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190; on the exclusion of Russia |
from the Principalities, 194; warn-
ing to the Porte of Mussulman out-
rages, 195; authorised to make use
of the British fleet in any defensive
operations in the Euxine, 197; not
in favour of Austria acting against
the Greek insurgents, 222; his per-
verse action at the opening of the
Vienna Conference, 257
Canrobert, General, ii. 239
Canterbury, Archbishop of, letter from
Lord John to, on the Gorham case,
ii. 117

Capponi, Marquis Gino, ii. 285
Cardwell, Rt. Hon. E., ii. 225, 226;
enters the Cabinet, 423
Carey, Dr. (head-master of West-
minster School), made Bishop of
Exeter, i. 7 and n

Carignan, Prince, and Central Italy,
ii. 323

Carleton, Mr. (Irish novelist), pension
to, ii. 146

Carlisle, Lord, ii. 167

Carlist insurrection in Spain, ii. 10
Carlos, Don, ii, 10

Caroline, Queen, i. 126, 127
Cartwright, Dr., tutor to Lord John,
i. 11; inventor of the power-foom,
&c., II; his volume of letters and
sonnets, 12; on the Bedford county
election in 1807, 30

Cartwright, Major (the reformer), i. 11
Cartwright, Mr., i. 17

Castlereagh, Lord, i. 115; agrees to
the disfranchisement of Grampound,
124; accepts Lord John's proposals
of Reform, 125, 126; death of, 133;
references to, ii. 11, 13
Catholic Association, the, ii. 199
Cato Street conspiracy, i. 125
Cator (Westminster scholar), i. 8
Cavaignac, General, at the head of

affairs in France, ii. 41, 44
Cavour, Count, meets Lord John, ii.
284, 285, and n; returns to office,
326; his interview with Sir James
Hudson regarding Savoy, 329; de-
fends the annexation of Savoy and
Nice, 329; thanks Lord John for
the immense service' rendered to
Italy, 338, 439 n, 454.
Cayley, Mr., on Lord John's leadership
of the House, ii. 172
Census of 1831, i. 182

Chalmers, Mrs., pension to, ii. 146
Chandos Clause, the, i. 173 n; ii.
155

Charles Albert, King of Sardinia, ii.
36, 44, 45; defeat at Novara, 45 n
Charles X. of France, i. 161, 162
Chartists, riots of, i. 92, 346; monster
procession of, ii. 64
Chatham, Lord, i. 167
Christian I. of Denmark and the
Schleswig-Holstein question, ii. 384
Christian VII. of Denmark formally
incorporates the Duchies of Schleswig
and Holstein into his kingdom, ii. 385
Christian VIII. of Denmark and the
Schleswig-Holstein question, ii. 385
Christian IX. of Denmark (Prince of
Glücksburg) and the Schleswig-
Holstein question, ii. 387; succeeds
Frederick VII., 392

Church of England, Temporalities Bill,

256; legislative reform for the,
271, 272; Rate Bill, 284, 290; ex-
citement in, over the Gorham case,
ii. 116-118; indignation with the
Pope's division of England into
twelve sees, 118; discontent with
the Durham Letter, 121
Churchill (at Dr. Moore's school), i. 4n
Cintra, convention of, i. 39
Clanricarde, Lord, i. 438
Clare, Lord, i. 14, 36, 37, 45
Clarendon, Lord, made Privy Seal, i.
351; opposes the treaty of the four
Great Powers in the Turko-Egyptian
War, 360; at Holland House, 362;
letter to Lord John, 372; on Irish
reforms, 411; on the formation of a
Ministry, 427; letter to Lord John,
with enclosure from Mr. C. P.
Villiers, 456; on loans to Irish rail-
ways, 461; made Viceroy of Ireland,
470; propositions for dealing with
Irish discontent, 477; advises the
suspension of Habeas Corpus, 482;
his Arms Bill, 485-487; proclaims
disturbed districts in Ireland, 487;
on Palmerston's action in the Foreign
Office, ii. 5; declares civil war in
Ireland to be imminent, 60; again
proposes the suspension of Habeas
Corpus in Ireland, 62; thanks Lord
John for his 'stout declaration,' 63;
threatening nature of his position in
Ireland, 67n; process against John
Mitchell, 68; proceedings against
editors of Irish journals, 68; favours
Irish emigration, 73; devises a mea-
sure for such emigration, 75; believes
in martial law for Ireland, 77; and
prefers machinery for preserving or-
der to remedial legislation, 77; asks

for the renewal of the Habeas Corpus
Suspension Act, 77; delighted with
Lord John's speech on his Irish
policy, 81; promise of support from
Lord John in his action towards Lord
Roden, 82; inquires into the Orange-
Riband screed at Dolly's Brae, and
dismisses Lord Roden from the com-
mission of the peace, 82; is of
opinion that the Lord-Lieutenancy
cannot be permanently retained, 84;
agrees with the proposal to substitute
a fourth Secretary of State for the
Lord-Lieutenant, 85; congratulates
Lord John on his approaching fall,
92n; desires to subsidise a newspaper
in his party's interests, 95, 96; dis-
approves of Lord John's policy in the
slave trade, 106; willingness to re-
linquish the Irish Viceroyship, 139;
his policy defended by Lord John,
143, 144; suggested as Prime Minis-
ter, 152; letter to Lord John on the
statement that there was an intrigue
against the latter's leadership, 153,
158; on Lord John's leadership of
the House, 171; his comment on
Colonel Rose's summons of the
British fleet, 179; opinion of Lord
Stratford de Redcliffe, 180 n, 186;
agrees with Lord John's estimate of
the situation before the Crimean War,
183; Lord John's memorandum on
the Eastern question laid before
him, 188, 203; quoted, 213; ap-
proves of the subsidising of Sweden
in the war with Russia, 221; letter
to Lord John on the latter's con-
templated resignation, 231; Lord
John's letter to him on the Vienna
Conference, 247; letters to Lord
John as to the latter taking office,
251, 252; on the action of Lord
Stratford de Redcliffe, 256; ex-
plains the new neutralisation pro-
ject to the Vienna Conference, 263;
appeals to Lord John not to resign,
269; strained relations between him
and Lord John, 305; invited to take
the Foreign Office by Lord John,
422; his death, 457 n
Clarke, Mary Anne (trafficker in com-
missions), ii. 107

Clive, Mr. (son of Earl Powis), i. 61,

69, 70

Cobden, Mr., national testimonial to,

i. 441; declines Lord John's offer
of office, 442; his pamphlet, 'The
Three Panics,' ii. 19, 31; on the

Ministry of 1851, 128 n; quoted,
144, 153-155; introduces the motion
which secured Lord Palmerston's
defeat, 293

Cockburn, Lord, i. 47

Coercion Bills, i. 211, 213, 438, 482
Collier, Mr. (afterwards Sir J.), and
the question of the Alabama, ii.
365

Collier, Sir G., i. 75
Colonies, the, autonomy for, ii. 103
Colquhoun, Mr. (member for New-
castle-under-Lyme), i. 352

Conservative party in 1852, ii. 151
Convict classes of Great Britain, i.
345-348

Cooke (actor), i. 7

Coppleston, Dr. (Bishop of Llandaff),
i. 496 n

Corbett, Mr. (British minister at
Florence), ii. 320

Corn Laws, the, i. 423, 433
Corporation Bill, i. 146, 253-255, 276
Cottenham, Lord (Chancellor), i. 303
Coup d'état, the, ii. 138
Courvoisier, murderer of Lord William
Russell, i. 2

Cowley, Lord, despatch to, from Lord
John, on the Holy Places dispute,
ii. 178, 240; writes to Lord John on
the Italian question, 322 n; letter
from Lord John regarding Austrian
intervention, 324, 333, 407, 409
Cowper, Lady (afterwards Lady
Palmerston), i. 162;
Palmerston, Lady
Crabbe, i. 137 n
Cracow, suppression of the republic
of, ii. 8
Cradock's (Mrs. Grove) 'Calendar of
Nature,' ii. 279 n

see under

Crampton, Judge, i. 215, 216, 469
Crampton, Sir John, ii. 438 n
Cranworth, Lord, ii. 166
Crawford, Mr., ii. 151 n
Creech, William (bookseller), i. 48
Cremorne, Lord, created a peer, i.
474, 475

Crimean War, causes of the, ii. 177;
protocol defining its object, 254
Croft, Mr., i. 64; illegally imprisoned
at Lisbon, ii. II n
Croker, Rt. Hon. J. W., i. 173, 174;
his article in the Quarterly on Lord
John's speech at Stroud, 301; attack
on Sir J. Stephen, 352 n; references
to, in Moore's diaries, ii. 150 n
Crown and Government Security Bill,
ii. 63, 67

Cumberland, Duke of, sanctions the
promotion of Orange lodges in the
army, i. 273, 275
Currie, Mr. Raikes, and Lord John's

seat in the City, ii. 197
Curwen, Mr., i. 31
Customs tariff, i. 386

DALHOUSIE, Lord, i. 440
Dalling, Lord, quoted, i. 226
Darlington, Lord, i. 389

Davy, Sir H., his disbelief in lighting
London with gas, i. 36 n

De Grey, Lord (afterwards Lord
Ripon), ii. 423, 424

Demont, Louise (Queen Caroline's
Swiss maid), i. 130

Denison, Dr. (Bishop of Salisbury), i.
496 n

Denmark, in the Schleswig-Holstein
dispute, ii. 132

Derby, Lord, ii. 155; asked by the
Queen to form a Ministry, 246; at
the head of government, 303; pro-
poses a compromise regarding the
Bill for the better government of
India, 306; his intimation to Palmer-
ston as to Conservative support, 344;
meets Lord John at a Palace concert,
345 ; communicates with him as to
action in Ireland, 444
Dessin, M., i. 128

Devon Commission, the, i. 416
Devonshire, Duke of, i. 129; offers the
borough of Bandon Bridge to Lord
John, 139; appointment as Lord
Chamberlain, 147 n

Dickens, Charles, ii. 145; character-
istic letters to Lord John of request
for aid and thanks on behalf of a
Mr. P., 146, 147

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Dillon, Mr., ii. 297
Disraeli, Right Hon. B., attacks Lord
John in the Runnymede Letters,' i.
264; later opinion of him, 266, 400;
his obituary notice of the session of
1848, ii. 94; on agricultural distress,
104; defeated thereon, 121; offers
to accept a colourless declaration in
favour of Free Trade, 160; his Budget
torn to shreds by Mr. Gladstone, 161;
on Lord John's postponement of a
Reform Bill, 208; his attack on the
Aberdeen Ministry and Lord John's
reply, 227, 228; brings forward a
resolution condemning the language
and conduct of the government,
271; defeated, 272; attacks the
Indian administration of govern-

ment, 300; his description of Lord
John's speech in answer to him,
301; becomes Chancellor of the
Exchequer, 304; his attack on the
great Reform Act, 304; accepts an
offer of Lord John regarding Bill for
the better government of India,
307; congratulates Lord John on
going to the House of Lords, 347;
his letter to Lady Russell on the
death of her husband, 469
Dissenters, legislation for, i. 267–272
Divisions of Counties and Boundaries
of Boroughs Bill, i. 187 n
Dodd, Mr. (Westminster master), i. 7
Dodsworth, Mr., ii. 118
Doherty, Mr. (Chief-Justice of Common
Pleas), i. 192

Dolly's Brae, battle of, ii. 82, 83
Dost Mahomed, i. 379
Dowling, Mr., i. 398
Doyle (H. B.') his caricature of Lord
John, i. 52 n; ii. 479
Dred Scott case, the, ii. 350
Drouot, Count, i. 79

Drouyn de Lhuys (French Foreign
Minister), proposes a compromise
between Greece and England, ii. 55;
recalled by his government, 55; in-
terviews with Lord John regarding
Vienna Conference, 250; joins the
Plenipotentiaries from Paris
Vienna, 263; his scheme regarding
the Black Sea, 263; his letters to
Lord John on the same, 265, 266 n;
tenders his resignation to the Em-
peror, 268

at

Drummond, Charles, i. 451
Drummond, Lieutenant, report on the
census of 1831, i. 182; (Under-Secre-
tary for Ireland), marries Miss Kin-
naird, 273 n; proposes that rent-
charge should go to Irish railways,
311

Drummond, Maurice (married to Lord
John's eldest step-daughter), i. 451
Drummond, Mrs. Maurice (Lord
John's step-daughter Adelaide),
quoted, i. 258; her sketch of Lord
John's home life, 281; illness of, 405;
marriage, 451; new year congratu-
lations to Lord John, ii. 143, 288
Du Cane, Sir E., quoted, i. 347
Dudley, Lord (Foreign Secretary), on
Doulocracy at Cassiobury, i. 116 n;
resignation of, 151
Duff, General, ii. 113, 114
Duke, Mr., ii. 151 n
Duncannon, Lord, one of 'a little fac-

tion at Brooks's,' i. 141; on a com-
mittee on Parliamentary Reform,
172; O'Connell's action towards,
190; is Moore's host, 204; his letter
on Lord John's circular to Reformers,
231; in communication with O'Con-
nell, 232 n; 'not an orator,' 260;
on the evictions in County Carlow,
274 ; assures Lord John of the
good feeling of the House, 330;
suggests a peerage for Lord Howick,
350

Duncombe, Thomas, his resolution for
opening Westminster theatres in
Lent, i. 330.

Dundas, Admiral, ii. 30

Dunfermline, Lady, death of, ii. 465
Dunfermline, Lord; see Abercromby,
Mr.

Dunkellin, Lord, his amendment on

the Reform Bill of 1865, ii. 427
Dunning, Mr., quoted, i. 50
Durazzo, Madame, sonnet to her by
Lord John, i. 119; at Genoa, 137;
letter to Lord John on his rumoured
marriage, 156; on the Durham
Letter, ii. 121

Durham Letter, the, ii. 119, 121, 174
Durham, Lord (Privy Seal), proposal
for extension of suffrage, disfran-
chisement of rotten boroughs, and
triennial parliaments, i. 131; forms
a committee for Parliamentary Re-
form, 172; engaged on Irish Church
Reform, 196; objected to by Lord
Melbourne as a Cabinet Minister,
197; mission to Canada, 308, 319,
320; returns home, 321; death of,

397

EAST INDIA COMPANY, its monopoly
terminated, i. 202

Ebrington, Lord (afterwards Lord For-
tescue), elected for Devonshire, i.
165, 176; motion on the rejection
of the Reform Bill, 181; address to
William IV., 185; in Ireland with
Lord John, 204, 205; assures Lord
John of the golden opinions' he has
won, 257; petitions for the commu-
tation of tithes, 268; is for a change
in the personnel of the Melbourne
Cabinet, 321; made Viceroy of Ire-
land, 327; a warm and consistent
Liberal, 334; on the treatment of
the education question by the House,
344 n; action in the Chartist riots,
347 n; on the corn duties, 381; ii.

228

VOL. II.

Ecclesiastical Titles Bill, ii. 123-127,
152
Eden, Dr. (afterwards Lord Auckland),
i. 493 n; ii. 117
Edinburgh, i. 34; intellectual society
of, in 1809, 46-48
Edinburgh Letter, the, i, 419-422
Education, condition of, at the Queen's
accession, i. 342; State, 471
Educational endowments, commission
of inquiry into, i. 263
Egerton, Sir Philip, his account of
Grillion's Club, i. 77 n, 318 n
Egmont, Lord, i. 142 n
Elba, Napoleon at, i. 78
Eldon, Lord, is of opinion that 'it is
impossible to muzzle a fool,' i. 36;
action on the Bribery Bill, 125; as
an equity judge, 263 n
Election petitions, i. 304
Eliot, Lord (Secretary for Ireland), i.
405

Ellenborough, Lord, i. 36; diary quoted,
162; boast regarding the Corporation
Bill, 254; a very able speaker,' 443;
his scheme for the better government
of India, ii. 305

Ellice, Mr., i. 321; quoted, 334 n;
on colonial administration, 352; on
war with France, 361
Elliot, Admiral, i. 379
Elliot, George (brother-in-law of Lord
John), 367 n

Elliot, Gilbert (Dean of Bristol), ii. 230
Elliot, Lady Fanny (daughter of Lord

Minto), i. 359; marriage to Lord
Jolin, 393; see Russell, Lady John
Elliot, Lady Harriet (sister-in-law of
Lord John), illness of, ii. 241; death
of, 248

Elliot, Mr. (afterwards Sir H.; British
minister at Naples, and brother-in-
law of Lord John), is advised by
Lord John as to his action with the
Neapolitan Government, ii. 332; on
the effect in Italy of Lord John's
Italian sympathies, 338; his diplo-
matic career in Italy, 438 n; his
relationship with Lord John gives
rise to a charge of jobbery on the
part of the latter, 439 n; correspon-
dence on the same, 439-443
Elwin, Mr., ii. 482 n
Emmet, Mr., i. 260
Encumbered Estates Act, i. 491
Enfield, Lord, testifies to the devotion of
Lord John's supporters, ii. 275, 305 n
Episcopate, proposal to increase, in
1846, i. 492, 493

2 I

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FACTORY ACT, the, i. 202
Fagging at Westminster School, i. 10
Famine, potato, in Ireland, i. 422, 448,
451, 454; ii. 73
Farini, Signor, ii. 284
Fellowes, Mr., i. 135
Fergusson, Cutlar, i. 246 n
Fergusson, Dr., ii. 27

Ferretti, Cardinal, elected to the ponti-
fical chair, ii. 33; liberal opinions
of, 33; hesitation between progress
and reaction, 34

Fielding, quoted, i. 13

Finlay, Mr. (historian), his complaint

against the Greek Government, ii. 51
Fish, Mr. (American Secretary of
State), ii. 373

Fitzgerald, Lord Edward, i. 260
Fitzgerald, Lord William, i. 13
Fitzgerald, Mr., condemns Lord John's
speech on the Irish Church, ii. 174
Fitzgerald, Vesey (President of the
Board of Trade), i. 152
Fitzgibbon, Richard, i. 13
Fitzpatrick, General, i. 27, 30, 73
Fitzroy (at Dr. Moore's school), i. 4
Fitzwilliam, Charles, ii. 470
Fitzwilliam, Lord, i. 415
Flahault, Count, ii. 331

Fleetwood, Sir H., his motion for
reducing the county franchise, i.
338

Fletcher, Mrs., ii. 230 n
-Follet, Sir W., i. 322
Fordwich, Lord, i. 171 n
Foreign Enlistment Bill, i. 116 n
Forster, John (editor of the Examiner),
ii. 147; on the Alabama claims, 372,
378
Forster, Mr. W. E., Lord John intro-
duces him to a subordinate govern-
ment office, ii. 423; his conduct in
the Education Act of 1870, 456; letter
to Lord John on the Act, 457 n
Fortescue, Lord, i. 204, 205, 420;
his letter to Lord John on Indian
administration, ii. 301

Fortescue, Rt. Hon. Chichester, obtains
the Irish Secretaryship, ii. 301
Foscolo, Ugo, i. 114 n

Fox, Colonel, retires from Stroud in
favour of Lord John, i. 245

Fox, Miss (Lord Holland's sister),
letter of, i. 289
Fox, Mrs., i. 23

Fox, Rt. Hon. C. J., i. 18, 23, 26, 27,
73, 420; letter on Horaces Odes,
11. 107

Fox Maule, Mr. (afterwards Lord
Panmure; Secretary-at-War), would
postpone the organisation of the
Militia till the outbreak of war, ii.
18, 112, 150 n, 199; letter to Lord
John on the differences regarding the
Vienna Conference, 261

France, position of, after the peace
of Tilsit, i. 38; Russia's ally, 38;
treaty with Spain for the partition
of Portugal, 39; revolution of 1830,
161; warlike attitude towards Eng-
land in 1840, 361, 362; feeling towards
England in 1846, ii. 13; flight of
Louis Philippe_from, 26, 32; for-
mally occupies Roman territory, 48;
action in the Greek dispute, 55; the
coup d'état, 138; in the Crimean
War, 178 et seq.

Francis, Don, ii. I
Fraser, Professor, i. 47 n
Frederick VI. of Denmark and the
Schleswig-Holstein question, ii. 385
Frederick VII. of Denmark, his rules
for the better government of Schles-
wig and Holstein, ii. 387

Free Trade, i. 424, 436
French, Fitzstephen, i. 457
Frost, Mr. (magistrate at Monmouth),
i. 355

Fuad Pasha (Turkish Foreign Minister),

ii. 186

Fuller, Major, i. 20
Fuller, Mr., i. 31

GALLOIS, M., i. 128

Garbarino, Marchese, his admiration
for Lord John, ii. 454

Garibaldi, General, sails for Sicily, ii.
332; effects expulsion of Bourbon
dynasty, 333, 334; lands in Cala-
bria, enters Naples, and announces
his intention of marching on Rome,
335; salutes Victor Emanuel as
King of Italy, 335; visits Lord John
Russell, 339; letter on the death of
Lord John, 470

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