with Bright, ii. 381-382;
Collier appointment, ii. 382-386;
Ewelme appointment, ii. 386-387;
licensing questions, ii. 390;
repeal of law against ecclesiastical titles, ii. 517.
1872.
Unpopularity, ii. 387;
cleavage in party, ii. 388;
attitude of radicals, ii. 388-390;
Alabama case, ii. 409-411;
indignation on American claims, ii. 406;
Act of Uniformity bill, ii. 410;
speech at King's College council meeting, ii. 523;
visit to Oxford, ii. 436-437;
address at Liverpool on Strauss, ii. 524.
1873.
Irish University bill, ii. 436-445;
letters to the Queen on retirement, ii. 442-443;
ministerial crisis, ii. 446-456, 652;
letter to Bright, on education question, ii. 309, 646;
speech against disestablishment, ii. 457-458 and note;
the Queen's birthday, ii. 422;
death of Wilberforce, ii. 459;
ministerial embarrassments, ii. 460-465;
becomes chancellor of exchequer, ii. 463, 645;
dispute as to vacating seat thereby, ii. 465-472;
at Balmoral, ii. 472;
engagement of his eldest daughter, ii. 472-473;
at Hawarden, ii. 473-474;
cabinet embarrassments, ii. 474;
marriage of his eldest daughter, ii. 475.
1874.
Financial plans, ii. 478, 481-482, 487;
question of dissolution, ii. 479 et seq.;
electoral manifesto, ii. 487-489;
speeches at Greenwich, etc., ii. 490 and note;
election, ii. 490;
resignation, ii. 492-493 and note;
offers of a peerage, ii. 493-494;
retirement from leadership, ii. 497-499, 503-506;
death of Sir S. Glynne, ii. 500-501;
Vatican decrees question, ii. 502, 509-512;
visit to Munich, ii. 513-515;
Vatican Decrees pamphlet, ii. 515-517;
its reception, ii. 517-520.
1875.
Meeting of Metaphysical Society, ii. 504;
article in Quarterly Review, ii. 520;
more work on Vatican question, ii. 520-521;
Vaticanism published, ii. 521;
sale of house in Carlton House Terrace, ii. 522.
1876.
Letter to Herbert Gladstone on Pitt's finance, ii. 637;
pamphlet on Bulgaria, ii. 551-554;
speech at Blackheath, ii. 552, 554;
visits in the north, ii. 555-556;
work at Hawarden, ii. 557;
visit to Liverpool, ii. 558;
'The Hellenic Factor in the Eastern Problem,' ii. 558;
St. James's Hall meeting, ii. 559;
letter on denominationalism, iii. 542.
1877.
Lessons in Massacre, ii. 560, 562;
visit to Darwin, ii. 562;
the five resolutions, ii. 563-565;
speech in parliament, ii. 565-568;
[602]visit to Birmingham, ii. 570;
views on Transvaal annexation, iii. 27, 28;
visit to Ireland, ii. 571.
1878.
Hostile crowds, ii. 574;
declines to stand for Leeds, ii. 611;
speech on treaty-making power, ii. 377 note2;
speech on Anglo-Turkish convention, ii. 576-578;
article on 'England's Mission,' ii. 579, 581;
literary work and emoluments, ii. 581;
sits to Millais, ii. 581-582;
visit of Argyll and Ruskin to Hawarden, ii. 582.
1879.
Invited to stand for Midlothian, ii. 584;
agrees, ii. 585;
the campaign, ii. 587-590; iii. 27;
day at Glasgow, ii. 590-592;
from Glasgow to Hawarden, ii. 596;
reflections, ii. 597;
correspondence on leadership, ii. 598-603.
1880.
At Hawarden, ii. 603, 604;
with his sister at Cologne, ii. 604;
election address, ii. 606-608;
Midlothian campaign in general election, ii. 608-612;
letter to Rosebery, ii. 613;
to Argyll, ii. 615;
conversations on leadership, ii. 616-617;
interview with Hartington, ii. 621-624;
with Granville and Hartington, ii. 624-625;
audience of the Queen, ii. 626-628;
construction of cabinet, ii. 628-630;
personnel of cabinet, ii. 653-654; iii. 2-3;
anonymous article in Fortnightly Review, ii. 345 note;
parliamentary difficulties, iii. 5-6;
budget, iii. 7;
illness, iii. 8;
cruise in Grantully Castle, iii. 8;
Berlin treaty obligations, iii. 8-10;
Bradlaugh question, iii. 11 et seq.;
question of Frere's recall, iii. 22-24.
1831.
Colley's correspondence, iii. 34;
Boer overtures, iii. 35;
Majuba, iii. 37-38;
letters to the Queen, iii. 40;
parliamentary attack, iii. 41-42;
Transvaal commission, iii. 44;
Coercion bill, iii. 49-50;
obstruction, iii. 52-53;
Irish Land bill, iii. 53-57;
letter to Granville on home rule, iii. 57;
visit to Leed's, iii. 59-61;
agrees to imprisonment of Parnell, iii. 61;
address to common council, iii. 61;
Egyptian question, iii. 74 et seq.
1882.
Egyptian question, iii. 78 et seq.;
letter to Forster, on Irish local government, iii. 58;
communications from Parnell, iii. 64;
letter to Forster on his resignation, iii. 66;
to the Queen on Irish situation, iii. 66;
Phœnix Park murders, iii. 67-69;
public position, iii. 89-90;
political jubilee, iii. 91;
appoints Benson to see of Canterbury, iii. 95-97;
reconstruction of cabinet, iii. 99-101;
letters to Bright on Egyptian policy, iii. 84, 85;
vexed with Bismarck, iii. 121.
1883.
Stay at Cannes, iii. 102-104;
interview with Clémenceau, iii. 123;
renewed offer of a peerage, iii. 104;
at Paris, iii. 105;
at Sandringham, iii. 105;
objects to sending troops to Suakin, iii. 149;
speech on Affirmation bill, i. 139; iii. 14, 18-20, 107, 312;
letter to Bright on 'Irish rebels' speech, iii. 111;
cruise to Denmark, iii. 115-117;
speech at Kirkwall, iii. 117-118, 354 note;
Congo debate, iii. 110.
1884.
Agrees to send Gordon to evacuate Soudan, iii. 149, 151 and note2;
advises disavowing him after his abandonment of instructions, iii. 156;
opposes appointment of Zobeir, iii. 158;
advises his appointment, iii. 159;
illness, iii. 159 and note, 160, 162;
views on relief expedition for Gordon, iii. 162;
Franchise bill, iii. 125-126, 140;
speech on House of Lords, iii. 128;
memorandum on case between Lords and Commons, iii. 129;
efforts at arrangement, iii. 131-133;
re-introduction of Franchise bill, iii. 136;
conferences with Salisbury and Northcote, iii. 137-139;
cabinet divisions, iii. 175;
speech at Edinburgh on Transvaal, iii. 40 note2.
1885.
On Chamberlain's social programme, iii. 174;
Acton's letter on retirement, iii. 172;
learns death of Gordon, iii. 166, 172;
letter in reply to the Queen's telegram, iii. 167;
memorandum on military position in the Soudan, iii. 178-179, 555-559;
on Russian action in Afghanistan, iii. 178;
[603]three cabinets on Soudan, iii. 179-180;
speech on war-supply for Afghanistan, iii. 184;
cabinet difficulties, iii. 185-186;
budget, iii. 187, 200;
cabinet disagreements on Ireland, iii. 190-195;
letter to the Queen on Irish policy, iii. 192;
intimation regarding Crimes Act, iii. 188;
letter to Hartington on cabinet crisis, iii. 196;
ministerial crisis, iii. 203-208;
audience of the Queen, iii. 205;
offer of an earldom, iii. 209-210;
defeated on budget, iii. 200;
suddenness of defeat, iii. 202;
resigns, iii. 200;
letters to the Queen, iii. 199, 203;
letters on advance in Irish situation, iii. 215-216;
throat troubles, iii. 216;
cruise in the Sunbeam, iii. 217-218;
election address, iii. 220;
conversation with Chamberlain, iii. 224-226;
consideration of Home Rule question, iii. 234-241;
letter to the Queen on Crimes Act discussions, iii. 199;
work on books—miscellaneous reading—reply to Réville, iii. 247;
Midlothian speeches, iii. 247-248;
election, iii. 248;
considerations of Irish situation, iii. 256-259, 261-264, 266, 268-276;
tenders support to Lord Salisbury, iii. 258-260, 284;
unauthorised publication of home rule scheme, iii. 264 and note, 265;
party urgency for action, iii. 267;
renewal of intercourse with Manning, iii. 281;
birthday, iii. 281.
1886.
Political rumours, iii. 279;
begins the session, iii. 281;
comments on Hartington's communication, iii. 282;
attitude towards home rule, iii. 283;
debate on the address, iii. 284-288;
supports Collings' amendment, iii. 288;
accepts the Queen's commission, iii. 290;
to Osborne, iii. 290;
formation of government, iii. 291 and note, 296 and note2;
preparation of bills, iii. 298;
difficulties in cabinet, iii. 302-304, 306;
interview with Parnell, iii. 305-306;
introduction of Home Rule bill, iii. 310-312;
violent hostility of opponents, iii. 321-322;
conversation with Bright, iii. 326;
strenuous efforts for the bill, iii. 331;
letter from Bright, iii. 327;
Parnell's letter, iii. 333-334;
party meeting at foreign office, iii. 332-333;
second meeting with Parnell, iii. 334;
replies to Hicks Beach, iii. 334-335;
speech on night of the division, iii. 338-340;
decides for dissolution, iii. 341;
electioneering, iii. 342-345;
elected for Midlothian and for Leith, iii. 344;
letter to the Queen, iii. 344;
decides for resignation, iii. 346-347;
final audience of the Queen, iii. 347-348;
views on Chamberlain's Baptist article, iii. 368;
at Tegernsee, iii. 351-352;
speaks on Tenants Relief bill, iii. 353;
at Hawarden, iii. 353;
article on Locksley Hall, iii. 353-354;
attitude towards plan of campaign, iii. 370-372;
birthday, iii. 354-355.
1887.
Letters to Acton, iii. 355-359;
at Sandringham, Cambridge, Hawarden, Dollis Hill, Windsor, iii. 385;
speech on Criminal Law Amendment (Ireland) bill, iii. 375 and note;
on introduction of closure, iii. 377;
on Mitchelstown, iii. 380;
Robert Elsmere article, iii. 356-360;
tour in South Wales, iii. 386-387;
visit to Florence, iii. 387.
1888.
Attitude towards Parnell commission, iii. 398-399;
sympathy with Parnell, iii. 408;
speech on report of the commission, iii. 408-411;
speech at Birmingham, iii. 387-389;
speech on Ireland, iii. 389;
visit to Naples, iii. 413.
1889.
Reasons for not visiting Rome, iii. 413-415;
Old Testament studies, iii. 415-416;
golden wedding anniversary, iii. 417;
Parnell's visit to Hawarden, iii. 420, 445-446.
1890.
Letter on General Gordon, iii. 169;
visit to Oxford, iii. 420-421;
death of Newman and Döllinger, iii. 421;
views on Parnell's position, iii. 429-433, 435-437, 440, 443-444;
Parnell leadership question, iii. 450, 452-453, 455-458;
memoranda on Parnell leadership question, iii. 443-445;
meeting at Lord Rendel's, iii. 434;
letter to Morley on Parnell leadership, iii. 436;
urges publication of letter, iii. 440-441;
[604]speaks at Bassetlaw, iii. 452;
Morley's visit to Hawarden, iii. 452-454;
communications with Irish party towards an understanding, iii. 455-456;
speech of condolence with the Speaker, iii. 456.
1891.
Death of Granville, iii. 462;
death of his eldest son, iii. 460;
Fasque— Glenalmond—Newcastle programme, iii. 462;
Biarritz, iii. 463 et seq.;
birthday, iii. 477.
1892.
Biarritz, iii. 480 et seq.;
to the Riviera, iii. 489;
re-elected for Midlothian, iii. 492;
formation of cabinet, iii. 494-495 note;
Home Rule bill, iii. 496.
1893.
Home Rule bill, iii. 500 et seq.;
reply to Chamberlain, iii. 499-500;
at Biarritz, iii. 504,508.
1894.
Advocates dissolution on Lords question, iii. 505;
naval estimates, iii. 506-508;
return to England, iii. 509;
last cabinet, iii. 510-511;
last speech in parliament, iii. 511-512;
at Windsor, iii. 512-514;
letter of resignation, iii. 514;
the Queen's reply, iii. 515;
letter to Sir H. Ponsonby, iii. 516.
1895-1898.
Literary work, iii. 520-521;
speeches at Chester and Liverpool, iii. 521-522;
last diary entry, iii. 523;
visit to Cannes, iii. 523;
last meeting with the Queen, iii. 524;
visit to Butterstone, iii. 525;
illness, iii. 525-528;
visit to Cannes, iii. 526;
to Bournemouth, iii. 526;
at Hawarden, iii. 526-528;
death, iii. 528;
parliamentary tributes, iii. 528-531;
foreign tributes, iii. 531-533;
funeral, iii. 533.
Characteristics:—
Ambition for noble ends, i. 218.
Caution—suspense of judgment, i. 309, 376, 418, 547; iii. 343.
Concentration, i. 186, 190, 255; iii. 88.
Considerateness, i. 195, 339, 364; iii. 456.
Continuity, i. 190.
Conversational charm, ii. 180, 561; iii. 482.
Co-operation, aptitude for, i. 189-190.
Copiousness, ii. 427; iii. 502.
Courage, i. 188, 218; ii. 246; iii. 44.
Courtesy, i. 213; ii. 416, 532, 562.
Deference to colleagues, ii. 415-416, 420, 492; iii. 4, 5, 497, 530.
Detachment—alacrity of mind—freedom of judgment, ii. 168, 562.
Disregard of appearances—regard for things rather than persons, i. 357; ii. 365; iii. 536-537, 540.
Duality of disposition, i. 2, 18, 189, 264.
Eloquence—
oratorical power, i. 191-195, 261, 410; ii. 41, 54-55, 123, 439, 566;
absence of bitterness, i. 503;
battle-cry element, ii. 592;
dramatic force, ii. 589, 594; iii. 500;
lofty tone, i. 5, 14; iii. 312;
persuasiveness, i. 440;
physical resources, ii. 380, 593; iii. 60, 91, 338, 500.
Essentials, grasp of, iii. 54, 331, 371.
Excitability of temperament—nervous sensibility, i. 83, 103, 434; ii. 40, 111, 119, 140, 381, 493, 565, 576, 631; iii. 18, 101-102, 170, 290.
Family feeling, i. 95-96, 339.
Gaiety of mind, i. 188.
Gravity of temperament, i. 212.
Growth, mental, continuance of, i. 207-208.
Humanity, ii. 555, 561, 595, 596.
Hurry, i. 186-187, 380.
Idealism, i. 197-198, 255.
Imagination, moral and political, i. 189, 255; ii. 56, 554; iii. 244, 540.
Impulsiveness, ii. 148, 203.
Industry, i. 186, 192, 197; ii. 261, 421; iii. 88, 298, 496;
in public duties, i. 101-102; ii. 418, 422; iii. 7-8, 110, 353, 496.
Intellectual curiosity, limits of, i. 202, 209.
Intensity, ii. 563.
Irritability, ii. 228.
Lancashire temperament, i. 192; ii. 41, 60.
Liberty, instinct for, see Liberty.
Loyalty to colleagues, ii. 599-601, 603, 619; iii. 110, 510.
Magnanimity, ii. 48.
Missionary temper, i. 231.
Modesty, ii. 561.
Musical ability, i. 98.
Nature, delight in, ii. 280; iii. 478, 479.
[605]Opportuneness, sense of, i. 190; ii. 240-241; iii. 258, 276, 509, 539.
Optimism—confidence, i. 218, 312, 364, 611, 630; ii. 265; iii. 354.
Orderliness, i. 206; iii. 88.
Over-refining—subtlety—'sophistry,' i. 165, 210-212, 354, 359, 453, 516; ii. 54, 396, 590; ii. 185.
Patience, iii. 185, 298, 456, 497.
Patriotism, i. 617.
Practical aptitude, i. 67, 195, 206; ii. 547, 553; iii. 88.
Personal questions, dislike of, ii. 462; iii. 455, 456.
Quietude, desire for, i. 187.
Religious temper, i. 2-4, 31, 56-57, 84, 200-201, 204;
fixity of dogmatic views, i. 153, 207;
religious growth, 160-162;
leanings towards clerical calling, i. 323-324, 382, 383, 635-641.
Reserve, i. 196-197, 376.
Resignation, i. 215-217.
Scrupulosity, i. 261.
Self-control, i. 189, 196; iii. 195, 298.
Self-distrust, i. 190-191.
Simplicity—trustfulness, i. 194, 197, 204; ii. 570; iii. 540.
Sincerity—integrity, i. 193, 194, 261, 410, 440; ii. 531, 554; iii. 482, 540.
Slowness of mental development, i. 14, 198, 529;
of judgment, i. 453.
Tact, iii. 100.
Tenacity of purpose, i. 315; ii. 38, 42, 59, 138, 207, 211, 404, 415, 569; iii. 29, 186, 209, 331.
Tolerance, i. 316-317; ii. 416, 432, 517, 535; iii. 12-13, 18.
Tradition, reverence for, i. 201-202, 209.
Unity of purpose, i. 200.
Versatility, i. 184; ii. 168; iii. 455, 467.
Vital energy, i. 185; iii. 60, 498.
Vivacity, ii. 593.
Walking, fondness for, i. 116.
Will-power, i. 185, 189, 470.
Eyesight, difficulties with, i. 111, 138, 140, 142, 143, 173, 185, 230;
cataract, iii. 492, 506, 515, 517-519.
Family and genealogy of, i. 7-9 and note, 16 and note2, 17 notes.
Horoscope of, i. 197.
Letters of, characteristics of, i. 6; ii. 180.
Residences of, i. 232-233 note; ii. 523 note.
Verses by; i. 38, 63 note, 118.

Gladstone, Mrs. W. E. (wife), on Gladstone's duality, i. 189;
ancestry of, i. 223;
to possess Hawarden Castle for life, i. 344;
at Oxford (1848), i. 377;
at Hagley, i. 572;
foreign travel prescribed for, i. 596;
Wood's conversations with, i. 623, 624;
at Newcastle (1862), ii. 78;
intimacy of, with Duchess of Sutherland, ii. 183;
medical skill of, ii. 190;
appears to rioters, ii. 211;
accompanies Gladstone to Midlothian, ii. 587;
to Cannes (1882), iii. 102;
has news of Cavendish murder, iii. 67;
visit to Biarritz, iii. 463;
on necessity for her husband's hearing both sides, iii. 479;
eightieth birthday, i. 486;
Rosbery's tribute to, iii. 531;
death of, iii. 533;
W. E. Gladstone's letters to, i. 187, 215, 233, 272-275, 276, 285, 335-336, 339-340, 355, 383-384, 436-439, 445, 480 note, 481 and note, 519, 570-573, 575; ii. 21, 138-141, 143, 152, 154, 378-379, 500, 503, 522, 523; iii. 115, 186, 352, 420.

—— W. H. (son), birth of, i. 227;
letters to, on Hawarden estate, i. 340-343, 344-349;
parliamentary career of, i. 346, 348;
Gladstone unwilling to bequeath a title to, i. 384;
speech at his father's Lancashire candidature, ii. 147;
Gladstone's letter to, on ecclesiastical affairs, ii. 159;
letter on dissolution (1874), ii. 487;
Worcestershire candidature of (1880), ii. 614;
return to Hawarden after election, ii. 617;
death of, iii. 460;
otherwise mentioned, ii. 98, 139, 410, 603, 604, 617.

Glanville, cited, i. 209 and note1.

Glasgow, Gladstone's inaugural address at (1879), ii. 590-591;
public meetings, i. 591-592; iii. 562.

Gleanings, preparation of, ii. 581;
later series of, iii. 521.

Gledstanes, family of, i. 8-9 and note, 16 and note2.

Glenalmond, i. 230-231; iii. 462.

Glenelg, Lord, i. 144, 362.

Glynne, Lady, i. 274, 341.

—— Catherine (see also Gladstone, Mrs. W. E.), Gladstone's engagement to, i. 222.

Glynne, Henry, i. 342-344.

—— Sir Stephen, Gladstone's travels with, i. 173;
candidature of, in Flintshire, i. 239;
[606]financial affairs of, i. 337 et seq.;
repulsed at election (1857), i. 565;
munificence of, ii. 195;
death of, ii. 500;
otherwise mentioned, i. 223; ii. 274, 279, 373 note1, 385, 410, 418, 421, 446, 476.

Goderich, Lord, i. 75, 431, 543.

Goethe, i. 159, 202; ii. 467, 534.

Gordon, Colonel, i. 228.

—— Arthur, see Stanmore.

—— General, advises evacuation of Soudan, iii. 147-148, 153-154;
suggested for the work, iii. 149;
previous career of, iii. 149 note3;
agrees to policy of evacuation, iii. 150, 153-155;
characteristics of, iii. 151;
popular feeling for, iii. 152, 156;
changes his plans, iii. 152;
appointed temporarily governor-general of Soudan, iii. 152;
instructions of, iii. 153, 154, 554;
views of, on the situation, iii. 153, 155;
request regarding Zobeir, iii. 155-160;
shows Khedive's secret firman, iii. 160-162 and note1;
reports himself safe, iii. 162;
relief expeditions to, contemplated, iii. 162-164;
Nile expedition to, despatched, iii. 165;
death of, iii. 166;
Gladstone's estimate of, iii. 169;
Gladstone's views of appointment of, iii. 177, 196.

Gorham case, i. 316, 378-381, 632.

Görres, Dr., i. 319-320 and note1.

Gortchakoff, ii. 15, 343, 350, 353 note, 354, 355.

Goschen, G. J., included in Russell cabinet (1865), ii. 156 and note1;
on Irish Church bill, ii. 274;
bill of, for throwing open all lay degrees, ii. 313;
on civil service reform, ii. 315;
president of poor law board (1868), ii. 644;
Local Bating bill of, ii. 377, 388;
first lord of admiralty (1871), ii. 615;
considered for exchequer (1873), ii. 463;
opposition support of, i. 472-473;
opposes reduction of estimates (1874), ii. 483-484;
at Constantinople, iii. 9-10;
on Soudan question, iii. 175, 176;
votes with conservatives on Collings' amendment, iii. 288;
against home rule, iii. 291 note, 294;
defeated in Edinburgh, iii. 343;
chancellor of exchequer (1886), iii. 364;
compared with Hartington, iii. 366;
urged by Hartington to join the government, iii. 367;
budget (1887), iii. 385;
otherwise mentioned, ii. 498, 503, 504, 563, 625, 644-645; iii. 220, 268.

Goulburn, Henry, appointed chancellor of exchequer, i. 240;
attitude of, towards repeal, i. 283;
towards Lord Derby, i. 419;
otherwise mentioned, i. 271, 420, 472.

Government Annuities bill, ii. 52-53, 125.

—— powers, i. 304.

Gower, F. Leveson, ii. 459 note.

—— Lord Ronald, ii. 183.

Grafton, Duke of, ii. 467.

Graham, General, iii. 176.

—— Sir James:—
Chronology—Reform advocated by, i. 143;
corn laws defended by, i. 114, 249;
resigns on Irish church question, i. 154;
estimate of Peel, i. 248, 263;
attitude towards protection, i. 253, 352;
bill on Irish colleges, ii. 434;
supports Peel on repeal, i. 283;
views on Peel's eulogium of Cobden, i. 295, 296;
on Peel's changes of policy, i. 296;
on Disraeli's agricultural distress motion, i. 354-356;
Don Pacifico debate, i. 368;
papal aggression question, i. 407;
Russell's proposal to include, i. 416;
decides for Russell rather than Derby, i. 418-421 and note, 423, 424;
views on Gladstone's attitude to Disraeli, i. 432;
Russell's attitude towards, i. 444;
refuses chancellorship of exchequer, i. 447-448;
on Gladstone's representation of Oxford, i. 453;
on Gladstone's budget, i. 465, 466;
misgivings of, i. 466, 467;
on Napoleon III., i. 485;
on Peelites' position regarding Palmerston, i. 534;
opposes Roebuck's proposal, i. 538;
resigns, i. 539;
reason for resigning, i. 542;
efforts for peace, i. 546;
Gladstone's relations with, i. 551, 559;
position of, contrasted with Gladstone's, i. 555;
discourages Gladstone's communicating with Derby, i. 552, 556;
views of, on reconstructed government, i. 561;
on Divorce bill, i. 571;
uneasiness regarding Gladstone, i. 581;
on party relationships, i. 584 and note;
Disraeli's attitude towards, i. 584, 587;
inclines to Gladstone's joining Derby, i. 586, 590, 591;
in sympathy with Palmerston's government, i. 628;
on Russell's despatch regarding Italy, ii. 16;
death of, ii. 87-88.

[607]Debating, method of, i. 195.
Estimate of, i. 407-408.
Gladstone's estimate of, i. 248, 250; iii. 525;
his estimate of Gladstone, i. 186; ii. 170;
Gladstone contrasted with, i. 407;
otherwise mentioned, i. 126, 177, 238,  248, 258, 273, 275, 293, 405 note, 418, 420, 445, 446, 449, 482, 490, 492, 511, 526, 535, 536, 560, 566, 576, 593, 595-596, 613; ii. 30, 37, 194, 302.

Gramont, Duc de, ii. 325-328, 330, 334, 336, 337.

Grant, General, ii. 406.

—— G., Gladstone's godfather, i. 7.

Granville, Lord:—
Chronology—On cession of Canada, i. 402 note;
on Gladstone's budget, i. 466;
on Peelites' refusal to join Palmerston, i. 535;
tries to form a government, i. 625;
French treaty, ii. 22;
Paper Duties bill, ii. 33, 37;
letter to Gladstone on his leadership, ii. 172;
against vote of confidence after Reform defeat, ii. 207;
on Gladstone's Chapter of Autobiography, ii. 249-250;
colonial secretary (1868), ii. 644;
Irish Church bill, ii. 261-262, 269-271, 274-279, 645;
foreign secretary (1870), ii. 324, 644;
efforts to avert Franco-Prussian war, ii. 325-330, 335;
deprecates Gladstone's absence, ii. 422;
Gladstone's daily conferences with, ii. 338;
on annexation of Alsace and Lorraine, ii. 348;
on Black Sea provisions of Treaty of Paris, ii. 349-351, 355;
on Collier appointment, ii. 383;
on Alabama case, ii. 403, 410, 411;
opposes honours for Mill, ii. 430;
consultations with, on ministerial crisis, ii. 446-447, 452;
at Hawarden (1873), ii. 474;
advocates resignation before assembling, ii. 492;
on question of leadership, ii. 504;
on Italian view of Vatican Decrees pamphlet, ii. 520;
reports Disraeli's proposed resignation, ii. 550;
on Bulgarian question, ii. 550, 552, 556, 564;
views on the party vote, ii. 568;
succession of, to power, foretold by Gladstone, ii. 582;
approves Gladstone's Midlothian candidature, ii. 584, 585;
views on leadership, ii. 601-602 and note, 620-621, 624;
omission of, by the Queen, disapproved by Gladstone, ii. 622;
foreign secretary (1880), ii. 625, 626, 653;
Smyrna demonstration affair, iii. 9;
Egyptian question (1881-82), iii. 74, 76-80, 87;
letter to Gladstone on renewed offer of peerage, iii. 104;
conferences on Franchise bill, iii. 137, 138;
correspondence, etc., on evacuation of Soudan, iii. 147,149 and note2, 152 and note, 157 note2, 159, 160 note, 162, 164;
agrees to send Gordon to Soudan, iii. 150;
at his send-off, iii. 150 note;
Gladstone's conversations with, on Ireland (May '85), iii. 191-192;
favours plan of central board for Ireland, iii. 194;
on Gladstone's refusal of an earldom, iii. 210;
correspondence with, on relations to liberal party, iii. 232-238;
at Hawarden and Chatsworth, iii. 261;
Gladstone's consultations with, iii. 261, 263, 268;
view of Irish situation, iii. 288;
Gladstone's memorandum, iii. 270-272;
declines requesting Gladstone to convene late cabinet, iii. 269;
colonial secretary, iii. 297 note;
declares for home rule, iii. 291 and note, 294;
prefers home rule to Chamberlain's Irish scheme, iii. 291;
Gladstone consults with, on birthday dinner, iii. 322;
golden wedding presentation to Mr. and Mrs. Gladstone, iii. 418;
meeting at Lord Rendel's on Parnell affair, iii. 434 note;
death of, iii. 462.
Brevity of letters of, ii. 526.
Gladstone's appreciation of, ii. 414;
loyalty to, ii. 599-601, 603, 619;
his estimate of Gladstone, ii. 415;
Gladstone's letters to, ii. 288, 289, 292, 300, 375, 381, 479, 503, 555, 556, 563, 587; iii. 57, 83, 93, 101, 103-105, 113, 131, 171, 174, 175, 210, 216, 236, 261, 268-270, 282, 413.
Temporising tendency of, ii. 602.
Otherwise mentioned, i. 415, 458, 492, 493, 495 note1, 624, 635-636, 648; ii. 39, 106, 120, 189, 233, 240, 244, 283, 297, 410, 417, 459, 462, 473, 477, 484, 485, 493, 502, 519, 557, 616-617, 644; iii. 5, 102, 112, 186, 414.

Grattan, Henry, ii. 589; iii. 313-314, 339.

Gray, Sir John, ii. 292.

Greece:—
Berlin treaty's provisions regarding, iii. 8, 10.
[608]Don Pacifico case, i. 368-371, and note, 372, 374.
Ionian Islands desirous of union with, i. 599, 602-605, 614;
ceded to, i. 620.
Gladstone's budget (1860) popular in, ii. 29;
Gladstone's political jubilee commemorated by, iii. 91;
tribute at his death, iii. 532.
Salisbury policy regarding, iii. 525.
Thessaly and Epirus desired for, by Palmerston and Russell, ii. 576.

Greeks, position of, in relation to Turkey, i. 477.

Green, J. H., i. 455.

—— J. R., ii. 561.

Greenwich:—
Dockyard suppressed, ii. 374.
Gladstone's election for (1868), ii. 251 and note1;
speech at, ii. 371;
dispute as to vacating seat by becoming chancellor of exchequer (1873), ii. 465-472;
manifesto to (1874), ii. 487-489;
election for, ii. 490;
election address, ii. 490 and note;
refusal to stand for (1879), ii. 584.

Greenwood, J., ii. 618 note.

Greg, W. R., i. 46.

Gregory VII., Pope, ii. 516.

—— XVI., Pope, iii. 62.

Grenville, Lord, i. 104, 223 and note1, 293, 445.

—— Thomas, i. 223 note1.

—— George, i. 223 and note1.

Greswell, Richard, i. 330, 409.

Greville, A., ii. 463 note.

—— C., i. 121 note; 243, 470; ii. 29; iii. 419.

Grévy, M., iii. 105.

Grey, General, Gladstone's letter to, on foreign policy, ii. 316;
Gladstone's appreciation of, iii. 516.
Otherwise mentioned, ii. 99, 103, 252, 267; iii. 473.

—— Lord, dissolution by (1831), i. 69;
resignation of (1832), ii. 653;
government of, broken up (1834), i. 113, 154;
attitude of, towards Lord J. Russell, i. 297;
refuses office (1845), i. 367; ii. 244;
Althorp and Russell opposed to, i. 430;
Taylor's estimate of, iii. 488;
otherwise mentioned, i. 75, 77, 104, 222, 241, 418, 543; ii. 238, 436, 619; iii. 223, 289 note, 535.

—— Lord de, see Ripon.

—— Sir George, defends slave apprenticeship law, i. 146;
home secretary (1855), 540 note;
leadership of Commons by, desired by Gladstone, ii. 152-153, 199;
estimate of Gladstone, ii. 174;
declines to join Gladstone's cabinet (1868), ii. 253;
on Irish Land bill (1870), ii. 295;
otherwise mentioned, i. 190, 297, 361 note3, 576; ii. 33, 100, 104, 105, 401, 435, 635-636.

Grillion's dining club, i. 227-228, 239.

Grosvenor, Lady, iii. 523.

—— Lord, ii. 195, 201-202, 205.

—— Lord R., iii. 269, 270.

Grote, George, i. 200; ii. 366, 370, 430.

—— Mrs., cited, iii. 4.

Guizot, F.-P.-G., on state of Italy, i. 398;
Aberdeen's letter to, i. 449;
estimate of Cavour, ii. 6-7;
letters from, ii. 533, 538;
sends Gladstone his Peel, ii. 538;
otherwise mentioned, i. 163, 229, 371; ii. 100, 102, 220, 240.

Gurdon, Mr., ii. 468.

Gurney, Samuel, i. 461.

Gurwood, Colonel, i. 228.


Haddo, i. 137, 594.

Halifax, Viscount (Charles Wood), on Gladstone's budget (1853), i. 465, 466, 468;
budgets of, criticised by Gladstone, i. 470;
first lord of admiralty, i. 540 note;
objects to French treaty project, ii. 21;
on Paper Duties bill, ii. 31, 33, 37;
estimate of financial statements of, ii. 55;
created viscount (1866), ii. 222 note;
views on condition of liberal party (1867), ii. 228;
on Gladstone's position in the House, ii. 229;
declines Irish vice-royalty, ii. 253;
on Irish Church bill, ii. 278;
Alabama case, ii. 401, 411;
appreciation of Gladstone, ii. 414;
Lord privy seal (1870), ii. 644;
on defections of liberal party, ii. 436;
on the Greenwich seat question, ii. 471;
on election of 1874, ii. 494;
otherwise mentioned, i. 222, 297, 420 and note1, 458, 491, 492, 521, 623, 624, 648; ii. 363, 504, 635-636.

Hall, Jane, i. 16.

—— Newman, ii. 134.

Hallam, Arthur, Gladstone's friendship with, i. 39-42, 66-67;
In Memoriam stanzas descriptive of, i. 39 note;
estimate of Gladstone, i. 95;
death of, i. 108;
Gladstone's mourning for, i. 108-109, 112;
otherwise mentioned, i. 34, 37, 54.

—— Henry, i. 112, 137, 220, 230, 329; iii. 476.

—— Henry (junr.), i. 229-230.

Hamilton, 10th Duke of, i. 102.

[609]Hamilton, 11th Duke of, ii. 193; iii. 485.

—— E. W., ii. 493; iii. 112, 306;
Gladstone's letter to, iii. 210.

—— Lord George, ii. 264.

—— Walter, Bishop of Salisbury, Gladstone's friendship with, i. 54, 161;
Gladstone's letter to, on Essays and Reviews judgment, ii. 164;
Gladstone's letter to, on state-aided education, ii. 299;
otherwise mentioned, i. 78, 111, 235.

—— Sir William, i. 51.

Hammond, E., ii. 324, 411.

Hampden, Dr., Oxford estimate of (1829), i. 57;
Gladstone examined by, in science, i. 78;
attack on (1836), i. 161, 167, 316;
Gladstone's early views regarding, i. 161, 167;
Gladstone's letter to, i. 168;
made a bishop, i. 377.

—— Lord (H. B. W. Brand), advice of, on Reform bill, ii. 202, 207;
Gladstone's consultations with, ii. 210, 211;
Gladstone's letter to, from Rome, ii. 217, 222;
from Paris, ii. 221;
dinner to, ii. 234-235;
defines situation on Educational bill (1870), ii. 304;
on Collier appointment, ii. 385;
on session of 1872, ii. 390;
on Irish university debate, ii. 445;
on Disraeli's tactics, ii. 456;
Gladstone's letter to, on the Greenwich seat question, ii. 467;
reply regarding writ, ii. 470;
forecast of general election (1880), ii. 605;
on parliament of 1880, iii. 2;
the Bradlaugh question, iii. 12-13, 16-17;
action of, against obstruction, iii. 52-53;
views on obstruction, iii. 57;
on Bright's 'Irish rebels' speech, iii. 112;
letter from, iii. 457.

—— John, i. 413-414.

Hanbury, R. W., iii. 426 and note1.

Handley, W. F., i. 92-93.

Harcourt, L. V., i. 72.

—— Sir William, on Foreign Enlistment Act, ii. 399 note;
solicitor-general, ii. 463 note, 470;
on the Greenwich seat question, i. 470;
home secretary, ii. 653;
speech on Khartoum vote of censure, iii. 176;
Gladstone's consultation with, iii. 288;
declares for home rule, iii. 291 note;
round table conference convened by, iii. 364, 366-368 and note;
chancellor of exchequer (1886), iii. 296, 297 note;
party loyalty of, iii. 296, 364;
meeting at Lord Rendel's on Parnell affair, iii. 434 note;
chancellor of exchequer (1892), iii. 495 note;
at last cabinet council, iii. 511;
tribute to Gladstone, iii. 530;
otherwise mentioned, ii. 602; iii. 67, 105, 106, 219, 268, 270, 273, 387, 429, 432, 433, 441.

Hardinge, Lord, i. 122, 351, note1, 420, 432, 549, 641.

Hardwicke, 4th Earl of, i. 561.

—— 1st Earl of (1753), i. 567.

Hardy, Gathorne, opposes Gladstone at Oxford, ii. 144-145 and note, 149;
on Irish Church bill, ii. 264;
Bentinck's appeal to, ii. 444.

Harrison, B., i. 59 note, 78, 111.

—— F., ii. 524.

—— Archdeacon, ii. 422.

Harrowby, Lord, i. 75, 132; ii. 268, 501.

Hartington, Lord, moves vote of censure on Derby government, i. 625 and note;
postmaster-general (1868), ii. 644;
Irish secretary (1870), ii. 644;
ballot bill of, ii. 368;
suggested as leader, ii. 498;
accepts leadership (1874), ii. 506;
Gladstone's loyalty to, ii. 599-600, 603, 619;
views on leadership, ii. 602 and note, 620-624;
audience at Windsor and interview with Gladstone, ii. 621-624;
suggested for India office, ii. 625, 627;
Indian secretary (1880), ii. 654;
war secretary (1882), ii. 654; iii. 150;
compared with Palmerston, iii. 3;
on local option motion, iii. 6;
on evacuation of Candahar, iii. 10;
opposes annexation of Transvaal, iii. 27, 28;
on withdrawal from Egypt (1882), iii. 120;
negotiations with conservative leaders on Franchise bill, iii. 133-134, 136, 138;
against franchise extension in Ireland, iii. 141;
agrees to send Gordon to Soudan, iii. 150;
views on relief of garrisons, iii. 156;
defence of government, iii. 163 and note1;
readiness to send troops, iii. 164;
Queen's telegram to, iii. 167;
at Holker, iii. 166, 171;
on avoidance of liberal rupture, iii. 171;
defends the government against vote of censure, iii. 176;
opposes plan of central board for Ireland, iii. 194;
Gladstone's letter to, on cabinet crisis (May '85), iii. 196;
presides at banquet to Lord Spencer, iii. 214;
views on conservative repudiation of Spencer's policy, iii. 215;
friction with Parnell, iii. 220, 241;
friction, with Chamberlain, iii. 226, 288;
[610]opposes home rule, iii. 233, 267, 273, 291;
Gladstone's letters to, on Irish policy, iii. 240, 262, 273;
reproaches Chamberlain for indiscretion at the elections, iii. 251;
attends banquet at Belfast, iii. 252;
Granville's visit to, iii. 261;
letters to Gladstone and to his chairman on Irish situation, iii. 266;
letter to the Times, iii. 269, 270, 273;
Parnell's attitude towards, iii. 275;
announces possibility of counter-declaration, iii. 282;
votes with conservatives on Collings' amendment, iii. 288;
declines to join Gladstone's cabinet, iii. 292;
explanatory letter, iii. 293;
Eighty club speech, iii. 293 note;
speech on second reading of Home Rule bill, iii. 301 note1, 313;
at Opera House meeting, iii. 324;
decides to vote against second reading, iii. 329;
declines Salisbury's offer to head government, iii. 364;
Gladstone's comments on position of, iii. 365-366;
declines to join round table conference, iii. 366;
urges Gladstone to denounce plan of campaign, iii. 371;
otherwise mentioned, iii. 447, 503, 504, 552, 564, 568, 616-617, 622, 644; iii. 99, 166, 219, 259, 322, 363, 388, 430.

Harvey, Rev. W. W., ii. 386-387.

—— i. 112 and note, 113.

Hastings, Warren, iii. 469.

Hatchard, J., i. 74.

Hatherley, Lord (W. Page Wood), ii. 383-385, 414, 644, 645.

Hawarden:—
Board school question at, ii. 646.
Cattle plague at, ii. 195.
Gladstone's first visit to (1836), i. 134;
his marriage at, i. 223.
Oak Farm embarrassments of, i. 338 et seq., 356;
Gladstone's public finances influenced by, i. 474.
St. Deiniol's library, iii. 420, 521.
Tourist pilgrimages to, ii. 569.
Transference of, to W. H. Gladstone, i. 344.

Hawkins, Edward (provost of Oriel), i. 379, 627 and note1; iii. 124.

Hawtrey, E. C., i. 30, 31, 229.

Hayter, Sir W. G., i. 440, 539 note; ii. 29.

Hayward, A., ii. 382.

Healy, T., iii. 447, 451.

Heathcote, Sir William, Derby's intermediary, i. 551;
Walpole's advances to, i. 683;
Gladstone's letters to, i. 627, 630;
letter to Gladstone on taxation, ii. 632;
election of (1865), ii. 145 note;
secedes from Derby government (1867), ii. 224.

Helena, Princess, ii. 98, 103.

Hellenic Factor in the Eastern Problem, The, ii. 558.

Helmholtz, ii. 536.

Henley, J. W., i. 417; ii. 31, 295.

Henry VIII., King, iii. 466.

Herbert, J. R., ii. 476.

—— George, Gladstone's estimate of, ii. 617.

—— Sidney, maiden speech of, i. 112;
appointed secretary at board of control, i. 121 note;
on Peel's eulogium of Cobden, i. 293;
Russell's proposal to, i. 350;
Peel's forecast regarding, i. 374;
Gorham case, i. 381;
attitude of, towards first Derby administration, i. 419;
against Villiers' amendment, i. 433, 435 and note;
on Gladstone's budget, i. 466, 467;
favours dissolution, i. 467;
invited by Derby to join government, i. 525;
refuses, i. 526;
inclines to join Palmerston, i. 532;
wavers, i. 534; declines, i. 535;
agrees to join, i. 536;
resigns, i. 539;
opposes joining peace party, i. 546;
Gladstone's friendship with, i. 551, 559, 565-566, 577;
discourages Gladstone's communicating with Derby, i. 552, 556;
Derby's attitude towards, i. 577;
approves Gladstone's refusal to join Herbert, i. 578;
views of, on the Ionian question, i. 596;
work of, during Crimean war, i. 651-652;
on Paper Duties bill, ii. 33, 37;
on French war rumours, ii. 43;
correspondence with Gladstone on military charges, ii. 44;
illness of, ii. 93;
death of, ii. 88;
otherwise mentioned, i. 55, 79, 351, 355, 405 note, 420, 423, 450, 468, 490, 492, 525, 527, 560, 576, 582-583, 585, 617, 648; ii. 47 note2, 184, 238, 635-636; ii. 194; iii. 485.

Herries, J. C., i. 112, 417.

Herschell, Lord, on the Bradlaugh question, iii. 12;
joins Gladstone's cabinet (1886), iii. 297 note;
at round table conference, iii. 364 note;
in cabinet (1892), iii. 495 note, 497 note1.

Herzegovina:—
Austrian acquisition of, ii. 83, 576.
Revolt in, ii. 548, 567.

Hewley, Lady, case of, i. 321-323.

Heywood, J., i. 498; ii. 147 note.

Hicks, General, iii. 145-146 and note, 161.

[611]Hignett, Mr., i. 345.

Hinds, Bishop, ii. 259.

Hobhouse, Sir John, i. 238, 266, 289, 420 and note1.

Hodgkinson, G., ii. 225 and note, 226.

Holidays, ii. 379, 421-422.

Holker, iii. 166, 171.

Holland:—
Belgium's severance from, ii. 2.
Prussian attitude towards, ii. 320.

Holloway, T., ii. 459.

Holmbury, ii. 459 and note.

Holmes, Colonel, ii. 212 and note2, 213.

Homeric studies, i. 549-550; ii. 423, 476-477, 523, 536; iii. 353, 356, 385, 415, 443-445.

Home rule, see under Ireland.

Honours and appointments, Gladstone's care in selection for, ii. 428; iii. 97.

Hook, Dean, i. 148; ii. 459.

Hooker, R., i. 160-161, 175; iii. 2.

—— Sir Joseph, ii. 536.

Hope, Admiral, ii. 18 note.

—— Beresford, A. J. B., ii. 224.

Hope-Scott, Miss, ii. 474.

—— —— J. R., Gladstone influenced by, i. 162;
interest in Gladstone's book, i. 162, 172-173;
offers services to Gladstone, i. 224;
godfather to Gladstone's eldest son, i. 227;
on Chapters bill, i. 228 and note;
interest in Scotch training college scheme, i. 230-231;
Gladstone's proposal to, of visiting Ireland, i. 281;
on Jerusalem bishopric, i. 308, 309;
Gladstone's close relations with, i. 310;
acquaintance with Dr. Döllinger, i. 318;
Gorham case, i. 379-380 notes;
secession of, to Rome, i. 386-387;
death of, ii. 458;
otherwise mentioned, i. 55, 212, 260, 272, 317, 321, 393, 403; iii. 419, 485.

Horace, iii. 482, 492, 510, 512.

Horsman, E., ii. 444 note, 445.

Houghton, Lord, ii. 212, 369.

House-tax, i. 106, 436-437.

Howick, Lord, i. 102, 105, 222, 262, 420 and note1, 644; iii. 300.

Howley, Archbishop, i. 175; ii. 271; iii. 108.

Howson, Dean, ii. 260.

Hoylake, i. 239.

Hübner, Baron, ii. 532.

Hudson, George, i. 199.

—— Sir James, ii. 5-6.

Hume, Joseph, impugns Gladstone's honesty, i. 301;
views on intolerance of dissenters, i. 414;
otherwise mentioned, i. 101, 106, 251 note2, 362, 371, 423.

Hunter, John, cited, iii. 388.

Huskisson, W., John Gladstone's estimate of, i. 20;
his support of, i. 249;
work of, towards free trade, i. 39, 251, 255;
death of, i. 66, 68, 69;
otherwise mentioned, i. 89, 248, 265, 419.

Hutton, R. H., iii. 349.

Huxley, Gladstone's articles on, iii. 280-281;
Manning's estimate of, ii. 308;
approves Gladstone's attitude towards Vatican decrees, ii. 520;
letters from, ii. 536;
estimate of Gladstone, ii. 562; iii. 536;
otherwise mentioned, ii. 423, 524.


Iddesleigh, Lord (Sir Stafford Northcote):—
Chronology
Works for Gladstone's Oxford candidature, i. 329, 333, 334;
vindicates Gladstone (1847), i. 359 note2;
appointed executor in Gladstone's will, i. 387;
return prepared by, on civil service, i. 510, 512;
Twenty Years of Finance, i. 516;
refuses to serve on Gladstone's committee (1859), i. 628;
article in Quarterly attributed to, ii. 94;
serves on Alabama commission, ii. 401, 404;
on the Bradlaugh question, iii. 12, 16-17;
on measures against obstruction, iii. 53;
on Land bill of 1881, iii. 53-54;
on Phœnix Park murders, iii. 68;
on Bright's 'Irish rebels' speech, iii. 112;
on Franchise bill, iii. 135-139;
moves vote of censure on Khartoum affair, iii. 175;
death of, iii. 356.
Financial ability of, ii. 637.
Gladstone's estimate of, iii. 356, 465, 466;
his estimate of Gladstone, i. 333 note1;
Gladstone's letters to, i. 516, 517, 647; ii. 148-149, 648.
Otherwise mentioned, i. 358, 452; iii. 6, 115, 537.

Ignatieff, General, ii. 349.

Imperialism, ii. 391-392.

Impregnable Book of Holy Scripture, The, iii. 421 note.

Income-tax, see under Taxation.

India:—
Burke's work for, iii. 469.
Coolies shipped from, for West Indies, i. 24.
Disraeli's schemes regarding government of, i. 592;
procedure on bill of 1858, iii. 300.
Gladstone's references to wrongs of, ii. 592, 595.
[612]Government of, contrasted with that of Ireland, ii. 284.
Mutiny, France quiescent during, ii. 44.
North-West frontier policy, iii. 10;
difficulties (1885), iii. 177, 183-185.
Parliamentary indifference to affairs of, i. 113.
Troops from, for South Africa, iii. 34;
refused for Soudan, iii. 147.

Indulgences, i. 319.

Inglis, Sir Robert, Oxford candidature of, i. 328, 332, 333;
Gladstone proposed by, for Oxford and Cambridge club, i. 98 note;
on China question, i. 227;
Gladstone's divergence from, i. 321;
political record of, i. 328;
on papal aggression, i. 409;
denounces Irish provincial colleges, ii. 434;
otherwise mentioned, i. 120, 278, 306, 335, 336, 377, 427.

Ingogo river, iii. 35.

Ingram, Dr., ii. 437.

Innocent iii., Pope, ii. 516; iii. 425.

Inshes, family of, i. 17 note.

Inverness, speech at, i. 476.

Ionian Islands:—
Case of, i. 597-601.
Gladstone's commission to, i. 594-597;
his arrival at, i. 602;
his scheme for, i. 610 et seq.
Greece, union with, desired by, i. 599, 602-605, 614;
granted, i. 620.

Ireland:—
Act of Union—
Gladstone's views regarding, iii. 409.
Home rule in relation to, iii. 285.
O'Connell's amendment for repeal of (1833), i. 106; iii. 284 and note.
Resolutions  preliminary  to, iii. 299.
Agitation in, relief measures due to, iii. 410.
Ashbourne Act (1885), iii. 287.
Assassination bill (1846), i. 430.
Beaconsfield's reference to, in election address (1880), ii. 606;
his apprehension regarding, iii. 47.
Boycotting in, iii. 199, 243-244 and note1.
Budget of 1853, as affecting, i. 462, 465-468, 646.
Carnarvon's statement on (1885), iii. 211.
Central board, see below Local government.
Chamberlain's views on compulsory expropriation, iii. 224;
his attitude towards home rule, iii. 223, 225 note2, 234, 267;
his speech on condition of (June '85), iii. 233-234;
his federation scheme, iii. 316-317, 327, 339.
Chief secretaries for, in Gladstone's cabinets (1868-74), ii. 644;
(1880-85), ii. 654;
(1886), iii. 297 note;
(1892), iii. 491, 495 note.
Churches—
Presbyterian against home rule, iii. 318.
Protestant episcopal—
Appropriation question, i. 54.
Disestablishment of—
difficulties of, ii. 257-258;
preliminaries, ii. 259-263;
bill in the Commons, ii. 263-264, 266;
with the Lords, ii. 266-271;
back to the Commons, ii. 271-272;
back to the Lords, ii. 272-279;
modifications accepted by the Commons, ii. 280;
debates on, iii. 57;
Gladstone's letter to the Queen on, ii. 427, 645.
Disraeli's proposals for, ii. 242.
Gladstone speaks on, in Parliament, i. 126;
at Newark, i. 129;
his five resolutions on, iii. 300;
his attitude towards (1865), ii. 141-143;
(1865-68), ii. 239-240;
his action regarding (1868), ii. 243, 245-248.
Home rule opposed by, iii. 318.
Reform bill, Gladstone's speech on (1833), i. 105;
Inglis's opposition to, i. 328.
Roman catholic, Parnell leadership denounced by, iii. 448-449.
Coercion:—
Acts and bills (1833), i. 106;
(1846) i. 290;
(1847-85) iii. 211;
(1866) ii. 200;
(1870) ii. 297;
(1880) iii. 56, 62;
(1881) iii. 52 and note, 65, 71, 253, 274, 296 note1;
(1882) iii. 70, 188-192, 194, 198-199;
(1886) iii. 350;
(1887) iii. 375 and note, 376 and notes, 377-378, 380.
Conservative party's repudiation of, iii. 212-214, 257;
revival of, as a last resort, iii. 278-279;
silence regarding, iii. 285;
proposal of, iii. 287;
Salisbury's 'twenty years' proposal, iii. 317.
[613]English realisation of, iii. 379;
English attitude towards (1890), iii. 427-28.
Liberal unionists accomplices in, iii. 368.
Parnell's view of, iii. 369;
his fear of renewal of, by liberals, iii. 274-275.
Commissions and committees on (1880-86), iii. 362;
(1894) i. 646.
Compensation for Disturbance bill, iii. 49, 113, 409, 410.
Conservative administration of (1886-87), iii. 369-370, 372-376, 378-383.
Consolidated annuities, i. 468 and note, 646.
Cowper commission, iii. 362, 372-374.
Crimes Acts, see Coercion under this heading.
Cromwell's insight into problem of, ii. 287.
Devon commission (1843), ii. 285.
Education grant, Gladstone's views of, i. 227.
Election results in (1880), ii. 613;
(1885) iii. 252-255;
(1886) iii. 346.
English traditional attitude towards, iii. 291, 307-308, 340.
Evictions in, iii. 48, 372, 379, 380, 410;
compensation in cases of, see Compensation under this heading.
Famine in (1845), i. 282, 352.
Fenians in:—
Parnell's alleged conversation with a spy regarding, iii. 404.
Plots of (1867), ii. 241.
Release of prisoners (1870), ii. 297.
Secret committee on, proposed (1871), ii. 297.
Temper of (1886), iii. 373.
Financial relations commission, i. 646.
FitzGerald's stanzas on, i. 31.
Franchise extension in, iii. 139-142.
Gladstone's first cabinet concerned with, i. 261;
his proposal to visit (1845), i. 281;
his forecast regarding (1845), i. 383;
uneasiness regarding state of, ii. 132, 174;
his view of his mission regarding, ii. 252;
his visit to (1877), ii. 571.
Government of Ireland bill (1886), see Home rule under this heading.
Habeas Corpus Act, suspension of, iii. 49-51, 57, 553.
Home rule for:—
Act of Union, relative to, iii. 285.
Bill of 1886:—
Alterations of original plan of, iii. 300-301.
Amendments proposed for, iii. 332.
Cesser of Irish representation, iii. 302, 304, 307, 309, 324, 326-327;
opposed, iii. 324-325, 327, 332.
Defeat of, iii. 341.
Disabilities specified in, iii. 302, 309.
Financial provisions of, iii. 305, 306, 319, 331, 560.
Introduction and first reading of, i. 363 note; iii. 310-312, 316.
Postponement of, after second reading, suggested, iii. 333-334.
Reception of, in the press, iii. 318-319;
by Irish party, iii. 319-320 and notes.
Resolutions instead of, later views on, iii. 299-301.
Second reading of, iii. 313-316, 317, 330, 334-341.
Summary of, iii. 559-561.
Taxation provisions of, iii. 302, 306-307, 560.
Withdrawal of, after second reading, suggested, iii. 333-334.
Bill of 1892—
preparation, iii. 496-497 and note1;
crux of Irish representation, iii. 497-498;
second reading stage, iii. 499-500;
majority, iii. 504;
committee stage, iii. 498-499, 500-503;
third reading, iii. 504;
defeat in House of Lords, iii. 504.
Cesser of Irish representation—
question of (1886), see above under Bill of 1886;
Gladstone's speech on, at Swansea (1887), iii. 386;
question of (1892), iii. 497-498.
Chamberlain's attitude towards, iii. 325 note2, 233, 234, 267.
Gladstone's speech on, at Aberdeen (1871), ii. 378;
his letter on (1881), iii. 57;
his attitude towards, before the elections (1885), iii. 215-216, 234-241;
after the elections, iii. 256-257, 259, 261-264, 266, 268-276, 283;
[614]his pamphlet on, iii. 352 and note1.
Hartington's opposition to, iii. 233, 267, 273.
Independence of nationalist vote desirable for concession of, iii. 238.
Liberal party in relation to:—
Central organisation declares for Gladstone, iii. 323.
Cleavage in, iii. 291 and note, 302-303, 324;
Gladstone's decision to act regardless of, iii. 288-304;
number of seceders on night of the division, iii. 341.
Dissentients' meeting in committee room 15, iii. 335-337.
Meeting of, at foreign office, iii. 332-333.
Vacillations of, iii. 323.
Waiting attitude counselled by Gladstone, iii. 285;
adopted, iii. 286.
National pronouncement for, iii. 252-255.
Parnell's demand for, iii. 232.
Popular sentiment regarding, iii. 330, 342.
Salisbury's attitude towards, iii. 231, 233, 239, 242-244.
Inglis's views on, i. 279.
Intimidation in, iii. 198, 199, 211, 283, 287.
Invincibles, iii. 70, 103.
Jansenism in, iii. 384.
Lady correspondents on turbulence in, ii. 531; iii. 348.
Land League:—
Commission on, iii. 398, 401 et seq.
Gladstone's view of, iii. 47, 59.
Land Act of 1881 in relation to, iii. 57, 66.
Land tenure in:—
Acts and bills:—
(1849) ii. 287.
(1860) ii. 287 and note.
(1870) ii. 294-296: iii. 49;
precautions against eviction, ii. 294;
debates on, iii. 57;
Vatican decrees inimical to parliamentary success of, ii. 511;
Greek congratulations on, ii. 532;
effect of, iii. 257;
failure of, iii. 54.
(1881) iii. 53-57;
debates and speeches on, iii. 56-57;
Parnell's attitude towards the Act, iii. 57-61;
nationalist efforts to amend the Act, iii. 66;
inadequacy of, iii. 254;
effect of, iii. 257;
secured by agitation, iii. 410;
unpopular, iii. 537.
(1885) iii. 190, 194-195, 197;
widespread repugnance to, iii. 310, 324-327, 332.
(1886) pressed by Spencer and Morley, iii. 301;
interest in, eclipsed by home rule, iii. 310;
first reading of, iii. 313 note.
(1887) iii. 373-374.
Dual ownership, iii. 54, 55.
Encumbered Estates Act (1849), ii. 287.
English ignorance of, ii. 281.
Peculiarities of, ii. 285-286.
Landed gentry, rule  of, destroyed by liberal party, iii. 256-257.
Local government for (other than home rule):—
Canadian scheme suggested, iii. 215, 317.
Central board scheme, iii. 193;
Gladstone's attitude towards, iii. 191, 193-194;
Parnell's approval of, iii. 194, 231, 291;
his repudiation of, iii. 215, 230;
his conversation with Carnarvon regarding, iii. 230-231;
liberal cabinet's attitude towards, iii. 194, 291.
County Government bill discussed by Gladstone and Chamberlain, iii. 225 and note2.
Federation views of Chamberlain, iii. 316-317, 327, 339.
Gladstone's letter to Forster on (1882), iii. 58.
Small holdings and allotments bill, Chamberlain's views on, iii. 224 and note.
Maamtrasna debate, iii. 213, 279.
Military v. moonlighters in, iii. 362.
Mitchelstown affair, iii. 380-383.
National League:—
Bill to deal with, proposed by Hicks Beach, iii. 287.
Commission upon, iii. 398, 401 et seq.
Elections influenced by, iii. 255.
Power of, iii. 278.
Papal intervention in, suggested, iii. 62-63;
on plan of campaign, iii. 383-385;
[615]on Parnell leadership, iii. 449.
Parnell's position in (1890), iii. 431;
elections after the split, iii. 457, 458.
Peel's view of condition of (1836), i. 133;
his decision against Gladstone for chief secretary, i. 241 and note.
Peers, Irish, called to House of Lords by Beaconsfield, ii. 429 note.
Phœnix Park murders, iii. 67, 90, 308, 391.
Plan of campaign:—
English and Scotch view of, iii. 373.
Gladstone's attitude towards, iii. 370-372.
Nature of, iii. 369-370, 373.
Parnell's attitude towards, iii. 370.
Pope Leo's pronouncements on, iii. 383-385.
Ulster, for, encouraged by Churchill, iii. 371 note.
Poerio's arrival in, i. 401.
Queen's attitude towards, ii. 425.
Railways in, Gladstone's commission on, ii. 243 note.
Rents in:—
Arrears bill (1882), iii. 66.
Beach on, iii. 369, 373.
Bessborough commission on, iii. 54, 56.
Buller's evidence on, iii. 372.
Conservative vacillations regarding, iii. 373-375.
Cowper commission on (1887), iii. 372-374.
Crime in relation to excess of, iii. 409, 410.
Parnell on, iii. 369, 372.
Richmond commission on, iii. 54.
Roman catholic party in, supporting English government, Gladstone's view of, i. 129.
Social condition of (1886), iii. 297 (see also Intimidation under this heading).
Tenants' Relief bill, iii. 353, 369.
Tithes bills, iii. 114.
Tractarian movement's effect on feeling towards, i. 308.
Ulster:—
Elections of 1885 in, iii. 252-253.
Gladstone's consideration of, iii. 236.
Home rule opposed by, iii. 327.
Plan of campaign for, encouraged by Churchill, iii. 371 note.
Separate assembly for, suggestion of, iii. 332.
Solemn League and Covenant for, iii. 318.
Variation in rents, attitude towards, iii. 374.
University education in:—
Gladstone's bill for (1873), ii. 437-445, 495.
Roman catholic attitude towards, ii. 435-436, 440-441.
Unsettled condition of, ii. 434.

Irish party:—
Aberdeen, attitude towards, i. 444.
Anti-Parnellites, Gladstone's responsibility towards (1892), iii. 493.
Bright's estimate of, iii. 328.
Cleavage of (1890), iii. 350.
Committee Room Fifteen, iii. 446 and note2, 452.
Conservative understanding with, iii. 188-190, 200, 203, 258, 260, 269-271, 274-276, 284.
Criminal Law Amendment bill (1887), tactics on, iii. 377-378.
Dependence upon, undesirable for settlement of home rule question, iii. 238.
Exclusion of, from Westminster, proposed, iii. 302, 304, 307, 309, 324, 326-327;
opposed, iii. 324-325, 327, 332;
Gladstone's speech on, at Swansea (1887), iii. 386;
question of (1892), iii. 497-498.
Gladstone, estrangement from, on Italian question, ii. 122;
on his Vatican campaign, ii. 502;
vituperation of (1882), iii. 89;
general attitude towards, iii. 274;
ovation to (1893), iii. 500.
Home Rule bill of '86, excitement at introduction of, iii. 311;
acceptance of, iii. 319.
Irish University bill, attitude towards, 441, 444, 445.
Italian Nationality, views on, i. 618; ii. 122.
Khartoum vote of censure supported by, iii. 176.
Liberal party—
attitude of (1873), ii. 441;
support of (1884), iii. 143 and note4;
opposition to (1885), iii. 184;
dislike of, iii. 274;
alliance with, apprehended by tory leaders, iii. 287;
alliance accomplished, iii. 370;
impossibility of uniform action with, iii. 371.
Obstructionist tactics of, iii. 48, 51-53, 57, 123, 124.
[616]Papal rescript, attitude towards, iii. 384.
Parnell re-elected by (Nov. 1890), iii. 438;
effect on, of Gladstone's letter, iii. 442;
split on leadership question, iii. 450-452;
attempts at an understanding, iii. 455.
Parnellites, iii. 458, 470.
Revolution in parliamentary procedure effected by, iii. 377.
Russell, attitude towards, i. 431.
Separate parliamentary organisation of (1874), ii. 491.
Spencer, Lord, attitude towards, iii. 108.
Strength of (1885), iii. 253, 255.
Violence of (1880-85), iii. 308.

Irving, Edward, i. 44, 100.

—— Sir H., ii. 604.

Ismail Pasha, iii. 145 note2.

Italian language, ii. 648.

Italy:—
Alabama tribunal, represented on, ii. 405, 412.
Austria—tyranny of, i. 389-403;
Aberdeen's views on, ii. 641-642;
Gladstone's Letters on, to Lord Aberdeen, i. 392, 394 and note, 396;
Aberdeen's view on the letters, i. 398, 399 note2, 401, 641, 642;
effect of the Letters, i. 396-398, 400-401 and note3;
Austrian war (1859), i. 618, 620 note3; ii. 6 et seq.
Eastern question, attitude towards, ii. 571.
Ecclesiastical policy of, Gladstone's views on, ii. 510 note.
Finance of, ii. 107.
France—
aid from, ii. 7-8, 14;
alliance sought by (1870), ii. 323;
neutrality during Franco-Prussian war, ii. 344.
German alliance of, iii. 414.
Gladstone's visit to (1850), i. 389-393;
(1859) i. 618;
(1866) ii. 213-219;
(1889) iii. 413;
Italian recognition of his services, ii. 533; iii. 532;
his views on policy of (1888), iii. 413-415, 561.
Rome occupied by government of, in Franco-Prussian war, ii. 343, 512.
Savoy, distinct from, ii. 22.
Smyrna demonstration favoured by, iii. 9.
Suez canal protection, invited to help in, iii. 80.
Unification of, ii. 17;
Gladstone slow to advocate, i. 389, 390; ii. 12-13;
effect of movement on England, ii. 123-124.
Venetia transferred to, ii. 214.

Ithaca, i. 603.


Jackson, Dean, i. 49 and note2.

Jacobson, Bp., i. 457; ii. 148.

Jamaica:—
Apprenticeship system in, i. 145.
Slave estates in, i. 22.
Suspension of constitution of, proposed, i. 221.

James, Sir Henry, made attorney-general, ii. 463 note, 470;
on the Greenwich seat question, i. 470;
on the Bradlaugh question, iii. 12;
Gladstone's regard for, iii. 110;
Corrupt Practices bill, i. 97 note1; iii. 110;
Collings' amendment, iii. 288;
on spies, iii. 404 note.

—— Sir Walter, Gladstone's letters to, i. 357, 409, 549;
otherwise mentioned, ii. 557, 565.

Jansenism, iii. 384.

Jeffreys, H. A., i. 71, 72, 80.

Jelf, W. E., ii. 386.

Jenner, Dr., ii. 99, 103.

Jerusalem:—
Bishopric question, i. 308-309, 312.
Greek and Latin dispute regarding holy places in, i. 478.

Jessel, Sir G., ii. 463 note, 468-470.

—— Lady, iii. 106.

Jesuits, ii. 516.

Jeune, Dr., i. 499, 508.

Jevons, W. S., ii. 57.

Jews:—
Admission of, to parliament, i. 375-377;
opposed by Gladstone, i. 106;
by Inglis, i. 328.
Disraeli's sympathies with, ii. 552-553, 558; iii. 475-476.
Eastern question, attitude towards, ii. 571.
Peerage recommended for, by Gladstone, ii. 429.
Rothschild's work for, iii. 11.

Jingoism, iii. 173.

Jocelyn, Viscount, i. 295.

Johnson, Dr., iii. 481.

—— Reverdy, ii. 401 note2.

Jones, Rev. J., i. 11.

—— Ernest, i. 396, 400.

Joubert, General, iii. 25, 29, 34, 39.

Jowett, B., supports Gladstone at Oxford, i. 335;
on Oxford reform, i. 501, 502;
Gladstone's appreciation of, i. 508, 512;
advocates civil service reform, i. 512;
[617]estimate of Gladstone, ii. 178;
work on educational reform (1869), ii. 312.

Joy, Henry Hall, i. 29, 34.

Juxon, Archbishop, iii. 96 and note1.


Kainadji, treaty of, ii. 550.

Kean, Charles, ii. 528.

Keate, Dr., i. 28, 30, 32, 34, 42, 44-46.

Keble, John, i. 57, 178, 317, 380 note2; ii. 181-182.

Kempis, Thomas à, ii. 186, 187.

Kew Gardens feud, ii. 420.

Khalifa, the, iii. 144.

Khartoum, see under Soudan.

Kimberley, Earl of, lord privy seal (1868), ii. 644;
on Alabama case, ii. 411;
colonial secretary (1870), ii. 644;
(1880), ii. 654;
correspondence, etc., on Transvaal question, iii. 28, 31-36, 38, 40, 42-44;
decides against a Transvaal commission, iii. 33 and note;
Indian secretary (1882), ii. 654;
for home rule, iii. 291 note;
Indian secretary (1886), iii. 297 note;
president of council and Indian secretary (1892), iii. 495 note;
at last cabinet council, iii. 511;
otherwise mentioned, ii. 304; iii. 50.

King, Locke, ii. 126, 653.

Kinglake, A. W., i. 480-481 and note; ii. 557 note.

Kingsley, Dr., ii. 143.

—— Rev. C, ii. 433.

Kiréeff, Colonel, ii. 557 note.

Kitchener, Major, iii. 166.

Kitson, Sir James, ii. 611; iii. 59-60.

Knapp, Rev. H. H., i. 29, 80.

Knatchbull, Sir E., i. 254, 420; ii. 156 note1.

Knollys family, ii. 100.

Knowles, J., iii. 356, 358, 360.

Knox, Alexander, i. 161.

Knutsford, Lord, iii. 45 note.

Kordofan, iii. 146.

Kossuth, i. 402, 415.

Kruger, President, Gladstone's meeting with (1877), ii. 571;
urges reversal of annexation, iii. 25, 29;
correspondence with Colley, iii. 35-36, 38.


Labouchere, H. L., i. 420 note1.

Labour, war-loans as affecting, i. 517.

Lacaita, Sir James, Gladstone's acquaintance with, i. 390-391;
secretary to Gladstone's Ionian commission, i. 597, 607;
Gladstone's letters to, i. 399; ii. 15, 107, 219, 510, 519;
otherwise mentioned, i. 396; ii. 184.

Laing's Nek, iii. 34, 36, 37, 42.

Lake, Dean, i. 335; iii. 95.

Lamartine, cited, i. 395.

Lamb, Charles, i. 215 and note1.

Lambert, Sir John, ii. 226, 467-468.

Lamennais, i. 200, 457.

Lancashire:—
American civil war, effect of, ii. 66;
Gladstone's relief works, ii. 77 note1;
fortitude under distress, ii. 124.
Gladstone's speeches in (1864), ii. 131;
(1865), ii. 178;
invited to stand for (1865), ii. 144;
his candidature, ii. 145-147;
his election, ii. 147.

Lancaster, T. W. L., i. 111.

Landed property:—
Chamberlain's pronouncements on, iii. 174.
Gladstone's views on, i. 345-349, 463;
his budget proposals regarding, i. 463, 471.
Ireland, in, see under Ireland.

Langley, ——, ii. 490.

Lansdowne, 3rd Marquis of, view of, on repeal, i. 289;
on reform, i. 416;
retirement of, i. 445;
on Gladstone's budget, i. 465, 466;
attempts to form a government, i. 528;
fails, i. 529;
conditionally consents to join Palmerston's government, i. 533;
assists Palmerston, i. 539;
recommends Derby for premiership, i. 576;
otherwise mentioned, i. 75, 431, 493, 530, 648.

—— 5th Marquis of, iii. 48, 90.

Lanyon, Sir O., iii. 31-32, 40, 43 note.

Laud, Archbishop, iii. 480.

Lavalette, Marquis de, ii. 324-325, 329.

Law of nations, i. 370, 371 note.

Layard, Sir A. H. L., iii. 2.

Lebœuf, Marshal, ii. 334.

Lecky, W. E. H., iii. 425.

Leeds, Gladstone elected for (1850), ii. 611 and note2;
his visit to (1881), iii. 59-61;
Herbert Gladstone returned for, ii. 618.

Leeds Mercury, iii. 264 note.

Lefevre, J. G. Shaw-, i. 252; ii. 654; iii. 291 note, 495 note.

Legacy duty, see Succession duty.

Legislation work, Gladstone's review of, ii. 51-52.

Legh, ——, ii. 147 note.

Leighton, F. K. (warden of All Souls'), i. 627.

—— Archbishop, i. 319.

Leith, Gladstone's election for, iii. 344.

[618]Leo XVIII., Pope, iii. 383-385.

Leopardi, essay on, iii. 548.

Leopold I., i. 449.

—— II., King of the Belgians, ii. 195, 458; iii. 162.

—— Prince, ii. 260.

—— —— (Hohenzollern), ii. 323-328, 330, 332, 333 note.

Lesseps, M. de, i. 591, 592; ii. 533.

Lessons in Massacre, ii. 560, 562.

Lewis, Sir G. Cornewall, on American civil war, ii. 69, 80, 84 and note;
on Irish agrarian outrage, i. 281 and note;
on Gladstone's influence in Oxford, i. 499;
criticises Gladstone's budget (1859), ii. 19;
succeeds Gladstone as chancellor of exchequer, i. 539-540;
budget of (1855), i. 517, 559-562;
Gladstone's differences with, on finance, ii. 22, 67, 623, 632;
agreement with, ii. 633;
objects to French treaty project, ii. 21;
on Paper Duties bill, ii. 33, 37;
views of, on nature of government, ii. 63;
cabinet struggle with Gladstone (1862), ii. 95;
Gladstone's estimate of, ii. 67;
his estimate of Gladstone, i. 547;
death of, ii. 67;
otherwise mentioned, i. 229, 256, 374, 441, 481 note, 519, 624; ii. 31, 50, 194, 635-636; iii. 539.

Lewis, Sir Gilbert, Gladstone's letter to, ii. 67.

—— Lady Theresa, ii. 190.

Liardet, ——, ii. 490.

Liberal party:—
Adullamites, ii. 205, 211, 224, 225.
Apathy and disorganisation of (1879), ii. 586.
Aristocratic element withdrawn from, iii. 293.
Church of England, antagonistic to (1870), ii. 307.
Cleavage in (1867), ii. 228, 232;
(1872) ii. 388;
(1874) ii. 499;
threatened (1885), iii. 170, 185, 188, 197, 200, 265, 267, 282, 294;
Gladstone's efforts to avert, iii. 220, 222, 241, 273, 282, 283;
Gladstone's determination not to take part in, iii. 222;
not to lead a home rule opposition, iii. 282;
to act regardless of followers, iii. 288, 304;
cleavage accomplished, iii. 291 and note, 302-303;
first public mark of, iii. 324;
number of seceders on night of home rule division, iii. 341;
reunion desired by Gladstone, iii. 363, 366, 371 (see also below, Disaffection).
Closure countenanced by, iii. 377.
Colonial and Irish policy of, vindicated by Gladstone, ii. 606-607.
Conservative party supported by, on important measures, iii. 257-258.
'Construction' shibboleth of, iii. 173.
Disaffection in (1866-67), ii. 202, 205-209, 224, 225, 227-228, 232-235;
(1868) ii. 246;
(1869-74) ii. 495;
(1870-73) ii. 497;
(1872-73) ii. 436, 442, 444 and note, 445;
(1873) ii. 457 (see also above, Cleavage).
Electoral losses of (1874), ii. 490-491;
triumph  (1880), ii. 609, 613-614;
gains (1886-90), iii. 427.
Foreign policy of, attacked by Pall Mall Gazette, ii. 579.
Forster's view of (1863), ii. 123.
Gladstone's junction with, i. 626;
his reception by, ii. 204.
Hartington accepts leadership of (1874), ii. 506.
Home rule, see under Ireland.
Irish party, see under Irish party.
Leadership of—
Hartington's acceptance of (1874), ii. 506;
Gladstone's correspondence on (1885), iii. 223,  225-227.
Majority of, in 1868, ii. 251 and note2.
Parnell's denunciations of, iii. 445, 450, 459.
Questions tending to divide, list of, ii. 503.
Round table conference, iii. 364, 366-368 and note.
Tea-room schism, ii. 228, 232.
Ultra-toryism in, ii. 37.

Liberal Unionist party:—
Coercion the touchstone for, iii. 368.
Conservatives, union with, iii. 350.
Round table conference, iii. 364, 366-368 and note.

Liberalism, Acton on, iii. 361.

Liberty:—
De Maistre on, ii. 518.
Gladstone's feeling for, i. 60, 84, 179, 180, 384-385; ii. 518, 524, 582; iii. 18-19, 88, 144, 178, 260, 475, 535;
his views regarding fitness for, iii. 58.

Licensing bills (1871), ii. 388-390.

Liddell, Dean, i. 59 note; ii. 312, 539.

Liddon, Canon, ii. 433; iii. 421.

Lieven, Madame de, i. 270, 397, 401, 469.

Life-insurance duty, i. 462.

Lightfoot, Bp., ii. 433.

Lincoln, Lord, see Newcastle, 5th Duke of.

[619]Lincoln, President, ii. 75; iii. 235.

Liquor interest, influence of, on election of 1874, ii. 495.

Literary controversy, temper for, iii. 351.

Littlemore, i. 235, 310.

Littleton, E. J. L., i. 113.

Liverpool:—
Canning's election for, i. 9-10.
Conservatism of, ii. 605.
Early condition of, i. 21-22.
Electoral scandals at, i. 105.
Gladstone, John, settles in, i. 16.
Gladstone's debt to, i. 192;
speech at (1856), i. 363 note2;
speech at (1864), ii. 132;
election speech at (1865), ii. 145-146;
speech at, on reform (1866), ii. 202;
address at, on Strauss (1872), ii. 524;
reception at (1876), ii. 558;
speech at (1895), iii. 521.

Liverpool Courier, Gladstone's letters to, i. 32.

Liverpool Standard, Gladstone's contributions to, i. 98.

—— Lord, church patronage under, i. 153;
nature of government of, i. 298;
policy of, i. 121;
otherwise mentioned, i. 242, 419; iii. 465, 543.

Lloyd, Bishop, i. 57.

Loans for war purposes, i. 515-518.

Locke, i. 135; iii. 476-477.

Lockhart, J.G., i. 274, 314-315.

Loch-Lochy, battle at, i. 17 note.

Lochnagar, i. 116; ii. 99, 102.

Loftus, Lord A., ii. 321-322.

Lombardy, i. 248; ii. 7.

London, election results in (1880), ii. 613.

—— and N.-Western Railway, iii. 171.

—— convention (1884), iii. 45 and note.

—— protocol, ii. 562.

Londonderry, Lord, i. 419; iii. 6.

Longley, Archbishop, iii. 96 note1.

'Lord Dundreary,' ii. 96.

Lords, House of, see under Parliament.

Lorraine, annexation of, ii. 346-348.

Louis, Princess of Hesse (Princess Alice), ii. 90, 97-100, 103, 187, 378.

—— xvi., iii. 480.

—— Napoleon, see Napoleon III.

Louise, Princess, ii. 379, 411, 533; iii. 524.

Lowe, Robert (Lord Sherbrooke), opposes Reform, ii. 201-203, 205, 224, 228, 231, 235; iii. 300 note4;
declines to join Derby government, ii. 211;
pronouncement on franchise, ii. 155-156;
on Gladstone's leadership, ii. 172;
chancellor of exchequer (1868), ii. 254, 644;
views on Irish land question, ii. 283, 292;
urges civil service reform, i. 510; ii. 314-315;
opposes transportation of convicts to Australia, i. 359;
Gladstone's letter to, on treasury administration, ii. 372, 650;
budgets of, ii. 373;
speech at Sheffield on finance, ii. 375-376;
on Alabama case, ii. 410, 411;
attitude towards Gladstone, ii. 416;
Gladstone's estimate of, ii. 417, 464-465;
on Irish University bill, ii. 441;
post office scandal, ii. 460-461, 463, 464;
home secretary (1873), ii. 463 note, 645;
on the Greenwich seat question, ii. 469;
protests against Gladstone's retirement, ii. 498;
viscounty desired for, by Gladstone, ii. 631;
otherwise mentioned, ii. 247, 260, 504, 644, 645.

Lowther, James, ii. 295.

Lubbock, Sir John, ii. 562.

Lucas, ——, i. 258.

Lucretius, iii. 19, 481, 484.

Lushington, ——, i. 59 note.

Lyndhurst, Lord, failure to form a ministry (1832), ii. 653;
attitude towards repeal, i. 283;
Brougham's compliment to, i. 575 and note;
Gladstone's estimate of, ii. 96;
otherwise mentioned, i. 75, 122, 293-294; ii. 194.

Lyons, Lord, on Trent affair, ii. 73-75;
on reduction of armaments, ii. 322;
Spanish sovereign affair, ii. 325, 327-330, 336;
on Black Sea affair, ii. 351;
mentioned, iii. 105.

Lyttelton, Lady (Mary Glynne), Gladstone's appreciation of, i. 187;
marriage of, i. 223;
illness and death of, i. 572-573;
mentioned, i. 274, 293; ii. 100.

—— Lord, marriage of, i. 223;
examines at Eton, i. 229;
attitude towards Welsh bishoprics question, i. 288;
connection with Oak Farm, i. 337 et seq.;
views on Gladstone's new policy (1865), ii. 133;
endowed schools commissioner, ii. 501;
Gladstone's letters to, i. 327, 381, 454; ii. 237, 299, 306, 312, 364, 646;
otherwise mentioned, i. 187, 306; ii. 212, 539.

Lyttelton, Neville, on Herbert Gladstone's candidature, ii. 617.

Lytton, E. L. Bulwer, Lord, casts Gladstone's horoscope, i. 196-197;
suggests to Gladstone mission to Ionian islands, i. 594;
Gladstone's relations
[620]with, i. 609, 617;
funeral of, ii. 437;
otherwise mentioned, i. 149, 561; ii.  28, 181.

—— Sir Edward, i. 609, 612.


Macaulay, Lord, first speech of, i. 22 note2;
Sadler defeated by, i. 99 note;
meets Gladstone in Rome (1838), i. 173-174;
on Gladstone's first book, i. 177-178;
on Church Principles, i. 181;
on Gladstone's political position, i. 182;
Gladstone contrasted with, i. 192-193, 195;
debating method of, i. 195;
on the China question, i. 226;
Gladstone's censure of, i. 236;
on Lady Hewley case, i. 322;
on Gladstone's ecclesiastical views in 1838, i. 323;
on Disraeli's budget debate, i. 440;
on Barrow, ii. 536; iii. 467 note;
Warren Hastings, iii. 290;
Gladstone's estimate of, iii. 98, 425;
linguistic purity of, iii. 476;
on Dryden, iii. 484;
Gladstone's essay on, iii. 546;
otherwise mentioned, i. 220, 245 note, 315, 539; ii. 55, 194, 238, 249.

—— Z., i. 236.

McCarthy, J.H., on conservative overtures to Irish party, iii. 190 and note2;
Gladstone's views on Parnell leadership announced to, iii. 436, 437, 444;
ignorant of Parnell's plans, iii. 439;
leads away the anti-Parnellites, iii. 451-452.

Macdonald, family of, ii. 17 note.

—— Sir John, ii. 401.

Macedonia, iii. 532.

Machiavelli, ii. 9 and note, 518, 594.

Macgregor, J., Gladstone's estimate of, i. 250, 252.

Macmillan, Mr., i. 455.

McNeile, Rev. Hugh, ii. 545.

Magee, Bishop, ii. 258, 260-261, 265 note, 275 note.

Magyars, eastern question, attitude towards, ii. 571, 609.

Mahdi, the, iii. 144, 149, 157, 161.

Mahon, Lord, see Stanhope.

Maine, ii. 405.

Maistre, Joseph de, ii. 518-519 and note2; iii. 476.

Maitland, Sir Thomas, i. 619 note2.

Majuba Hill, iii. 37.

Malacca Straits, ii. 488.

Malet, Sir E., iii. 146.

Malmesbury, Lord, estimate of, i. 198;
his estimate of Gladstone, i. 431;
on co-operation with Gladstone, i. 562;
distrusted by Gladstone, i. 623, 624;
otherwise mentioned, i. 361 note4, 417, 561, 595.

Maltby, Bp., i. 56.

Manchester:—
Disraeli's speech at (1872), ii. 390.
Fenian outrage in, ii. 241.
Fraser appointed bishop, ii. 432.
Gladstone nominated for (1837), i. 141;
his speech at (1853), i. 483.
Nonconformist protest at, against Education Act, ii. 308.

Manin, D., i. 402; ii. 533.

Manners, Lord J., see Rutland.

Manning:—
Chronology—Strongly anglican attitude, i. 161;
in Rome with Gladstone, i. 173, 174;
approves Church Principles, i. 182;
revises ms. of Church Principles, i. 224;
godfather to Gladstone's eldest son, i. 227;
with Gladstone before resignation on Maynooth, i. 273, 274;
Gladstone's close relations with, i. 310, 313;
Newman's letters to, i. 311, 312;
Guy Fawkes sermon, i. 313 note1;
on secession to Rome, i. 317;
on Gladstone's career, i. 323;
on church outlook, i. 325;
Gorham case, i. 378-380 and note2;
secession to Rome, i. 385-387;
estrangement from Gladstone, i. 387 and note2;
on Gladstone's Irish church policy, ii. 143, 246, 250, 279;
letter on Oxford defeat, ii. 147, 150 note;
letter to Gladstone on premiership, ii. 255;
Irish Land bill (1870), ii. 294, 296;
on Education bill, ii. 308;
on Irish University bill, ii. 439, 440;
pamphlet of, replying to Gladstone's on Vatican decrees, ii. 504, 519-521;
on eastern question, ii. 571;
intercourse with Gladstone renewed, iii. 281;
on cesser of Irish representation, iii. 325;
on Parnell leadership, iii. 448-449.
Contrasted with Newman, ii. 137, 521.
Gladstone's letters to, i. 171, 230, 276, 323-325, 378; iii. 106.
Ultramontanism of, ii. 509-510;
otherwise mentioned, i. 55, 141, 148, 207 note2, 260, 321, 364, 393, 403 note; ii. 192, 214-215, 474, 499, 504, 509; iii. 191, 197.

Mansfield, Lord, i. 17, 75.

Manzoni, i. 173; ii. 11, 151 note2, 533;
ode translated, iii. 549.

Marcus Aurelius, i. 207 and note1.

Maria, Donna, i. 248.

[621]Marie Antoinette, iii. 469.

Marlborough, Duke of, ii. 268, 275, 571.

Marriage—civil, legalisation of, i. 567;
deceased wife's sister question, i. 569;
Gladstone's views on, i. 568-572.

Marriott, C, i. 59 note, 334.

Marsham, Dr., i. 336, 426-427.

Martin, Sir J., ii. 383.

—— Sir Theodore, ii. 47 note1.

Martineau, Miss, ii. 541.

—— James, ii. 136; iii. 525.

Maskell, Rev. W., i. 380 note2.

Match tax, ii. 373 and notes.

Mathew, Father, ii. 192.

Maurice, F. D., influence of, i. 54;
Newman compared with, i. 165;
proceedings against, i. 168, 316, 454-455;
on Gladstone's Oxford candidature, i. 331-332;
King's College attack on, i. 454-455;
appointed to Vere St., i. 456;
otherwise mentioned, i. 54, 59 note, 60, 64, 79, 149, 376; ii. 534.

May, Sir T. E., on the Greenwich seat question, ii. 467, 469;
assists Speaker against obstruction, iii. 53;
memo. by, iii. 285 note;
mentioned, iii. 306.

Maynooth:—
Conservative advantage regarding Act, iii. 238.
Gladstone's retirement on question of, i. 632; ii. 238, 240.
Inglis opposes grant to, i. 328.
Irish Church bill (1869) concerned with, ii. 263, 266.
Peel's policy regarding, i. 270;
Gladstone's attitude towards Peel's policy, i. 271-273, 278.
Russell's speech on, i. 411-412.

Mazzini, i. 390, 396, 402; ii. 150, 184; iii. 464, 478.

Melbourne, Lord, dismissal of (1834), i. 118 and note2;
Hampden appointment, i. 166-167;
on Peel's position (1843), i. 266;
nature of government of, i. 298;
Gladstone's estimate of, iii. 472;
long administration of, iii. 493;
otherwise mentioned, i. 143, 543; iii. 471, 490.

Melvill, H., i. 100.

Menschikoff, i. 486, 494.

Mérimée, Prosper, ii. 533.

Merivale, Charles, ii. 539.

Metaphysical Society, ii. 524.

Metaphysics, Gladstone's attitude towards, i. 209.

Metastasio, i. 108.

Metternich, i. 366; ii. 319.

Mexico, French embarrassments in, ii. 84-85.

Miall, E., ii. 305, 444.

Middlesborough, ii. 78 and note.

Midlothian, Gladstone's invitation to stand for, ii. 584;
agrees, ii. 585;
general outlook, ii. 586-587;
the campaign, ii. 587-596; iii. 27;
the Queen's disapproval, ii. 628; iii. 102;
his return for (1880), ii. 611-612;
(1886) iii. 344;
(1892) iii. 492;
his farewell to, iii. 535-536.

Mignet, F.-A.-A., ii. 220.

Miguel, Don, i. 248.

Miles, ——, i. 264.

Mill, James, i. 144, 200; ii. 366-367.

—— J. S., views on the Tractarians, i. 163-164;
on civil service reform, i. 509;
estimate of Gladstone, ii. 123;
on government of India, ii. 284;
on Irish land question, ii. 293;
on education, ii. 302;
against the ballot, ii. 366-367;
memorial to, ii. 543-544;
Gladstone's estimate of, ii. 544;
otherwise mentioned, i. 187, 189, 229, 314; ii. 220, 282, 430, 534; iii. 491.

—— Dr. W. H., i. 319, 380 note2.

Millais, Sir J., ii. 581-582.

Milman, Dean, i. 56, 166; ii. 166, 539.

Milnes, R. Monckton, i. 135, 149, 177, 229, 234.

Milton, Gladstone's estimate of, i. 96;
views on the church, i. 155;
on marriage, i. 568, 572;
Gladstone compared with, ii. 555.

Minghetti, ii. 533.

Mold, speech at (1856), i. 363 note2.

Moldavia, ii. 3.

Molesworth, Sir William, views on toleration, i. 138;
on Canadian revolt, i. 361 and note5;
in coalition cabinet, i. 447, 450;
Denison's attitude towards, i. 451;
supports Gladstone's budget, i. 466;
attitude towards Crimean war, i. 482 note;
on colonial policy, i. 645;
otherwise mentioned, i. 144, 358, 361, 362, 458, 492, 648; iii. 13.

Moltke, ii. 321, 324, 332-333.

Moncreiff, Rev. Sir H. W., i. 59, 73.

Money dealings, i. 206; iii. 419-420.

Monsell, W., postmaster-general (1870), ii. 460-461, 463 note, 479, 644.

Montalembert, De, i. 178; ii. 185, 476, 481;
letter from, ii. 544.

Monte Cassino, ii. 218-219.

Montenegro:—
Berlin Treaty's provisions regarding, iii. 8-10.
[622]Revolt in, ii. 549, 553, 561, 566-567.
Sympathy in Gladstone's illness, iii. 527.

More, Hannah, i. 12.

Moriarty, Bishop, ii. 512.

Morier, Sir Robert, ii. 525.

Morpeth, Lord, i. 222.

Morley, Arnold, iii. 429, 433, 434 note.

—— John, appointment of, as Irish secretary, iii. 295, 297 note;
previous utterances of, on Irish question, 296 note1;
presses Irish land bill, iii. 301;
in communication with Parnell, iii. 304-306, 320 note1;
letter from Parnell against withdrawal of bill after second reading, iii. 333;
letter on Parnell's view of resignation, iii. 347;
at round table conference, iii. 364 note;
Gladstone's letter to, on Churchill's retirement, iii. 364;
interviews with Parnell, iii. 369, 370;
Gladstone's letters to, on plan of campaign, iii. 371-372;
Bingley Hall meeting, iii. 388;
Parnell consults with, on Times letters, iii. 394;
Gladstone's letter to, on Italian policy, iii. 414;
Gladstone's letter to, on Parnell, iii. 429-431;
meeting at Lord Rendel's on Parnell affair, iii. 434 note;
Gladstone's letter to, on Parnell's leadership, iii. 436;
interviews with Parnell, iii. 439-441, 444;
visit to Hawarden (1890), iii. 452-454;
Gladstone's letters to, on Kilkenny election, iii. 457;
on his birthday, iii. 458;
on death of eldest son, iii. 461;
at Biarritz, iii. 463 et seq.;
at Dalmeny, iii. 491-492;
Gladstone's letter to, on election, iii. 494;
Irish secretary (1892), iii. 495 note;
at Butterstone with Gladstone, iii. 525;
farewell visit, iii. 528;
otherwise mentioned, iii. 387, 423, 497 note1, 499 note, 500.

Mortgage of land, Gladstone's views regarding, i. 347, 349.

Mozley, J. B., i. 334.

—— T., ii. 260.

Mulgrave, Lord, iii. 211 note.

Mundella, A. J., iii. 297 note, 495 note.

Münster, Count, iii. 247.

Murray, Archbishop, i. 178.

—— Sir G., i. 112; ii. 156 note1.

—— John, i. 274; ii. 382.

Murchison, Sir R., ii. 380.

Myrianthes, Archimandrite, ii. 532.


Napier, Sir Charles, on Ionian islanders, i. 598-599.

Naples:—
Gladstone's visit to (1850), i. 389-393;
later visit (1888), iii. 413.
Misgovernment of, i. 390-393; ii. 12, 16-17.
Victor Emmanuel's entry into, ii. 17.

Napoleon I., i. 320 and note1; iii. 482, 485, 549.

—— III., plot to slay, i. 574;
aids Italy, ii. 7-8, 14;
estimate of, by a papal official, ii. 10 note;
difficulties of, with French ultramontanes, ii. 15;
Cobden's negotiations with, ii. 20;
estimate of Gladstone's budget speech, ii. 28;
friendliness towards England, ii. 46;
Palmerston's mistrust of, ii. 49;
urges plan of representations to America, ii. 84-85;
on Garibaldi, ii. 111;
on Danish question, ii. 117, 118, 580;
Gladstone dines with (1867), ii. 221;
uneasiness regarding Prussia, ii. 321;
deposition of, ii. 343;
letter from, ii. 546;
otherwise mentioned, i. 485-486, 489, 490; ii. 3-7, 325, 328 note1, 329, 334.

National Debt:—
Conversion scheme (1853), i. 472, 513, 647.
Proposals regarding (1866), ii. 57, 200.
Reduction of (1868-73), ii. 375.
Terminable annuities for paying off, ii. 651.

—— Press Agency, iii. 264 note, 265.

Nationalist party, see Irish party.

Nationality:—
Emergence of principle of, ii. 2-3.
Gladstone's attitude towards (1851), i. 389, 390;
(1854) ii. 12-13;
(1859) i. 618;
(1885) iii. 260;
(1888) iii. 361.
Napoleon III.'s views on, ii. 7.

Negro apprenticeship, Gladstone's speech on, i. 134 and note.

Neilson of Springfield, i. 16.

Nelson, Thomas, i. 110.

Neruda, Mme. Norman, ii. 459.

Nettleship, Mr., iii. 519.

Neville, Father, iii. 388.

Newark, Gladstone's candidature and election for (1832), i. 88-94, 96-97, 181;
returned for, without contest (1834), i. 121;
speech at (1835), i. 129;
speech at (1837), i. 138;
returned for (1837), i. 141;
(1841) i. 238;
end of his connection with, i. 287.

Newcastle, Gladstone's visit to (1862), ii. 76-78;
his speeches at (1891), iii. 462.

[623]Newcastle, 4th Duke of, offers Gladstone influence in Newark, i. 88-89;
views of, i. 91-92;
Gladstone's relations with, i. 94;
Gladstone's visit to, i. 95;
Sadler a nominee of, i. 99;
Gladstone's first book approved by, i. 176;
mentioned, i. 286.

—— 5th Duke of, informs Gladstone of parliamentary opening at Newark, i. 88;
re-elected (1846), i. 288;
on Gladstone's quarrel with Bentinck, i. 302;
Russell's proposal to, i. 350;
advises Gladstone to decline office, i. 406;
desires leadership of Peelites, i. 408;
attitude towards Derby, i. 418;
ideas of a third party, i. 419, 423;
supports Gladstone's budget, i. 466;
war minister during Crimean war, i. 651-652;
suggests substitution of Palmerston for himself, i. 522;
on Peelites' refusal to join Palmerston, i. 535;
favours Ionian project, i. 595;
attitude towards French treaty scheme, ii. 22;
on Paper Duties bill, ii. 33, 37;
supports Finance bill proposal, ii. 39;
death of, ii. 143;
Gladstone trustee for, ii. 151;
Gladstone's estimate of, ii. 193, 256;
otherwise mentioned, i. 54, 74, 113, 119, 242, 285, 287, 355, 420, 443, 480 note, 490, 491, 493 and note, 528, 536, 584, 648; ii. 237, 238, 635-636.

Newdegate, C. N., iii. 15.

Newman, Francis, i. 329;
letter from, ii. 177, 539.

—— Cardinal, J. H., Gladstone's early contact with, i. 57-58 and note1;
sermons by, i. 58, 79, 86;
Gladstone's estimate of, i. 163 note1;
on Church Principles, i. 181;
on J. R. Hope, i. 228 note;
Gladstone's correspondence with, i. 272;
Tract Ninety, i. 306-307, 311;
view on Jerusalem bishopric, i. 308, 309, 312;
on system of Roman church, i. 310;
position of (1843), i. 310-313;
Gladstone on treatment of, i. 316;
secession of, i. 317;
letter of, describing Gladstone's position, i. 632;
contrasted with Manning, ii. 137, 521;
on Gladstone's criticism of Ecce Homo, ii. 167;
on Gladstone's Chapter of Autobiography, ii. 250;
reply to Gladstone's Vatican Decrees pamphlet, ii. 520;
to Vaticanism, ii. 521;
last letter from, ii. 547;
Gladstone's call on, with Chamberlain, ii. 570 and note;
Gladstone's letter to, on papal responsibility for disloyal priests in Ireland, iii. 62;
reply, iii. 63;
death of, iii. 421;
otherwise mentioned, i. 159, 165, 168, 235, 319;  ii. 192, 504; iii. 388.

Newnham College, iii. 385.

New Zealand, i. 297-298, 358, 645.

Nice, French acquisition of, ii. 9, 22, 30, 108.

Nineteenth Century, iii. 356-360, 519.

Nomination boroughs, i. 621.

Nonconformists, see Dissenters.

Normanby, Lord, i. 407.

Norreys, Lord, i. 72.

North, Lord, i. 133; ii. 467; iii. 181.

North Notts, i. 287.

Northbrook, Earl of, Gladstone's letter to, on Egyptian mission, iii. 121;
agrees to  send Gordon to Soudan, iii. 150;
against home rule, iii. 291 note, 294;
otherwise mentioned, i. 450 note; ii. 654; iii. 268.

Northcote, Sir S., see Iddesleigh.

Norway, Gladstone's cruises to (1883), iii. 115-117;
(1885) iii. 217-218.

Novalis, cited, iii. 466.

Novikoff, Mme., ii. 557, 574, 582.

Nubar, iii. 149, 153, 157.


Oakeley, F., i. 310.

Oak Farm, financial embarrassments of, i. 337 et seq.;
Gladstone's preoccupation with, i. 272, 340, 342;
his public finance influenced by experiences with, i. 474.

O'Brien, W. Smith, i. 400.

—— W., iii. 448.

Obstruction, see under Parliament.

O'Connell, Daniel, repeal amendment of (1833), i. 106; iii. 285 note;
on Harvey committee, i. 112 note, 113;
influence of, on Gladstone, i. 113;
tory attitude towards, i. 129, 138;
visits Newark, i. 130;
on Gladstone's first book, i. 178;
Peel's attitude towards (1844), i. 270;
Gladstone contrasted with, ii. 593;
crime denounced by, iii. 50;
otherwise mentioned, i. 101, 266, 372; ii. 227; iii. 11, 62, 493.

Octagon, the, ii. 526-548.

Office, Gladstone's view of desire for, i. 554.

O'Hagan, Lord, ii. 292.

Okes, Provost, i. 11.

Oliver, Mrs., i. 9 note.

Opium question, i. 259-260.

Oratory, political, i. 191-195, 411, 470; ii. 589; iii. 312 (see also Gladstone, W. E.—characteristics—eloquence).

[624]Orsini affair, ii. 24, 44.

Osman Digna, iii. 178.

Ossory, Archdeacon of, ii. 265.

Oswald, Alex., i. 419.

Otho, King, i. 479, 605.

Ottomans, see Turkey.

Owen, Professor, ii. 537.

Oxenham, ——, i. 59, note.

Oxford:—
Bias of, i. 60, 70, 84.
Chandos opposes Gladstone at, i. 628.
Christ Church, enthusiasm at, after Gladstone's election (1847), i. 336.
Democracy, attitude towards, ii. 35.
Dissenters' disabilities at, ii. 313 and note.
Ewelme appointment, ii. 386-387.
Famous sons of, iii. 476.
Gladstone's career at, i. 48-85;
his feeling for, i. 80, 84-85; ii. 148; iii. 486, 528;
his combination of Lancashire and, i. 192; ii. 41;
his visits to (1834), i. 111;
(1847) i. 235, 377;
(1853) i. 457;
(1872) ii. 436-437;
his reception of D. C. L. degree at, i. 377;
his advice to his son at, i. 205;
sympathy from, iii. 527.
Gladstone's candidature for (1847), i. 328-333;
election, i. 333-335;
his return for (1852), i. 426-427;
return for (1853), i. 452;
return for (1857), i. 565;
return for (1859), i. 614 note, 630;
defeat at (1865), ii. 145-148.
Gladstone's membership for, effect of, on his career, i. 327, 429, 453;
on the university, i. 499;
as it appeared to himself, i. 630.
Influence of, i. 501.
Method of study at, i. 50-51 and note.
Reform—commission proposed by Lord J. Russell (1850), i. 497;
opposed by Gladstone, i. 426, 497;
Oxford resistance to, i. 498;
conduct and report of, i. 499 and note4;
Gladstone's scheme, i. 500, 501, 506-507;
its reception, i. 502-503;
results of, i. 508-509;
Tractarian movement's effect on, i. 57.
Tests, i. 506-507;
abolition of, ii. 313 and note; i. 314.
Tractarian movement, see Oxford movement.
W E G Essay Club at, i. 59-60.

Oxford and Cambridge Club, Gladstone's membership of, i. 98 and note.

Oxford movement:—
Gladstone unaffected by, i. 161;
his election affected by, i. 328.
Ireland affected by, i. 308.
Nature of, i. 163-165.
Oxford, influence on, i. 496.
Second phase of, i. 305.
Tracts for the Times, i. 329;
Tracts Eighty and Eighty-seven, i. 307 note;
Tract Ninety, i. 235, 306, 310, 311; iii. 422.


Pacific, Gladstone advocates reduction of force in, i. 458.

Paget, Miss, iii. 524.

—— Lord Clarence, ii. 112, 140.

Paine, Thomas, ii. 127.

Pakington, Sir J., i. 561.

Palgrave, F. T., ii. 474.

Pall Mall Gazette, ii. 579-580, 618.

Paley, cited, i. 422.

Palmer, Kelly and, i. 518.

—— Roundell, see Selborne.

—— William, Gladstone influenced by, i. 162, 167;
Gladstone's estimate of, i. 235;
on Maynooth grant, i. 279.

Palmerston, Lord:—
Chronology—On sugar duties, i. 236;
on free trade, i. 265;
on Spanish treaties, i. 280;
on repeal, i. 289;
Don Pacifico debate, i. 368-371;
on Neapolitan tyranny, i. 394, 400; ii. 13;
relations with Kossuth, i. 415;
dismissal by Russell, i. 415;
amendment on Militia bill, i. 416;
in opposition to Peel, i. 420 and note1;
section represented by, i. 431;
moves amendment against Villiers, i. 433;
joins coalition government, i. 446-447;
on Gladstone's budget (1853), i. 465-467;
different views of, on eastern question, i. 480;
communications with preceding Crimean war, i. 481-482;
approves Lord Stratford, i. 488;
desired as war minister during Crimean war, i. 651;
on Black Sea affair, ii. 349;
Derby's vote of censure on (1857), i. 561-562; ii. 269;
defeat of, on Cobden's motion, i. 564; ii. 265;
urges postponement of Reform bill, i. 490, 648;
Gladstone's letter to, on Crimean operations, i. 494;
Aberdeen in conflict with, i. 495 and note3;
foreign office reconstructed by, i. 510;
suggested by Newcastle as substitute for himself, i. 522;
invited by Derby to join government, i. 525;
[625]refuses, i. 526;
approves Gladstone's refusal, i. 527;
Peelites' attitude towards, i. 531-535;
satisfies Aberdeen, i. 535;
intention of, to oppose Roebuck's committee, i. 538, 542;
advises acceptance of Roebuck's committee, i. 539;
on Crimean war, i. 548;
triumph of, at election (1857), i. 564;
defeated on Conspiracy bill, i. 574-576;
suggested as leader of Commons by Disraeli, i. 587;
views on Suez Canal scheme, i. 591;
on Corfu, i. 619;
hands over Ionian Islands to Greece, i. 620 and note2;
communications with Russell, i. 624;
forms a government (1859), i. 626;
views of, identical with Derby's, i. 631;
the Principalities, ii. 4;
French treaty scheme, ii. 20, 22;
Paper Duties bill, ii. 31-33, 37, 39;
Finance bill, ii. 39;
franchise proposals of, ii. 200;
supports Herbert, ii. 44;
fortifications scheme, ii. 47;
makes a peace speech (1859), ii. 48;
correspondence with Gladstone, ii. 49-50;
on Trent affair, ii. 74;
favours suggestion of representations to America, ii. 75-77, 85;
advises Gladstone regarding Newcastle speech, ii. 76;
on American separation, ii. 82;
on reduction in naval estimates, ii. 94;
receives Garibaldi, ii. 110;
views on Garibaldi's departure, ii. 112;
on Danish question, ii. 115-118, 120;
on Gladstone's franchise pronouncement, ii. 127-130;
on cabinet government, ii. 142;
death of, ii. 151;
Gladstone's action regarding funeral of, ii. 153;
Gladstone's speech on, ii. 157.
Career and abilities of, i. 543.
Characteristics of, i. 366-368.
Compared with Lansdowne, i. 530;
with Aberdeen, i. 530;
with Gladstone, ii. 172;
with Disraeli, ii. 551;
with Hartington, iii. 3.
Ecclesiastical appointments of, ii. 122, 430.
Foreign estimates of, i. 366, 367, 392.
Foreign policy, principles of, i. 367;
Granville's view of, ii. 348.
Frankness of, i. 554.
Gladstone's relations with, from 1850, i. 371;
his opposition to, i. 553, 558, 566, 585; ii. 43;
his harmony of sentiment with, i. 628;
Gladstone's estimate of, i. 567; ii. 35;
his estimate of Gladstone, ii. 171;
Gladstone's conflicts with, on expenditure, ii. 43, 138-139.
Leadership of, ii. 172.
Life-objects of, ii. 45.
Peers created by, ii. 429.
Popularity of, i. 400, 493, 543, 564; ii. 633;
cooling of, ii. 50, 176.
Queen's attitude towards, ii. 98.
Selection of work by, ii. 465.
Otherwise mentioned, i. 120 note, 226, 402, 431, 444, 450, 526, 528, 579, 622; ii. 3, 19, 63, 80, 100, 104, 106, 111, 131, 171, 189, 194, 256, 423, 435, 494, 576, 577, 595, 619, 635-636; iii. 96 note1, 178, 228, 300, 419, 443, 475.

Panizzi, Sir A., influence of, on Gladstone, i. 389-390;
interview of, with king of Naples, i. 401;
Gladstone's letters to, i. 402; ii. 107, 151;
illness of (1868), ii. 196;
otherwise mentioned, ii. 110, 184, 552.

Papal States, ii. 108, 185.

Paper duty, ii. 24-25, 30-41, 238-239, 636.

Paris, Comte de, ii. 189; iii. 103, 470.

—— Treaty of (1856), i. 550; ii. 349-356, 607; iii. 522.

Parish Councils bill (1893), iii. 504, 505, 511.

Parliament:—
House of Commons:—
Attendance in—Gladstone's diligence regarding, i. 102; ii. 418, 422; iii. 7-8;
Peel's view of, i. 299.
Balance of parties in (1850), i. 373;
(1852) i. 428;
(1853) i. 446, 448-449.
Burning of, in 1834, i. 114.
Closure, introduction of, iii. 377;
Gladstone's distaste for, iii. 124;
drastic form of, on Parnell commission bill, iii. 401.
Colonial affairs, indifference to, i. 362.
Committee Room Fifteen, Irish party proceedings in, iii. 446 and note2, 454.
Composition of first reformed, i. 101.
Ecclesiastical  discussions in, ii. 502.
Excitement in, manifestations of, iii. 441;
on introduction of Home Rule bill (1886), iii. 310-311.
[626]Executive sphere invaded by, iii. 6.
Expenditure controlled by, under Exchequer and Audit Act (1866), ii. 61.
Gladstone's diligence for duties of, see above, Attendance; his feeling of powerlessness in, i. 221;
his care for rights and traditions of, ii. 492-493; iii. 7, 206, 208, 510, 530;
his mastery of, i. 193, 410-411, 470; iii. 312;
his place in (1847-52), ii. 211 note;
his position in (1858), i. 581;
his isolation in (1867), ii. 229.
Grote's estimate of, ii. 370.
Indian discussion, indifference to, i. 113.
Intolerance of, in the Bradlaugh matter, iii. 13-20;
resolution of 1881 struck off records of, iii. 21.
Irish members of, see Irish party.
Irish representation in, cesser of, contemplated, iii. 302, 304, 307, 309, 324, 326-327;
opposed, iii. 324-325, 327, 332;
Gladstone's speech on, at Swansea (1887), iii. 386;
question of (1892), iii. 497-498.
Lords, conflict with, see below under House of Lords.
Majorities, large, dating from Gladstone's premiership, ii. 264-265.
Obstruction in, Irish, iii. 48, 51-53, 57, 123-124;
unionist, iii. 499.
Party obligations in, i. 292, 295, 299.
Payment of members, Gladstone's views regarding (1861), i. 611 note;
his scheme for (1891), iii. 478-479;
Chamberlain's pronouncement, iii. 174.
Popular influence on, i. 150; iii. 4.
Position of seats in, significance of, i. 422-423, 539; iii. 363;
Gladstone's place (1853-1866), i. 631 note.
Procedure of, violated by Disraeli, ii. 189;
altered by Gladstone, ii. 631;
Gladstone's advocacy of reform in, iii. 123.
Reform, see that title.
Reversal of previous vote ruled not out of order, i. 462 note.
Shah's interest in, ii. 459.
Supply, rights regarding, ii. 38, 40, 61.
Tactics in, Stephen on, i. 147;
Russell's skill in, i. 467;
Gladstone's, iii. 538-539.
Temper, school of, i. 199.
Temporary retirements from, Gladstone's views of, i. 357-358.
Uncertainties in, i. 650.
Variety of style desirable for stating a case in, i. 192.
House of Lords:—
Ballot bill rejected by, ii. 369.
Chamberlain's attitude towards, iii. 173, 225.
Commons' feeling against premier from (1894), iii. 513.
Compensation for Disturbance bill rejected by, iii. 49, 409, 410.
Conservative influence in, iii. 258;
occasions of defeats, ii. 269.
Employers' Liability bill mutilated by, iii. 504.
Franchise bill struggle (1884), iii. 126-139.
Gladstone's first hearing of debate in, i. 75-76;
his first conflict with, i. 471;
his refusal of position in, iii. 104, 209;
his attitude towards (1884), iii. 127-128, 130;
his later attitude towards (1894), iii. 504-505;
his speech against (Mar. 1), iii. 511-512.
Home Rule bill (1892) thrown out by, iii. 504.
Irish church question, attitude towards, ii. 246, 258, 267-279.
Opposition by, a stimulus to popular causes, ii. 248.
Paper duty struggle with Commons, ii. 25, 31-40, 238-239, 636.
Parish Councils bill maimed by, iii. 504, 505, 511.
Parnell's apprehensions regarding, iii. 240.
Peel's view of, ii. 133.
Permanent opinion represented by, Gladstone's exposure of the theory, iii. 128.
Preponderance of cabinet in (1865), ii. 153-154.
Reform bill of 1867 amended by, ii. 226.
[627]Jews, admission of, i. 375-377.
Premiership, labours entailed by, i. 297-299.

Parnell, C. S. (see also Irish party), number of followers of (1880), ii. 613;
party of, iii. 2;
obstructionist tactics, iii. 48, 53, 57, 123-124;
attitude of, towards Compensation for Disturbance bill, iii. 49;
indicted for seditious conspiracy, iii. 50 note1;
attitude towards Land Act of 1881, iii. 57, 61;
Gladstone's warning to, at Leeds, iii. 61;
imprisonment of, iii. 61-62, 228, 233;
Chamberlain's communications with, iii. 64;
offers to resign his seat, iii. 70;
on franchise extension in Ireland, iii. 143;
supports government (May 1885), iii. 184;
conservative understanding with, iii. 188-190, 200;
not counted on by Gladstone, iii. 191, 197;
favours plan of central board for Ireland, iii. 194, 231, 291;
repudiates it, iii. 215, 230;
on Maamtrasna case, iii. 213;
friction with Hartington, iii. 220, 241;
speech of (Aug. 1885), iii. 220, 228, 233;
public estimate of, iii. 228;
Carnarvon's interview with, iii. 228-231;
home rule demanded by, iii. 232;
victory of adherents of, at the elections, iii. 253, 255;
Salisbury's reference to, at Newport, iii. 243;
gives Irish vote to conservatives at the election, iii. 244-245;
speculations regarding, iii. 267, 268;
attitude towards Gladstone, iii. 274;
tactics after elections (1885), iii. 274-275;
in communication with Morley, iii. 304-306;
characteristics of, iii. 304, 311;
interview with Gladstone, iii. 305-306;
objections to financial provisions of Home Rule bill, iii. 305, 306, 319, 331;
consultations with colleagues, iii. 319-320 and notes;
on introduction of Home Rule bill, iii. 311;
on continued Irish representation at Westminster, iii. 324;
opposed to withdrawal of the bill, iii. 333;
second meeting with Gladstone, iii. 334;
speech on night of the division, iii. 337, 340;
deprecates ministerial resignation, iii. 347;
systematic disagreement with, iii. 369;
illness of, iii. 370, 376;
disapproves plan of campaign, iii. 370;
tactics on Crimes bill (1887), iii. 376-377;
produces Tenants Relief bill, iii. 369;
on papal rescript, iii. 38;
forged letter in Times, iii. 391 and note1;
denial in the House, iii. 392;
further letters, iii. 394;
personal statement in the House, iii. 395;
asks for select committee, iii. 395;
special commission, iii. 396-399;
alleged interview of, with spy from America, iii. 404;
Gladstone's sympathy with, iii. 408;
visit to Hawarden, iii. 420, 445-446;
speech at Liverpool, iii. 446 note1;
divorce suit, iii. 428-430;
public opinion regarding the verdict, iii. 430-434, 448-449;
question of leadership of, iii. 435 et seq.;
Gladstone's letter to Morley regarding, iii. 436, 444;
attitude of, iii. 438, 442-443;
re-elected by Irish party, iii. 438;
interviews with Morley, iii. 439-441;
manifesto to the Irish people, iii. 445;
committee room fifteen, iii. 446 and note2-448, 449-452;
denounces liberal party, iii. 450-459;
elections adverse to, iii. 458;
last speech of, in England, iii. 459;
death of, iii. 459;
otherwise mentioned, ii. 492; iii. 56, 225 and note2, 240, 286, 367, 369, 372, 493.

Parnell, Sir Henry, i. 251.

Parnellism Unmasked, iii. 406.

Parnellites, see under Irish party.

Party:—
Elements deciding relations of, i. 422, 435.
Gladstone's views on, i. 304, 405.
Tenacity of system, i. 448 note1.

Pascal, i. 153.

Patronage, i. 649; ii. 428.

Patten, Wilson, i. 351 note1, 438.

Patteson, Bishop, ii. 581; iii. 419.

—— Sir T., i. 455.

Pattison, Sister Dora, ii. 604.

—— Mark, iii. 482.

Paxo, i. 601.

Pearson, C. B., i. 77.

Pedro, Don, i. 248.

Peel, General, i. 351 note1, 355.

—— Arthur, ii. 492; ii. 463 note; iii. 455.

—— Mrs., iii. 455.

—— Sir Robert (2nd Bart.):—
Chronology—Oxford University representation resigned by, i. 53;
Oxford honours of, i. 79-80;
praises Gladstone's maiden speech, i. 103;
views on emancipation, i. 104;
on Irish Church Reform bill, i. 105;
Cobbett's attack on, i. 114;
Gladstone encouraged by, i. 114;
election promises of, ii. 489;
summoned to form a government (1834), i. 118;
[628]Gladstone offered treasury post by, i. 119;
Gladstone appointed under-secretary of the colonies by, i. 123;
cabinet of (1835), i. 420;
composition of whig opposition to, i. 419-420 and note1;
resigns, i. 127;
views on Ireland (1836), i. 135;
speaks at Glasgow (1837), i. 138;
Stanley dines with, i. 139;
on Canada question, i. 641;
on Molesworth's vote of censure, i. 145;
on slave-apprenticeship law, i. 146;
on Wilberforce, i. 150;
defeated on Irish church question, i. 154;
views on Gladstone's first book, i. 177;
Jamaica case, i. 221-222;
misunderstanding with the Queen, i. 222;
China question, i. 225, 242;
annoyance with Stanley, i. 234;
views on sugar duties, i. 236, 280, 644;
turns out whigs by majority of 1 (1841), i. 237; ii. 203 note2, 264;
party meetings, i. 239;
forms a government (1841), i. 240;
Gladstone's inclusion in cabinet, i. 240, 305;
privy council, i. 243;
position of, regarding protection, i. 250-253, 258, 262-263, 282-287;
lays duty on Irish spirits, i. 646;
miscalculation of, regarding income-tax (1842), i. 474 and note;
letter to Sir John Gladstone, i. 257;
appeal to Pope Gregory, iii. 62;
Lady Hewley case, i. 321, 322;
Irish Land bill introduced by government of (1845), ii. 285;
Maynooth, i. 270-274;
precarious position of, i. 264-266;
resigns, i. 283;
agrees to resume office, i. 283, 285; iii. 207 note1;
repeal of corn laws, i. 208, 282-287, 290, 459;
hostility towards (1846), iii. 322;
resigns (1846), i. 290-291;
eulogium on Cobden, i. 291-293, 295, 296;
party relations of, i. 289-290, 292, 293, 295;
Gladstone's farewell interview with, i. 297-300;
Russell's overtures to (1846), i. 350;
votes for Gladstone at Oxford, i. 333;
advocates keeping protectionists out of office, i. 352, 373;
Gladstone's divergencies from, i. 353, 354;
letter on Gladstone's mission for his friend, i. 365;
Don Pacifico debate, i. 368-369, 372;
death of, i. 371;
statue of, inaugurated at Manchester, i. 483.
Administration of (1842-44), importance of, i. 247;
character of, i. 298, 642-643;
ministerial discipline of, iii. 114.
Age of, on entering cabinet, i. 261.
Changes of policy of, i. 266, 425.
Compared with Grey, i. 248;
with Gladstone, i. 269;
with Palmerston, i. 367;
with Russell, i. 373;
with Aberdeen, ii. 640-641.
Courage of, i. 188, 289.
Debating method of, i. 195.
Disraeli's attitude towards, i. 432.
Estimate of, i. 372;
estimate of financial statements of, ii. 55.
Gladstone—relations with, i. 112; 280, 286;
confidence in, and appreciation of, i. 139, 221, 241, 243, 246, 252, 257, 259, 261, 277, 354;
estimate by, i. 254; iii. 465;
influence upon, i. 269;
forecast regarding Disraeli and, i. 374.
Graham's estimate of, i. 248, 263.
Guizot's book on, ii. 538.
Influence of, in the House, i. 373.
Justice of, ii. 640.
Liberalism of, i. 418, 419.
Oxford training of, i. 497;
convocation mob at election, i. 629.
Parliamentary tactics of, i. 254.
Peers, views on, ii. 133.
Premiership of, length of, ii. 61.
Otherwise mentioned, i. 49, 98, 126, 128, 149, 192, 212, 227, 236, 238, 245-6, 258, 263-4, 293, 300, 356, 416, 419; ii. 147, 154, 156 note1 178, 229 note, 277 and note, 288, 328, 423, 433-435, 463, 498, 619, 623, 627, 628; iii. 238, 277, 486.

—— Sir Robert (3rd Bart.), ii. 444 note.

—— Lady, i. 469.

Peelites:—
The tory whip's attitude towards, i. 418.
Derby's first administration supported by, i. 424;
Derby's second administration supported by, i. 428;
Derby's questions regarding (1856), i. 551.
Dissolution of, as a party, i. 591.
Disturbing effect of, i. 551-552, 558, 567.
Divergencies of, i. 351, 353, 417-420.
Gladstone's view on best policy for, i. 417-419.
[629]Leadership of—discussed (1850), i. 373-374;
accepted by Aberdeen, i. 408.
Palmerston, designs of, i. 447;
attitude towards (1855), i. 531-535;
in cabinet of, i. 536;
resignation, i. 539;
public outcry, i. 541.
Papal aggression question, attitude towards, i. 410.
Position of seats of (1852), i. 422-423.
Protectionists, attitude towards, i. 407.
Russell's proposal to include (1852), i. 416.
Third party, position as, i. 417.
Whigs, coalition with (1853), i. 443 et seq.

Peerage:—
Additions to, during various premierships, ii. 428-429 and note.
Offer of, to Gladstone, iii. 104, 209.

Pembroke, Lady, i. 293.

Pembroke Castle, Gladstone's cruise in, iii. 115-117.

Penjdeh, iii. 183.

Pensions, political, iii. 107-108 note.

Penzance, Lord, ii. 383.

People, the, see Democracy.

Perceval, Spencer, i. 298, 543; ii. 467 and note.

—— Mr., i. 452.

Persico, Monsignor, iii. 383.

Persigny, ii. 20.

Petty, Lord Henry, ii. 156 note1.

Phillimore, Sir Robert, on Hawarden settlement, i. 343-344;
assists in Oxford reform scheme, i. 501, 502;
on Gladstone's China war speech, i. 563;
on Ionian Islands mission, i. 594;
interview with Gladstone, i. 623;
Gladstone assisted by, at Oxford, i. 628-629;
on paper duties debate, ii. 33;
on Gladstone's franchise pronouncement, ii. 130;
on Irish church, ii. 141, 279-280;
on disaffection of liberals, ii. 232, 234-235;
on Gladstone's Chapter of Autobiography, ii. 250;
on Gladstone's intention of retiring, ii. 388;
on Gladstone's Irish University bill, ii. 437;
on resignation of ministers (1874), ii. 493;
Gladstone's letters to, i. 325-326, 388, 409, 616; iii. 94;
otherwise mentioned, i. 54, 65, 75, 79, 80, 393, 623 note; ii. 26, 29, 31, 34, 35, 47 note2, 48, 73, 88, 92, 127, 214, 295-296, 422, 432, 461-462, 475.

Phillpotts, Bishop, ii. 530.

Phipps, Sir C., ii. 98.

Pickering, ——, i. 75.

Piedmont, growth of, ii. 7-9, 17.

Pierrepont, Hon. H. E. (American minister), ii. 552.

Pitt, William (the younger), finance of, ii. 58-59, 637-638;
views of, on emancipation of slaves, i. 104;
Glynnes related to, i. 223 and note1;
income tax imposed by, i. 255;
free trade theories promulgated by, i. 265;
habits of, i. 298;
Palmerston contrasted with, i. 367;
Scott's lines to memory of, i. 371;
Gladstone compared with, i. 469, 472;
warlike preparations of (1791), i. 478;
censured for French war, iii. 471;
length of premiership of, ii. 61;
resolutions of, preliminary to Act of Union, iii. 299;
on the Union, iii. 313, 314;
otherwise mentioned, i. 372, 419; ii. 230, 264, 343, 428, 435, 589, 619; iii. 256.

Pius IX., Pope, syllabus of 1864, issued by, see under Churches—Roman;
Italian federation under, suggested, ii. 7;
French ambassador's estimate of, ii. 10;
invasion of territories of, ii. 11, 15;
annexation to Piedmont of states of, ii. 17;
misgovernment in states of, ii. 108;
Gladstone's intercourse with, ii. 215-216, 218;
attitude towards eastern question, ii. 571.

Playfair, Lord, ii. 444, 463 note, 562; iii. 53.

Plimsoll, S., ii. 620 and note.

Plumptre, ——, i. 146.

Plunket, Lord, ii. 589; iii. 139-140.

Poerio, imprisonment of, i. 391, 396, 401;
views of, i. 392-393;
exile of, i. 401;
Gladstone's efforts on behalf of, ii. 11;
Gladstone's letter to, ii. 13;
speech at Gladstone dinner (1867), ii. 218;
compared with Mazzini, iii. 478.

Poland:—
French feeling in regard to, ii. 118.
Gladstone's interest in, i. 248.
Peel's forecast regarding, i. 133.
Russian dismemberment of, i. 477.
Warsaw, meeting of monarchs at, ii. 5, 16, 184.

Pollok, Robert, i. 132.

Ponsonby, Sir Henry, messages during ministerial crisis (1873), ii. 447-450, 452;
in Lords and Commons controversy, iii. 131;
on North's American policy, iii. 181;
interview with, on ministerial crisis, iii. 205, 207 and note1;
brings Gladstone the Queen's commission, iii. 290;
states the Queen's message, iii. 291;
[630]on feeling against peer premier, iii. 513;
Gladstone's letters to, iii. 112, 179, 516.

Poor Law Act (1834), i. 115, 121, 140.

Porter, ——, i. 55, 64.

Portland, Duke of, i. 543.

Portugal:—
British preoccupation with affairs of, i. 248.
Tariff negotiations with, i. 267; ii. 641.

Positivists, iii. 358.

Post office:—
Gladstone's admiration for, ii. 182.
Scandal regarding, ii. 460-463.

—— —— Savings Banks, i. 651; ii. 52, 125.

Postage, cheap, ii. 57, 60.

Preaching, English and Italian, i. 174.

Premiership:—
Age for quitting, Gladstone's view on, ii. 423, 443.
Foreign secretary, Gladstone's view of relations with, ii. 399.
Limitations of, ii. 416, 420.
Parliamentary labours entailed by, i. 297-299.
Responsibilities of, ii. 416.

Prerogative of the crown, Gladstone charged with resorting to, ii. 364-365.

Press:—
Excitement fomented by, ii. 650.
Gladstone popular with, ii. 41, 184;
his views on, ii. 41, 557.

Pretoria convention, iii. 44-45 and note.

Prevost, Sir G., ii. 382.

Prince Imperial, iii. 6.

Princess Royal, i. 275.

Privy council appointment, ii. 382-386.

Protection:—
Colonial, against England, ii. 132.
Gladstone's position regarding, i. 249-254, 260, 262, 264, 283-285.
Peel's position regarding, i. 250-253, 258, 262-263, 282-289;
his apprehensions regarding, i. 352; iii. 465.
Peelites' views regarding, i. 351-352, 373, 407.
Rout of, i. 425, 428, 441-442.

Proudhon, i. 157.

Prussia (see also Germany):—
Army of, ii. 359.
Austria—attitude towards (1853), i. 489;
war with (1866), ii. 210 note, 214.
France:—
Treaty with, regarding Belgium, ii. 340.
War with (1870)—British efforts to avert, ii. 320-330, 335-336;
declaration of, ii. 335 and note2;
French miscalculations, ii. 337;
course of the war, ii. 342-343;
effect of, on British naval expenditure, ii. 374.
Schleswig-Holstein question, ii. 114-118.
Tariff negotiations with, i. 267.

Public Worship Regulation Act, Gladstone's suggested substitute for, ii. 514 note3.

Purcell, cited, i. 58 note1, 379-381 and note.

Pusey, Dr. E. B., on Jerusalem bishopric, i. 308;
on Newman's letters, i. 311;
intolerance towards, i. 316, 317;
supports Gladstone's Oxford candidature, i. 335;
on Jewish Disabilities Removal bill, i. 375;
Gorham case, i. 380 note2;
on Gladstone's reform scheme, i. 504;
Gladstone's relations with, ii. 135;
Manning's letters to, ii. 137;
on Ecce Homo, ii. 166-167;
on Temple's appointment, ii. 432;
Gladstone's meeting with (1872), ii. 437;
death of, iii. 94;
Gladstone's letters to, i. 316; ii. 181;
otherwise mentioned, i. 57, 163 note2, 179, 235, 317; ii. 144, 236.

—— Philip, on Irish agrarian outrages, i. 281.

Pym, John, i. 413-414.


Quarterly Review, i. 315; ii. 520.


Radical Party:—
Beer duty opposed by, iii. 187, 200.
Chamberlain's popularity with, iii. 3.
Characteristics of, Gladstone's views on causes of, iii. 240-241.
Coercion for Ireland opposed by, iii. 190-191.
Eastern question (1877), attitude towards, ii. 564, 568.
Educational views of, ii. 303.
Gladstone not popular with (1867), ii. 229;
Gladstone criticised by, for resorting to crown prerogative, ii. 364;
his attitude towards (1872), ii. 388-390; (1880), ii. 630; iii. 5.
Irish land purchase opposed by, iii. 190, 194-195.
Social programme of (1885), iii. 173-174.
Suffrage, attitude towards, ii. 227.
Utilitarian reforms effected by, 156.

Raikes, H. C., iii. 96.

[631]Railways, i. 269, 353.

Rampolla, Cardinal, iii. 521.

Ramsay, Dean, ii. 379-380.

Rangabé, i. 605.

Rawson, ——, i. 333 note.

Reading aloud, ii. 558.

Reclamation work, iii. 419.

Redcliffe, Lord Stratford de (Stratford Canning), views on Neapolitan question, i. 407;
on eastern question, i. 486-488; ii. 555;
otherwise mentioned, i. 406, 417, 420 note, 523.

Redistribution of Seats bill, iii. 137-139, 176-177, 203, 205, 246.

Redmond, J., introduces Arrears bill, iii. 66 note;
on Parnell leadership, iii. 447;
otherwise mentioned, iii. 66, 494.

Reform, i. 490; ii. 370.

—— bills:—
(1832), i. 69-70, 75-76; ii. 227; iii. 125, 535.
(1851), i. 415.
(1852), ii. 238.
(1854), i. 648.
(1860), ii. 26, 29-30.
(1866), ii. 200 et seq.
(1867), ii. 223-236; iii. 57, 125, 175, 300 note4.
(1884), iii. 125 et seq.
Various, ii. 199.

Reid, J. J., ii. 612.

Religion:—
Gladstone's prepossession by, see under Gladstone, W. E.—characteristics.
Ecclesiasticism versus, ii. 306.
Peerages independent of, ii. 430.

Religious controversy, temper for, iii. 351.

—— Disabilities Removal bill (1891), i. 414 note.

Renan, ii. 476.

Rendel, Lord, iii. 386, 413, 434, 523, 526, 533.

Retz, De, iii. 480.

Reynolds, Henry, ii. 134.

Ricasoli, Baron, ii. 8, 218-220, 533; iii. 475.

Richards, Dr., 332 and note.

Richmond, Duke of, i. 262; iii. 130, 131.

—— George, i. 233.

Rio, i. 319.

Ripon, Earl of (F. J. Robinson), at board of trade, i. 240, 243, 257;
Gladstone's estimate of, i. 250;
at board of control, i. 259;
otherwise mentioned, i. 252, 253, 254, 255, 641-642.

Ripon, Marquis of (Lord de Grey), war secretary (1865), ii. 153 note;
education bill (1870), ii. 300-301, 303;
on civil service reform, ii. 315;
president of Alabama commission, ii. 400-401, 404, 408, 411;
created marquis after treaty of Washington, ii. 408 note;
president of council (1868), ii. 644;
retires (1873), ii. 463 note, 465;
on Transvaal suzerainty question, iii. 45 note;
Gladstone's letter to, iii. 69;
for home rule, iii. 291 note;
first lord of the admiralty, iii. 296 note;
colonial secretary (1892), iii. 495 note.

Robert Elsmere, iii. 356-360.

Roberts, General, iii. 41.

Robertson, Provost, i. 7-8, 17 note.

—— Anne, i. 16.

—— Colin, i. 12.

Robinson, see Ripon, Earl of.

—— Sir Hercules, iii. 32 note, 34, 41, 43.

Roebuck, J. A., i. 239, 521, 523, 537-539, 542; ii. 173.

Rogers, Frederick, see Blachford.

Rogers, S., i. 137, 149, 176, 320; ii. 540.

Roman catholic church, see under Churches.

Roman catholics:—
Affirmation bill opposed by, iii. 20.
Cesser of Irish representation opposed by, iii. 325.
Election of 1874, action in, ii. 495.
Emancipation of, i. 52-53, 277 note, 328, 506; ii. 227; iii. 257, 284.
Irish university education, attitude towards, ii. 435-436, 440-441.
Peerages recommended for, by Gladstone, ii. 429-430.

Rome:—
Church of, see under Churches.
Ecumenical council at (1869), ii. 508, 510-512.
French—occupation by, ii. 214, 319, 323, 512;
evacuation by, ii. 217, 512.
Gladstone's visit to (1832), i. 86-87;
his feeling for, i. 174;
his reasons against visiting (1888), iii. 413-415.
Italian occupation of, ii. 343, 512.
Misgovernment in, ii. 12.

Romilly, Lord, ii. 168.

Roon, Albrecht, Count von, ii. 332-333.

Roscoe, W., i. 117.

Rose, Sir John, ii. 400.

Rosebery, Lord, invites Gladstone to stand for Midlothian, ii. 584;
Gladstone the guest of, ii. 588, 609;
speech after Gladstone's election, ii. 612;
[632]first commissioner of works, ii. 654;
lord privy seal, ii. 654;
at Hawarden, iii. 261;
Gladstone's consultations with, iii. 261, 263, 268;
for home rule, iii. 291 note;
foreign secretary (1886), iii. 297 note;
foreign secretary (1892), iii. 495 note;
Gladstone's letters to, ii. 613; iii. 4, 239;
farewell visit to Gladstone, iii. 528;
tribute in parliament, iii. 531;
otherwise mentioned, iii. 270, 414, 533.

Rothschild, Baron, ii. 325, 328 note; iii. 11.

Rouher, M., ii. 221.

Roumania, ii. 4; iii. 532.

Roumelia, iii. 91.

Round, Mr., i. 329, 330, 332, 333.

Round table conference, iii. 364, 366, 368 and note.

Rousseau, i. 128, 203.

Routh, Dr., i. 330, 384.

Ruskin, John, i. 329; ii. 559, 582.

Russell, Hastings, ii. 232.

—— Lord John (Earl Russell):—
Chronology—on Irish Church funds, i. 127;
on Ireland (1835), i. 130;
proposes 8s. corn duty, i. 254;
Edinburgh letter, i. 282, 289, 444;
Jewish Disabilities Removal bill, i. 376;
defeat of (1851), ii. 653;
Grey's refusal to join (1845), i. 367; ii. 244;
fails to form a government, i. 283;
takes office (1846), 290;
overtures to Peel (1846), i. 350;
on colonial government, i. 363;
Palmerston dismissed by, i. 367, 415;
on Neapolitan tyranny, i. 400;
Ecclesiastical Titles bill, i. 405, 409;
Durham letter, i. 408, 444;
defeated (1852), ii. 264;
resigns, i. 406;
overtures to Gladstone, i. 421;
on Four Seats bill, i. 424;
views on leadership of coalition government, i. 444;
joins Aberdeen's government, i. 445;
budget of, i. 459;
Gladstone's budget, i. 465-467, 469;
negotiations preceding Crimean war, i. 481-482;
approves Lord Stratford, i. 488;
postpones Reform bill, i. 648;
on Crimean war, i. 493;
Aberdeen in conflict with, i. 495, and note3;
Oxford reform, i. 497, 503;
on exclusion of dissenters from universities, i. 505;
on civil service reform, i. 511;
on woods and forests dismissal case, i. 520;
resigns on Roebuck's notice of motion, i. 521;
his explanation, i. 523;
Gladstone unwilling to join, i. 528;
attempts to form a government, i. 530;
fails, i. 531;
complains of Peelites, i. 536;
colonial secretary, i. 540 note;
resigns, i. 548;
opposes Lewis' budget, i. 560;
Graham's relations with, i. 584 note;
on Gladstone's Ionian commissionership, i. 613;
on Italian nationality, i. 618-619; ii. 13;
declines Palmerston dinner, i. 624;
states conditions of joining Granville's government, i. 626;
on economy, ii. 48;
on the Principalities, ii. 4;
despatch of, on Italian question (1860), ii. 15-16;
supports French treaty scheme, ii. 22;
on Nice and Savoy, ii. 23;
Reform bill of (1860), ii. 26, 29-30;
on Paper Duties bill, ii. 32-33, 37;
supports Gladstone in finance debate, ii. 40;
Trent affair, ii. 74;
on American war, ii. 76-77, 83, 85;
on Gladstone's Newcastle speech, ii. 80;
interview with Mr. Adams, ii. 83;
statement on Morocco loan, ii. 92-93;
opposes reduction in naval estimates, ii. 94;
on Danish question, ii. 117-118;
Gladstone's letter to, on Palmerston's death, ii. 151;
commissioned to form a government, ii. 152;
offers Gladstone leadership of Commons, ii. 154;
Reform bill of 1866, ii. 199, et seq.;
the supplemental charter, ii. 435;
resigns, ii. 208;
audience with the Queen, i. 209-210;
disaffection against, ii. 228;
on Irish church question, ii. 239;
retires, ii. 243;
asked by Gladstone to enter his cabinet, ii. 253;
education proposals of, opposed by dissenters, ii. 302;
on Alabama case, ii. 394-397, 409 and note;
on Thessaly and Epirus, ii. 576;
Gladstone's visit to (1878), ii. 582.
Compared with Althorp, i. 118;
with Peel, i. 373.
Gladstone's estimate of, i. 237; ii. 244;
his attitude towards, i. 429; ii. 122.
Impatience during recess, i. 235.
Irish attitude towards, i. 430.
Leadership of, i. 300.
Palmerston's views regarding, i. 622.
Parliamentary courage of, i. 188.
Queen's mistrust of, ii. 98.
Otherwise mentioned, i. 143, 146, 208, 266, 277, 280, 289, 420, 422, 430, 446, 450, 500, 526, 527, 543; ii. 12, 14, 20, 106, 116, 120, 144, 196, 229, 251, 295, 476, 577, 595, 623, 635-636; iii. 125, 238, 300, 476.

[633]Russell, Odo, ii. 352-354, 509, 510; iii. 179 note.

Russia:—
Accusations against, applicable to, i. 652.
Afghanistan, action in (1885), iii. 178, 183-185, 208 note.
American war, mediation in, declined by, ii. 85.
Austria, attitude of, i. 488;
hostility to, ii. 4.
Berlin memorandum, ii. 549.
Bessarabia claimed by, ii. 574 and note2, 577.
Bismarck's estimate of policy pursued by, ii. 353 note.
Black Sea claims of, ii. 349-356, 398, 400.
British secret agreement with, ii. 575, 577.
Confusion in policy of, ii. 120.
Crimean war, see that title.
Don Pacifico case, offer of good offices in, i. 368.
Egyptian question, attitude towards, iii. 82, 178.
France, estrangement of, from England the aim of, ii. 4;
neutrality in Franco-Prussian war, ii. 344.
Germany, attitude towards, ii. 343, 348.
Gladstone's attitude towards, i. 545; ii. 3, 499;
tribute at his death, iii. 532.
Ionian Islands despatch, attitude towards, i. 601.
Rise of, i. 477.
San Stefano, treaty of, ii. 572, 575.
Smyrna demonstration favoured by, iii. 9.
Turkey, war with (1771), i. 477;
(1828) i. 480;
(1853) see Crimean war;
(1877) ii. 562, 569, 572.

Rutland, Duke of (Lord John Manners), i. 238, 303-305; iii. 533.

Ryder, see Harrowby.


Sadler, Michael T., i. 99 and note.

Sadowa, ii. 115, 214, 302, 319, 359.

St. Asaph, bishopric of, i. 260 note1.

St. Deiniol's, iii. 420, 521.

St. Germans, Lord, i. 420.

St. Leonards, Lord, i. 416, 448 and note1.

St. Paul's Cathedral, i. 12, 233-234.

Salisbury, Marquis of:—
Chronology—Views on the Principalities, ii. 4;
on Gladstone's American war speech, ii. 86;
on Danish question, ii. 120;
retires from Derby government (1867), ii. 223, 231, 235;
Disraeli's sarcasms against, ii. 247;
on Irish Church bill, ii. 268, 270-271;
on religious tests, ii. 314;
subscribes to Mill memorial, ii. 543;
at Constantinople, ii. 559-560;
at Berlin congress, ii. 575, 577;
Egyptian policy, iii. 74, 180 and note, 495;
on Franchise bill (1884), iii. 132, 135-139;
overtures to Irish party, iii. 188-190;
unwilling to take office (1885), iii. 204-207;
takes office, 208;
countenances repudiation of coercion, iii. 212-213;
Carnarvon's interview with Parnell unauthorised by, iii. 229 note1;
but known to, iii. 230-231;
speeches on Irish policy (Oct. 7), iii. 233, 242-244, 260;
(Nov. 9) 239;
nationalist support of, at the elections, iii. 244-245;
on destruction of government system in Ireland, iii. 256-257 and note1;
Gladstone's tender of support to, iii. 258-260, 284;
resigns, iii. 289;
Hottentot speech, iii. 317-318;
at Opera House meeting, iii. 324;
offers Hartington premiership, iii. 364;
on rents in Ireland, iii. 374-375;
on Times forgeries, iii. 392;
on report of special commission, iii. 402;
Gladstone's estimate of, ii. 560;
his estimate of Gladstone, i. 3; iii. 529;
hesitation of, iii. 277;
otherwise mentioned, i. 127; ii. 203, 587; iii. 90, 131, 203, 344, 365, 525.

—— Lady, iii. 526.

Salmon, Dr., iii. 417.

San Juan boundary question, ii. 405.

San Stefano, treaty of, ii. 572, 575.

Sand River convention, iii. 45.

Sandon, Lord, i. 103.

Sandwich, Lord, i. 144.

Sandwith, Humphry, ii. 561.

Sanquhar, i. 11.

Sarpi, Father Paul, i. 598.

Saunders, Dean, i. 52, 80.

Saunderson, E., ii. 410.

Savings banks, i. 519; ii. 34.

Savoy, French acquisition of, ii. 9, 22, 30.

Say, Léon, iii. 486.

[634]Scartazzini, iii. 387.

Science, Gladstone's attitude towards, i. 209; iii. 359.

Schiller, i. 108.

Schleswig-Holstein question, ii. 114-120, 265, 580;
Prince Consort's view of, ii. 93, 102.

Schleiermacher, i. 166.

Schouvaloff memorandum, ii. 575.

Schwarzenberg, Prince, i. 395-396, 398, 399, 600.

Scott, Hon. F., i. 356.

—— Sir Claude, i. 18.

—— James Hope, see Hope-Scott.

—— Dr., Dean of Rochester, i. 61, 329 and note; ii. 433, 536.

—— Sir Walter, i. 159, 337, 371, 387 note1; iii. 424, 491.

Scotland:—
Disestablishment question in, iii. 471.
Election results in (1880), ii. 613-614.
Enthusiasm of, ii. 588, 599, 608-609.
Home Rule (Irish), attitude towards (1886), iii. 323, 324, 346.
Liberalism of, iii. 536;
liberal losses (1874), ii. 490.
Local government suggested for, iii. 198.
Peers, Scotch, called to House of Lords by Beaconsfield, ii. 429 note.
Reform Act's effect on, iii. 535.
Religious freedom in, Gladstone's views on, i. 384.
Scotch Patronage bill, ii. 501.

Seaforth, i. 107.

Seaton, Lord, i. 228.

Seats bill, see Redistribution.

Seely, C., ii. 113 note2.

Selborne, Lord (Sir R. Palmer), ignorant of Irish land tenure, ii. 281;
on Irish Land bill, ii. 295, 296;
on Education bill, ii. 306;
on abolition of army purchase, ii. 363, 364;
on Collier appointment, ii. 385;
on Alabama case, ii. 403;
on the Greenwich seat question, ii. 469-472;
on leadership discussion, ii. 602 note;
lord chancellor (1872), ii. 645;
on Irish Church bill, ii. 646;
otherwise mentioned, ii. 99, 165, 232 note, 239, 243, 436, 504, 627, 653; iii. 13, 53.

Selden on contracts, iii. 45-46.

Selwyn, Bishop, i. 38, 39, 43; iii. 419.

Semon, Dr., iii. 216.

Servia, i. 477; ii. 549, 553.

Settembrini, i. 396, 401; ii. 11.

Seward, W. H., ii. 75.

Sexton, Thomas, iii. 69, 447, 451, 452 note.

Seymer, H. K., i. 49, 59 note.

Seymour, ——, i. 230.

Shaftesbury, Lord, i. 163; ii. 111, 113, 122, 171, 367, 369.

Shah, the, ii. 459.

Shaw, Sir F., iii. 114.

—— W., ii. 613.

—— Lefevre, see Lefevre.

Sheil, R. L., i. 135, 195, 208, 221, 263-264, 322-323.

Shelburne, Lord, i. 265; ii. 401 note2.

Sheldon, Archbishop, iii. 95.

Shelley, i. 96, 159; iii. 484, 549.

Shepstone, Sir T., iii. 43 note, 45.

Sheridan, i. 265; ii. 589.

Shurey, Mrs., i. 27.

Sibthorp, Col., i. 288 note.

Sidmouth, Lord, i. 431.

Simeon, Charles, i. 11 and note2.

Simon, Jules, ii. 221.

Sinclair, Sir G., i. 113, 178.

Sinking Fund, ii. 68.

Sinope, i. 490.

Skingley, ——, i. 113.

Slavery:—
American war, ii. 70 et seq.
Apprenticeship system, i. 134 and note, 145-147, 221.
Demerara estates question, i. 22-24.
Education scheme for slaves, i. 125.
Emancipation question, i. 102-105; iii. 300.
Evangelical party against, i. 200 note.
Gladstone's reply to Poulett Thomson on, i. 142 note.
Gordon's decree sanctioning, iii. 156;
his observations on, iii. 158-159.
Suakin retained to check slave trade, iii. 180 note.

Slave Power, The, cited, ii. 70 note.

Smith, Adam, i. 251; ii. 58.

—— Goldwin, i. 499, 508, 630; ii. 312, 561.

—— John, i. 22 and note.

—— Sydney, i. 56, 135.

—— W. H., view of, on South African affairs, ii. 601;
against franchise extension in Ireland, iii. 141;
Irish secretary, iii. 279;
rapid visit of, to Dublin, iii. 296;
on introduction of closure, iii. 377;
on Times letters, iii. 395;
on bill for special commission, iii. 397.

Smyrna, iii. 9.

Smyth, Sir J. C., i. 24 note1.

Soap duty, i. 462, 465, 466.

Social question, Gladstone's attitude towards, ii. 56, 60;
his disapproval of socialism, iii. 221.

Socrates, ii. 538.

[635]Solferino, ii. 7.

'Some of my Errors,' quoted, i. 179.

Somerset, Duke of, ii. 33, 153 note, 635, 636; iii. 358.

Soudan:—
Egyptian misrule of, iii. 144-145;
loss of, iii. 146.
Evacuation of, advised, iii. 145-148;
difficulties of, iii. 147, 149;
determined, iii. 180;
agreed to, by Gordon, iii. 150, 153-155;
intention of, divulged by Gordon, iii. 160-161 and note1.
Foreign attitude towards embarrassments in, iii. 177-178, 183.
Garrisons in, to be extricated, iii. 148, 151;
Mahdi's treatment of, iii. 149 note1;
Gordon's opinion regarding abandonment of, iii. 156;
Zobeir's appointment urged for extrication of, iii. 159.
Khartoum, garrison of, to be relieved, iii. 150, 151;
Gordon's arrival at, iii. 155;
disaffection of tribes round, iii. 160;
fall of, iii. 166;
expedition to, urged by Goschen, iii. 176;
deprecated by Baring, iii. 180.
Mahdi's rise in, iii. 144.
Nile campaign, iii. 165-166.

South Sea stock, i. 472, 513, 647.

Southey, i. 140; ii. 538.

Spain:—
Hohenzollern candidate for throne of, ii. 323-328, 330, 332, 333 note.
Land question in, iii. 477.
Palmerston on treaties with, i. 280.
Tariff negotiations with, i. 267.

Special commission, the, unconstitutional character of, iii. 390, 400, 401;
offer of, by government, iii. 396;
bill for, iii. 397-401;
sittings of, iii. 401-407;
scope of, iii. 402;
report of, iii. 402, 408-411;
effect of, on public opinion, iii. 411-412.

Spectator, ii. 175-177.

Spedding, James, i. 509; ii. 534.

Spencer, 3rd Earl, i. 235, 292.

—— 4th Earl, i. 341.

—— 5th Earl, interview of, with Cardinal Cullen, ii. 439-440;
president of the council (1880), ii. 653;
Irish viceroy (1882), iii. 65, 654;
magnitude of task in Ireland, iii. 70-71;
Irish party, attitude towards, iii. 108;
on renewal of Crimes Act, iii. 190, 192;
views on Land Purchase bill, iii. 194-195;
conservative attack on, iii. 213-214, 262;
banquet to, 214, 233;
at Chatsworth and Hawarden, iii. 261;
Irish administration of, 261, 379;
Gladstone's consultations with, iii. 261, 263, 268;
Gladstone's letter to (Dec. 30), i. 272;
for home rule, iii. 291 note;
views on Chamberlain's Irish scheme, iii. 291;
president of council (1886), iii. 297 note;
first lord of admiralty (1892), iii. 495 note;
Gladstone's intention to recommend, as his successor, iii. 512;
otherwise mentioned, ii. 260, 265; iii. 50 note, 67, 69, 105, 186, 195, 198, 301, 306, 429, 497 note.

Spencer, Lady Sarah, iii. 518.

Sport, Gladstone's view of, i. 116.

Spring-Rice, T., Lord Monteagle, i. 420 and note.

Spurgeon, Rev. Charles, ii. 135, 272, 530, 531.

Stafford, Augustus, i. 356.

Standard, iii. 264 note.

Stanhope, Lord (Lord Mahon), i. 351 note, 438, 569; ii. 536.

Stanley, Dean, position of, at Oxford (1847), i. 335;
on Oxford reform, i. 498, 503;
serves on Oxford commission, i. 499;
on religious tests, i. 506;
visits to Monte Cassino, ii. 219;
in Rome, ii. 222;
death of, iii. 98;
otherwise mentioned, i. 15, 46-47; iii. 98.

—— Edward, Bishop of Norwich, i. 46.

—— Lady Augusta, ii. 216 and note; ii. 222.

—— of Alderley, Lord, ii. 39-40, 118.

——, Lord, see Derby.

Stanmore, Lord (Arthur Gordon), private secretary to Gladstone, i. 597, 604-608;
Gladstone's letters to, i. 573; ii. 225, 550, 639; iii. 139;
otherwise mentioned, i. 399 note2; 490; ii. 88.

Stansfeld, Sir James, ii. 113 note2, 415, 504, 645; iii. 297 note.

State in its Relation with the Church, The, Hope's interest in, i. 162, 172-173;
Gladstone's purpose in, i. 172;
his later estimate of, i. 179-180;
opinions on, i. 175-177;
German translation of, i. 181 note.

Stead, W., ii. 550 note.

Stephen, Sir James, i. 127, 142 note, 146, 147, 359.

Sterling, John, i. 177; ii. 534.

Stewart, Colonel Sir Herbert, iii. 145-147, 155, 160, 165.

Stocker, C. W., i. 78.

Stockmar, Baron, ii. 244.

[636]Stopford, Archdeacon, ii. 258-259.

Storks, Sir Henry, i. 614, 616, 617; ii. 649-650.

Stowe, Mrs. Beecher, ii. 72.

Strahan, Sir George, iii. 32 note.

Stratford, Lord, see Redcliffe.

Strauss, ii. 524 and note2, 525.

Strossmayer, Bishop, iii. 352-353.

Stuart, R., i. 237.

Stubbs, Bishop, ii. 535, 561.

Suakin, iii. 178, 180 note.

Succession duty, i. 463, 465, 474, 513.

Success, Gladstone's view of, i. 213-214.

Suffrage, see Franchise.

Sugar duties, i. 236, 643-644; ii. 632-634.

Sullivan, Sir Edward, ii. 264, 279, 283.

Sumner, Bishop, iii. 96 note.

—— Charles, i. 441; ii. 70, 75, 398, 401, 402.

Sunbeam, Gladstone's cruise in, iii. 217-218.

Sussex, Duke of, i. 178.

Sutherland, Duchess of, Gladstone's letters to, ii. 71, 88, 89, 146, 182-197, 215-217, 218, 246;
friendship for Gladstone, ii. 183, 197;
death of, ii. 197.

Sutherland, Duke of, ii. 111, 112, 185-186.

Sutton, Manners (Speaker), i. 100.

Sydenham, Lord (Poulett Thomson), i. 142 note.


Tait, Archbishop, on Oxford commission, i. 499;
Gladstone's letter to, on Essays and Reviews judgment, ii. 164;
consultations with, on Irish Church bill, ii. 261-262, 267-270, 274, 278, 624;
conversation with Disraeli, ii. 265 and note;
on Gladstone's concern at outbreak of Franco-Prussian war, ii. 335;
Gladstone's relations with, iii. 94;
erastianism of, iii. 471.

Talbot, ——, i. 380 note2.

—— Bp. of Rochester, ii. 436.

Talfourd, Sir T. N., i. 135, 136; iii. 467.

Talleyrand, i. 515 note; ii. 343; iii. 485.

Tariff revision (1842), i. 255-257;
(1845) i. 279.

—— treaties, attempts at, i. 267; ii. 21.

Taste, i. 190.

Taunton, Lady, ii. 183.

Taxation:—
Chamberlain's views on (1885), iii. 174, 224.
Collection of taxes, ii. 650.
Conveyance duties, ii. 373, 651.
Customs, articles liable to, in various years, ii. 25 and note.
Direct, ii. 62, 63, 634.
Fire insurance duty, ii. 373, 651.
Gladstone's policy regarding (1857), ii. 632-635.
Home Rule bill's provisions regarding, iii. 302, 306-307.
House tax, i. 106, 436-437.
Income tax:—
Assessments for, in 1842 and 1862, ii. 67.
Chamberlain's pronouncement on, iii. 174.
Charities, proposed extension to, ii. 65-66.
Committee on (1851), i. 459.
Crimean war, effect of, i. 474.
Disraeli's proposals regarding (1852), i. 436.
Expenditure, spirit of, fostered by, ii. 62.
Gladstone's policy regarding (1853), i. 460, 462, 465, 466, 468, 471, 472; iii. 537;
(1857) ii. 632-634;
(1869) ii. 651;
(1874) ii. 478, 483.
Ireland, proposals regarding, i. 465, 646.
Peel's policy regarding, i. 251;
his miscalculation, i. 474 and note.
Rate of, in 1866, ii. 58.
Repeal of, possible only in 1874, ii. 496.
Rise of, in 1859, ii. 19.
Unpopularity of, i. 254-255.
Indirect, ii. 21, 63, 634.
Local—Goschen's Local Rating bill, ii. 337, 388;
question of (1874), ii. 479, 481, 482.
Malt duty, i. 436; ii. 651; iii. 7.
Match tax, ii. 373 and notes.
Powers regarding, ii. 40.
Probate duty, ii. 650.
Soap duty, i. 462, 465.
Sugar duties, i. 236, 643-644; ii. 632-634.
Tea duty, Disraeli's operation on (1852), i. 436;
Gladstone's operation on (1853), i. 462;
Lewis' additions to, ii. 633;
Gladstone's policy regarding, ii. 632-635.
Tea licences, ii. 650.
War, for, i. 515-518.
Arthur Young's view of, i. 559.

Taylor, Colonel, ii. 448.

—— Sir Henry, remark of, on Gladstone, i. 27;
on money-dealings, iii. 420;
otherwise mentioned, i. 135, 205 and note; ii. 55, 195 note, 358; iii. 488.

[637]Tea duties, see under Taxation.

Tegernsee, iii. 351-352.

Telegraph Act (1844), i. 268.

Tel-el-Kebir, iii. 83, 120 note.

Temple, Archbishop, position of, at Oxford (1847), i. 335;
advocates civil service reform, i. 512;
views on Gladstone's Irish Church bill, ii. 264 note1;
work on educational reform (1869), ii. 312;
appointment to Exeter, ii. 431-432.

—— William, i. 392, 400.

Temporal power, see Churches—Roman.

Tenants Relief (Ireland) bill, iii. 353.

Tennyson, Alfred, Lord, Essay Club's vote on, i. 59;
lines on Prince Consort, ii. 95;
Gladstone's estimate of Maud, ii. 184; iii. 547-548;
later estimate, ii. 581;
given Gladstone's translation of Iliad, Bk. I. ii. 190;
Gladstone's visit to (1871), ii. 377;
on Irish self-government, ii. 540;
pension of, ii. 540 note;
reads Harold, ii. 557;
conversation with, on theology, ii. 558;
with Gladstone on Pembroke Castle, iii. 115, 116;
at Kirkwall, iii. 117-118;
views on Franchise bill, iii. 132;
Locksley Hall, Gladstone's article on, iii. 353-354;
early work of, iii. 484;
Gladstone's essay on, iii. 546-547;
otherwise mentioned, ii. 183, 187, 192, 193.

Tenterden, Lord, ii. 405, 410, 412.

Terrible, Gladstone's voyages in, i. 602, 605-606, 618;
cost of constructing deck cabins on, ii. 64-65.

Tests, religious:—
Abolition of, i. 328; ii. 313 and note1, 314; iii. 257.
Gladstone's early attitude towards (1833), i. 106;
later (1863), ii. 313.

Tewfik, Khedive, constitutional position of, iii. 73;
embarrassments of, iii. 78, 118;
claims of, on England, iii. 119.

Thackeray, W. M., ii. 189, 538.

Theological studies as mental training, i. 514-515 and note.

Thessaly, Palmerston's and Russell's views regarding, ii. 576.

Thiers, M., opposes war with Prussia, ii. 335 note1, 336;
mission to courts of Europe, ii. 345;
anecdote of, iii. 486;
otherwise mentioned, ii. 5, 221.

Thirlwall, Bishop, Gladstone's estimate of, ii. 248;
on Irish Church bill, ii. 269;
on Gladstone's disestablishment speech (1874), ii. 502;
letters from, ii. 536;
memorial to, i. 209 note2;
otherwise mentioned, i. 229; ii. 228.

Tholuck, F. A., i. 181 note.

Thompson, ——, ii. 147 note.

—— Dr. W. H., ii. 228.

Thomson, Dr. Andrew, i. 110.

—— Poulett (Lord Sydenham), i. 142 note.

Thornton, ——, i. 59 note.

—— Sir Edward, ii. 401.

Thring, Lord, i. 501.

Times
Chamberlain's Baptist article in, iii. 367 note2.
Forged letters published by, iii. 391 and note1, 405; libel action, iii. 393-394.
Franco-Prussian treaty divulged by, ii. 340.
Gladstone's retirement, article on (1875), ii. 504;
on his position (1882), iii. 90.
Hartington's letter to, iii. 269, 270, 273.
Irish land question, letters on (1870), ii. 293.
Parnellism and Crime article, iii. 391, 393.

Tocqueville, de, i. 415 note; iii. 470.

Toleration:—
Bradlaugh's question, iii. 12-13, 18.
Gladstone's growth towards, i. 138-139, 316; ii. 137.
Papal aggression question in relation to, i. 410.

Torquay, i. 89.

Tory democracy, iii. 173, 201.

—— party, see Conservative.

Tosti, Padre, ii. 219.

Total abstinence, Gladstone's view on, ii. 192.

Townsend, M., ii. 175-177.

Tractarians, see Oxford Movement.

Traill's New Lucian, iii. 91 and note.

Treaties:—
Berlin convention (1878), ii. 575-576; iii. 82;
enforcement of, attempted (1880), iii. 8-10.
—— memorandum (1876), ii. 549.
Kainardji, ii. 550.
London convention (1885), iii. 122.
Paris (1856), i. 550; ii. 349-356, 607; iii. 522.
San Stefano, ii. 572, 575.
Transvaal, with, iii. 45 and note.
Washington, ii. 390, 405, 410.

Trench, Archbishop, views on Irish church question, ii. 248, 258, 262 note;
Gladstone's letter to, offering help in organising Irish voluntary church, ii. 280.

[638]Trent affair, ii. 73-75, 580.

Trevelyan, Sir Charles, i. 510, 512.

—— Sir G. O., views on abolition of army purchase, ii. 361;
county franchise extension pressed by, ii. 475; iii. 124;
views on Bulgarian question, ii. 559;
question by, on Turkey, ii. 566;
Irish secretary (1882), ii. 654; iii. 71;
chancellor of the duchy (1884), ii. 654;
Scotch secretary, iii. 294, 297 note;
at round table conference, iii. 364 note;
against home rule, iii. 291 note;
resigns, iii. 302-303;
Scotch secretary (1892), iii. 495 note;
otherwise mentioned, ii. 463 note.

Truro, Lord, i. 92, 93, 121.

Tupper, M. F., i. 53 and note, 65.

Turgot, iii. 4, 91.

Turkey:—
Armenian atrocities, iii. 521-522.
Berlin treaty obligations repudiated by, iii. 9;
effect of pressure, i. 10.
Britain—support from (1771), i. 477;
secret convention with, ii. 575, 579, 592;
antipathy of (1881), iii. 74.
Bulgarian atrocities (1876), ii. 548 et seq.
Crimean war, see that title.
Egypt, pretensions in, iii. 73;
irritation at the joint note, i. 76;
declines to join European conference, i. 79;
complications of the conference, i. 81;
unfitness of the Sultan to be protector of the Khedive, i. 118;
interference in, suggested, iii. 147;
frustration of Salisbury policy in, iii. 495.
Foreign consuls murdered in, ii. 548-549.
French, hostility towards (1881), iii. 74.
Gladstone's distinction regarding government of, towards Christians and orientals, iii. 74 note;
his achievements against, iii. 538.
Lebanon government, ii. 580.
Problem of, i. 477, 544.
Roumania and Servia partially released from, ii. 2.
Russia, war with (1828), i. 480;
(1853) see Crimean war;
(1877) ii. 562, 569, 572.
Salisbury policy regarding, iii. 525.
San Stefano, treaty of, ii. 572, 575.
Secret convention with, ii. 607.
Suez canal scheme as affecting, i. 591-592.

Turkey, Asiatic, British protectorate over, ii. 577.

Turner, ——, ii. 146-147 and note.

—— Dr., i. 46.

Tyler, J. E., i. 78.

Tyndale memorial, i. 209.

Tyndall, John, ii. 524.


Ultramontanism, i. 404.

Unitarian chapels, i. 321-323.

Unitarianism, i. 160; ii. 136.

United States:—
Alabama claims, see that title.
Church in, ii. 169.
Civil war:—
Books on, cited, ii. 70 note.
Course of, ii. 75, 81.
Forster's attitude towards, ii. 301.
France and Russia, attitude of, ii. 85.
Gladstone's view of, ii. 70-72, 74-77, 79-82;
later view, ii. 124;
his speeches on, ii. 79-82, 85 and note2, 86.
Lancashire, effect on, ii. 66, 77 note1, 124.
Lewis' estimate of, ii. 69.
Principles of, ii. 70.
Rams built at Birkenhead for confederates, ii. 395-396.
Gladstone—popularity of, ii. 82-83;
tribute to, iii. 532.
Irish—on Home Rule bill, iii. 318, 323;
on papal rescript, iii. 384;
spy from among, at Parnell commission, iii. 404;
Parnell repudiated by, iii. 459.
Materialism of, iii. 475.
Palmerston's attitude towards (1845), i. 367.
Roman catholic prelates in, chances of, ii. 511.
Senate of, ii. 407.
War with (1782), iii. 181-182.

Universities, Gladstone's view of (1833), i. 106 (see also Cambridge and Oxford).

Utilitarians, i. 156.


Vatican decrees, Döllinger's attitude towards, iii. 422.

Vatican Decrees in their Bearing on Civil Allegiance, ii. 515-517;
reception of, ii. 517-520.

Vaticanism, ii. 521; iii. 281.

Vattel, cited, ii. 16.

Vaudois valley, i. 87.

[639]Vaughan, Mr., ii. 79.

—— Rev. ——, i. 59 note.

—— Dean, ii. 433.

Vauvenargues cited, iii. 482.

Veitch, Prof. John, i. 9 note.

Vestiges of Creation, ii. 165, 166 and note.

Victor Emmanuel, King, ability of, ii. 8;
Gladstone's appreciation of, ii. 107, 114;
Gladstone's audience of, ii. 218;
otherwise mentioned, ii. 17, 356, 532.

Victoria, Princess, ii. 103.

—— Queen:—
Chronology:—Gladstone's first presentation to, i. 140;
misunderstanding with Peel, i. 222;
at swearing in of Privy Council (1841), i. 242-243;
Gladstone's audience of, on Maynooth resignation, i. 276;
on Peel's retirement, i. 293;
premier's correspondence with, i. 297, 299;
on Palmerston's relations with Kossuth, i. 415;
on Gladstone's budget speech, (1853), i. 469;
consults Aberdeen on Crimean question, i. 482;
views on Stratford's policy, i. 487;
Gladstone dines with, i. 490;
Newcastle recommended to, i. 493;
refuses resignation of coalition ministry, i. 522;
sends for Derby, i. 525;
for Lansdowne, i. 528;
for Russell, i. 530;
desires continuance of Palmerston government, i. 537;
on Peelites' resignation, i. 540-541;
commends Gladstone's offer regarding Ionian position, i. 612;
reply of, to Corfiote petition, i. 615;
sends for Lord Granville, i. 625;
for Palmerston, i. 626;
draft of letter to, on Peel's government, i. 642;
grief at Prince Albert's death, ii. 89-90, 99;
references to Prince Albert, ii. 96, 98, 104, 105;
at Balmoral, ii. 97-106;
on Danish question, ii. 102, 104, 117, 192;
on Garibaldi, ii. 113 note3;
action on Palmerston's death, ii. 152, 155;
commends Gladstone's leadership, ii. 157;
Russell and Gladstone in audience, ii. 209-211;
sends for Lord Derby, ii. 211;
advised by Disraeli to dissolve, ii. 248;
difficulty regarding Lord Clarendon, ii. 254;
Irish church disestablishment, ii. 259-262, 267-271, 273, 278, 427;
urged by Gladstone to open parliament (1870), ii. 293;
suggested action of, to avert Franco-Prussian war, ii. 327;
army reform, ii. 360, 363, 649;
at Balmoral (1871), ii. 378-379;
seclusion of, criticised, ii. 425-427;
Gladstone's report to, on Irish University bill, ii. 439, 441;
ministerial crisis, ii. 446-455, 480;
Gladstone's communications to, on dissolution, ii. 484-487;
offers peerage to Gladstone, ii. 493;
receives ministers' resignations, ii. 493 note;
remarks on Gladstone's retirement, ii. 504-505;
averse to meddling with ecumenical council, ii. 510;
on Disraeli's proposed resignation, ii. 550;
Hartington's audiences of, ii. 621-624;
views on Lowe's viscounty, ii. 631;
friendship for Dean Wellesley, iii. 93;
desirous of Harold Browne's appointment to Canterbury, iii. 95-96;
on cabinet reconstruction (1882), iii. 100;
urges Gladstone's acceptance of a peerage, iii. 104;
Gladstone's memorandum to, on case between Lords and Commons, iii. 129;
her efforts towards settlement, iii. 130-139;
on Egyptian question, iii. 80, 159, 162, 167, 179;
Gladstone's letters to, on ministerial defeat, i. 199, 202;
suggests continuance, i. 203;
summons Lord Salisbury, i. 204;
Gladstone's audience of, i. 205;
negotiations through Sir H. Ponsonby, i. 205-208;
offers Gladstone an earldom, i. 209;
Gladstone's audience of (Feb. 1, '86), iii. 290, 291;
views on Gladstone's electioneering, iii. 344;
Gladstone's final audience of (1886), iii. 347-348;
Gladstone's last cabinet report to, iii. 511;
Gladstone's last audience of, iii. 513-514;
last meeting with Gladstone, iii. 524.
Enthusiasm, dislike of, ii. 425.
Gladstone, letters to, ii. 89-90, 185, 252, 459, 526, 527, 649; iii. 15-16, 40, 115-117, 167, 180, 192, 199, 202, 209, 515;
appreciation of, ii. 267, 426;
friction with, ii. 427-428, 599;
his estimate of, ii. 424, 626, 628.
Gladstone, Mrs., letter to, ii. 472-473;
telegram to, iii. 531.
Home Rule, attitude towards, iii. 291.

[640]Otherwise mentioned, i. 199, 274, 276, 448; ii. 31, 67, 74, 104-141, 182, 186, 189, 191, 208-209, 418, 472, 499, 617; iii. 6, 23-24, 385.

Villafranca, ii. 7, 13.

Villiers, de, chief justice, iii. 33, 41.

—— C., i. 249, 433; ii. 33, 37, 45, 635-636.

Virgil, iii. 481.

Vitzthum, i. 576 note, 591 note.

Vivian, third Lord, iii. 116.

—— Sir Hussey, iii. 386.

Vivian Grey, ii. 499.

Votes of confidence, Gladstone's dislike of, ii. 209, 442.


Wakefield, E. G., i. 358, 361 note3.

Wales:—
Bishoprics question, i. 260 and note, 288.
Church disestablishment question in, iii. 367 and note2, 471, 495.
Election results in (1874), ii. 490;
(1880) ii. 613, 614.
Gladstone's tour in (1887), iii. 386, 387.
Home rule (Irish), attitude towards (1886), iii. 323, 346.

—— Prince of (King Edward VII.), on Danish question, ii. 120;
on Phœnix Park murders, iii. 68;
friendliness to Gladstone, iii. 103, 105;
Gladstone's letter to, iii. 108;
gift to Gladstone on golden wedding anniversary, iii. 417;
letter from, on Gladstone's impending resignation, iii. 510;
Gladstone's estimate of, ii. 294, 378; iii. 200;
otherwise mentioned, i. 275; ii. 92, 141; iii. 322, 385, 524, 533.

—— Princess of (Queen Alexandra), ii. 99, 189, 499; iii. 117, 417, 510.

Walewski, i. 491; ii. 21.

Wallace, D. Mackenzie, ii. 561.

Wallachia, ii. 3.

Wallenstein, ii. 101.

Walpole, Sir R., i. 37; ii. 59, 61, 91, 638.

—— Spencer H., i. 561, 583, 631; ii. 31, 39.

—— Spencer, i. 467 note.

Walsh, Dr., iii. 449.

—— Father, ii. 535.

War:—
Gladstone's opinion of, iii. 182-183 and note; 547-548.
Manchester school's view of, iii. 182.
Popular fevers for, ii. 221, 574, 575.
Preparations for, effect of, ii. 44.
Taxation and loans for, i. 515-518.

Ward, Mrs. Humphry, iii. 357-359.

—— W. G., i. 274, 313-316, 331; ii. 165.

Waste lands, committee on, i. 358.

Waterford, Lord, iii. 143 and note.

Watson, Colonel, iii. 149.

Watts, George, ii. 541-543.

Webster, Daniel, ii. 369.

—— Sir Richard, iii. 394, 398, 409.

Welby, Lord, iii. 306, 526.

Wellesley, Dean, i. 39; ii. 89, 273-275; iii. 92-94.

Wellington, Duchess of, iii. 93.

—— Duke of, retrenchments by, i. 121;
unpopularity of, i. 122;
at Drayton, i. 133;
methodical ways of, i. 134;
Gladstone's first interview with, i. 143;
view of, on church question, i. 155;
on China question, i. 225;
Gurwood on, i. 228;
on boundary question, i. 260;
on 'the Queen's government,' i. 283;
advises dissolution, i. 290;
on Peel's view of party, i. 290;
as premier, i. 300;
on Ionian Islands, i. 598;
leadership of Lords by, ii. 369;
brevity of, ii. 532, 545;
letters from, ii. 545;
cabinet fight over statue of, iii. 5;
Gladstone's estimate of, iii. 481;
position of, iii. 485-486;
otherwise mentioned, i. 68-69, 75, 110, 120, 149, 243, 376, 543, 641-642; ii. 641, 649, 653; iii. 277, 473.

Wells, David Ames, ii. 373.

Wesley, John, i. 319.

West, Sir Algernon, ii. 279.

Westbury, Lord (Sir Richard Bethell), Gladstone assisted by, i. 472 note1, 501;
views on Divorce bill, i. 570-571;
on Ionian Islands, i. 620 note2;
on stamp duties, ii. 64;
on Danish question, ii. 118;
Essays and Reviews judgment, ii. 164;
otherwise mentioned, i. 502, 518.

Westminster, Duke of, iii. 523 note.

—— Lord, i. 239.

—— Abbey, ii. 460; iii. 6, 533.

Wharncliffe, Lord, i. 75, 242.

Whately, Archbishop, i. 51, 57, 158.

Whigs:—
Characteristics of (1853), i. 446.
Coalition of Peelites with (1853), i. 443 et seq.
Defeat of (1841), i. 237; ii. 203 note2, 264.
Finance of, i. 458, 459.
Fusion of seceders with tory party, i. 139.
Influence of, till 1868, iii. 293.
Name of, discussed, 422.
Opposition of, to Peel (1835), composition of, i. 419-420 and note.
Protectionist combination with, i. 290.

[641]Whitbread, S., iii. 12, 303 note.

White, Blanco, i. 57, 74, 217.

—— Edward, ii. 134.

Whiteside, Chief Justice, ii. 128.

Wigan, i. 287.

Wilberforce, Samuel, Bishop (of Winchester), advice to Gladstone, i. 150-151;
on marriage question, i. 569;
advocates revival of convocation, ii. 162;
on rise of Disraeli, ii. 230;
archbishopric of York desired for, by Gladstone, ii. 430;
death of, ii. 459;
Gladstone's estimate of, 460;
Life of, ii. 597;
Gladstone's estimate of, i. 227; ii. 460;
his estimate of Gladstone's position, ii. 134, 171;
Gladstone's letters to, i. 387; ii. 149, 159, 162;
otherwise mentioned, i. 568; ii. 183, 423, 534; iii. 96 note.

—— William, Gladstone's meeting with, i. 12;
emancipation views of, i. 104;
Gladstone's estimate of, i. 106-107;
Peel's view of, i. 150;
otherwise mentioned, i. 23, 213, 236.

Wilbraham, Mrs., i. 234.

Willes, Sir James Shaw, ii. 383.

William I., Emperor, on Russell's despatch, ii. 16;
interviews with Benedetti, ii. 330-331, 333 note;
San Juan boundary question referred to, ii. 405.

—— III., King, iii. 284 note.

—— IV., King, Melbourne government dismissed by, i. 118 and note;
death of, i. 140;
perversity of, i. 144;
otherwise mentioned, i. 103; iii. 653.

William George Ward and the Oxford Movement, i. 313 note2.

Williams, Isaac, i. 111, 307 note.

—— R., i. 309-310.

Wilmslow, ——, i. 46.

Wilson, Sir Charles, iii. 165.

Winchelsea, Lord, i. 279.

Window duty, i. 106, 459.

Wiseman, Cardinal, i. 173, 174, 318, 408.

Wolf, F. A., iii. 543.

Wolowski, Count, ii. 220.

Wolseley, Lord, in South Africa (1879), iii. 25-26, 31 note2;
defeats Arabi at Tel-el-Kebir, iii. 83;
at Gordon's send-off, iii. 150 and note;
advises preparations for relief expedition, iii. 163;
appointed to command, iii. 164-165;
asks reinforcement, iii. 178;
position of, 179; cited, ii. 360.

Wolverton, Lord, at Hawarden, ii. 474;
letter on leadership, ii. 601-602;
Gladstone's reply, ii. 602;
discusses leadership with Gladstone, ii. 616-617;
at Hawarden (June 1885), iii. 196;
otherwise mentioned, ii. 462, 463, 485, 493, 563, 564, 584; iii. 102.

Wood, Sir Charles, see Halifax, Lord.

—— General Sir E., on South Africa, iii. 37-41;
on General Gordon, iii. 149.

Woods and forests dismissal case, i. 520.

Woolner, Thomas, ii. 191, 192.

Wordsworth, Charles, Bishop of St. Andrews, i. 50, 74, 329.

—— Dr. Christopher, i. 80, 213.

—— William, Gladstone's estimate of, i. 96, 135, 220;
intimacy with, i. 136-137;
on Gladstone's first book, i. 176;
on Kendal railway scheme, i. 269 note; ii. 540;
pension of, ii. 540 note;
Gladstone's reminiscences of, iii. 483-484, 488;
otherwise mentioned, i. 159, 204 and note.

Wortleys, the, i. 123, 468.

Wyndham, Sir W., i. 223 note1.

Wynford, first Baron, i. 75.


York, address from, ii. 130-131.

Young, Arthur, cited, i. 559.

—— Sir John, i. 420, 595, 601, 611.

—— Lord, ii. 469.

Young England group with Disraeli, i. 304-305.


Zambelli, Napoleon, i. 616.

Zante, i. 599, 604.

Zetland, Lord, ii. 78.

Zobeir, iii. 155-160.

Zulu war, ii. 583, 592, 595; iii. 6, 22.

ERRATA

Volume I:

Page 129, marginal date, for Æt. 25 read Æt. 26.

 "  222 and 223, marginal dates, for 1840 read 1839; for Æt. 31 read Æt. 30.

 "  251, line 24, omit and.

Volume II:

Page 49, line 9, for council-keeping read counsel-keeping.

 "  220, line 4, for previous year read 1865.

 "  227, line 23, for 1868 read 1866.

 "  264, line 35, for 91 read 1.

 "  345, footnote, for three years read two years.

 "  455, line 9, for on luxury read luxury.

 "  562, line 24, for made read much.

 "  608, line 11, after 1865 insert 1868.

Transcriber's note:

The cover for the eBook version of this book was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.






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