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Garrard, Mr., A.R.A., his picture of
sheep-shearing at Woburn, i. 24 n
Garvey, Mr., i. 485

Gas-lighting of London, i. 36 n
Gascoign, General, i. 175
Gasparin, M., quoted, ii. 350
General Association of Ireland, i, 284,
286, 287

George III., insanity of, 'i. 51
George IV., institutes proceedings
against Queen Caroline, i. 126; an
Anti-Catholic, 142; death of, 161
Gerard, Count of Holstein, ii. 384
Germany, revolution in, ii. 35; and
the Schleswig-Holstein question, 37,
132; war with France, 456
Germany, Crown Princess of, visits
Lord John, ii. 454

Germany, Eniperor of, his letter to
Lord John on the struggle for re-
ligious liberty, ii. 464
Gibbs, Sir Vicary, i. 31

Gibson, Rt. Hon. G. Milner, attacks
Lord John for his conduct at Vienna,

ii. 272
Gilbert, Davies, i. 126
Gilpin, Mr., i. 5

Gladstone, Rt. Hon. W. E., ii. 156;
for Free Trade, 158; defeats Mr.
Disraeli's Budget, 161; his first and
greatest Budget, 171, 204; resigns
office in Palmerston's Cabinet, 250;
thoroughly approves of Lord John's
Italian policy, 343; loyally supported
by Lord John in his financial mea-
sures, 343 and n; his Budget, 343
and n; letter to Lord John on the
latter going to the House of Lords,
348; splendid results of his fiscal
reforms, 419; defeated at Oxford,
420; his letter to Lord John on the
successorship to Lord Palmerston,
422; does not think a new govern-
ment could be a continuation of
Lord Palmerston's administration,
422; meets Lord John at the Duke
of Buccleuch's, 422 n; introduces
the Reform Bill of 1866, 424; his
additional measures to complete the
scheme, 426; his letter to Lord John
on the latter's decision not to take
office, 446; his motion regarding the
Established Church in Ireland, 429;
sent for by the Queen to form an ad-
ministration, 450; invites Lord John
to a seat in the Cabinet without other
responsibility, 450; passes the Irish
Land Bill, 452; his letter to Lord
John on the same, 455

Glenelg, Lord (Colonial Secretary),
abused by William IV., i. 250 n;
the King's antipathy to him, 270;
at Bowood, 300; motion of want of
confidence in him as Colonial Minis-
ter, 309; Sydney Smith's satirical
allusion to him, 317; Lord John's
proposals with regard to his retire-
ment, 321, 325; action in the West
Indian crisis, 326; his colonial policy,
350

Gloucester, Duchess of, i. 287 n
Gloucester, Duke of, i. 35
Goderich, Lord, formation of his Minis-
try, i. 140-142; resignation of, 144;
see Ripon, Lord

Goito, Piedmontese victory at, ii. 40
Gordon, Lord Alexander (son of fourth
Duke of Gordon), i. 23
Gordon, Lord William, i. 32
Gordon, Sir A., his correspondence
with Lord John, ii. 188 n
Gordon, Sir Robert, i, 159
Gore, Charles, i. 337

Gorham case, the, ii. 116-118
Gortchakoff, Prince (Russian Plenipo-
tentiary at Vienna Conference), re-
fuses to consent to limitation of
Russian force in the Black Sea, ii.
258
Goschen, Rt. Hon. G., appointed to
the Cabinet by Lord John, ii. 423
Gosford, Lord (Governor of Canada),
i. 306, 474

Gosset, Sir W. (Serjeant-at-Arms), i,
273

Goujon, M., i. 37 n
Goulburn, Rt. Hon. W., i. 184
Graham, Dr., made Bishop of Chester,
498

Graham, Sir James, engaged in Par-
liamentary Reform, i. 172; retires
from office, 209, 213; on the Con-
servative benches, 254 n; impresses
on Sir Robert Peel the necessity for
moderation, 329; charges Lord John
with encouraging Chartism, 355;
motion on Chinese policy, 356; in-
troduces Factory Bill, 403; on the
Arms Act, 404; reintroduces the
Factory Bill, omitting education
clauses, 413; 'a bitter opponent,
excellent tactician,' 443; on the Irish
poor-law, 464; offered the Gover-
nor-Generalship of India, ii. 96;
declines the Admiralty, 97; on Lord
John going to the Lords, 99; favours
Lord John's Reform proposals, 101;
arranges with Lord John a Ministry

of Whigs and Peelites, 124; reply to
Lord John's memorandum, 124; the
latter's answer, 127; declines further
negotiations, 127; endeavour of Lord
John to induce him to enter the
Cabinet, 128, 130, 143, 153; bears
testimony to Lord John's endeavour
to check corrupt election practices,
154; indecision in the Russo-Turkish
question, 184; advises Lord John
to concert with Lord Aberdeen on
Reform and the Eastern question,
200; against the postponement of
the Reform Bill, 207; resignation of
office in the Palmerston Ministry, 250
Graham, Sir Thomas (afterwards Lord
Lynedoch), i. 53, 61 n

Grammont, Duc de (French ambassa-
dor at Rome), ii. 327 n
Grampound, bribery at, i. 123, 124;
writ suspended, 125, 130, 131
Grant, Mr., i. 151; see Glenelg, Lord
Granville, Lord, enters the Cabinet, ii.
134 ; President of the Council,
224 and n; thanks Lord John for his
conduct at the Vienna Conference,
275, 276; letters from Palmerston and
Lord John regarding dissensions in
the Liberal camp, 313, 314; letter
to Lord John on the question of
leadership, 316; Lord John's reply,
316; resigns the commission which
the Queen had entrusted to him,
317; his reply to Lord John's ad-
dress relative to the Alabama
awards, 375; on putting the fleet in
motion, 406; on Lord John's deci-
sion not to take office, 447; quoted,
456 n; appointed successor to Lord
Clarendon, 456 n

Grattan, James, returned for Dublin, i.
31, 229 n

Greece, her struggle with Turkey, i.

158; English interference in behalf
of Mr. Finlay's and Don Pacifico's
claims, ii. 51; yields to the English
demands, 55

Greek Church, the, in Turkey, ii. 178-
181, 189, 194, 195
Gregory XVI., death of, ii. 33
Grenville Committees, the, i. 304
Grenville, Lord, i. 92, 153
Greville, Charles, quoted and in-
stanced, i. 49 n, 222, 234, 249, 251 n,
276, 279 n, 289 n, 302, 307, 329 n,
332, 333, 362 n, 372, 376, 385, 389 n,
393, 402, 413, 416, 446, 449, 451,
464, 472 m, 488, 489 n, 490; ii. 2n,
5 n, 7 n, 9 n, 15, 29, 38 n, 69, 72 n,

99, 100, 106, 121, 130 n, 143, 205,
290, 295, 298, 305 n, 306 n, 313
Grey, Lady, her report of an Irish
rising, ii. 70

Grey, Lord (2nd Earl), policy towards
Spain, i. 44; his proposed mission
to Mr. Adair, 53; at Holland House,
56; declines to act with Lord Lans-
downe, 440; opposes the formation
of a Central Association, 153; offers
Lord John the Paymaster-General-
ship, 166; troubles in the formation
of a Ministry, 167; plan of Parlia-
mentary Reform, 172; advises the
King to dissolve Parliament, 175;
admits Lord John to the Cabinet,
176; resignation of, 185; returns to
office with power to create peers,
186; conduct of Irish affairs, 191;
accepts coercive legislation for Ire-
land, 194; schemes of Irish Church
Reform, 195; dealings with the tithe
question, 206; resignation of, 213;
letter to Lord John, 219; 'horror
of the Radicals,' 228 n; declines
concert with the Radicals and Irish
party, 234, 235; declines to reform
the administration, 241; Lord Mel-
bourne's memorandum to him offer-

ing the Foreign Secretaryship, 242;
on O'Connell, 244; death of, 419
Grey, Lord (3rd Earl); see under
Howick, Lord

Grey, Sir Charles, William IV.'s vio-

lent language to him at a council, i.
249 n; observation on members of
the Grey Ministry, 317

Grey, Sir George, made Judge-Advo-
cate, i. 327; on the Arms Act, 482,
486; ii. 17; his Crown and Govern-
ment Security Bill, 63, 67; on the
Chartist processions, 66; sponsor to
Lord John's second son, 70; opposed
to spending more money on Ireland,
75; account of the Queen's visit to
Ireland, 83; weak health of, 85 n;
small influence in debate, 88; action
on the Pope's Bull concerning Eng-
lish sees, 118, 150 n, 151; exclu-
sion from the Cabinet, 167 n; sent
to the Home Office, 202, 203; sug-
gests to Lord John the Presidency
of the Council, 223; offered the
Colonial Office, 223, 224; becomes
Secretary for the Colonies, 226, 303,
364, 423

Grillion's Club, i. 77; Lord John at, 318
Gros, Baron, mediates between Eng-
land and Greece, ii. 53

Grosvenor, Lord, ii. 425
Grosvenor, Sir Richard, i. 475
Grote, Mr., motions on the ballot, i.
308, 338; ii. 379

Guizot, M., i. 362, 363, 370, 371, 372;
his policy in the Spanish marriages,
ii. 5-7; quarrels with Lord Nor-
manby, 8; quoted, 482 n
Gunning, Mr., i. 5

Herschel, Sir John, made Master of the
Mint, ii. 145
Heywood, Lady, ii. 110
Heywood, Sir Benjamin, ii, 110
Higgins, Mr., i. 1
Hill, General, i. 55
Hind, Mr., grant to, ii. 146
Hinds, Professor, ii. 27 n, 116
Hoare, Mr., i. 24

Gurney, Mr., on the Chartist proces- Hobhouse, Sir J., on Abercromby as

sions, ii. 65

HABEAS CORPUS ACT, suspension of,
in Ireland, ii. 60-62, 69, 77
Hailes, Solomon, his tribute to Lord
John's character, ii. 276
Hallam, Mr., resigns the pension which
he no longer needs, ii. 146 n
Hallowell, Admiral, i. 75
Hamilton, Duke of, i. 33
Hampden, Dr., appointed Dean of
Hereford, i. 493; action of the
bishops on his appointment, 496;
consecration of, 498; ii. 116
Hampden, Miss, letter to, i. 498 n
Harcourt, Sir W., description of Lord
John, ii. 482

Hardinge, Sir Henry, accuses Lord
John of supporting the Birmingham
Political Union, i. 181; Chief Secre-
tary for Ireland, 237
Hardwick, Mr. (police magistrate), ii.

147

Hardy, Lady, i. 171 n, 184 n
Harewood, Lord, i. 352
Harrington, Lord, commander of the
forces in Ireland, i. 28
Hartington, Lord (afterwards Duke
of Devonshire), at school at Wood-
nesboro', i. 13; his dog 'Chance,'
20, 28

Hartington, Lord, appointed by Lord
John to first place in the War De-
partment, ii. 424

Harvey, Whittle (member for Colches-
ter), i. 146
Hatherton, Lord, ii. 108
Hawes, Sir B., i. 398 n, 410
Hawkesbury, Lord (afterwards Lord
Liverpool), proposed as Pitt's suc-
cessor, i. 18

Hawtrey, Dr. (Provost of Eton), ii.
289

Herbert (confidential servant), i. 6, 8.
Herbert, Rt. Hon. Sidney, i. 440; ii.

156; urges Lord John not to resign,
212; would subsidise Sweden, 221,
233, 234, 239; resignation of, 250,
295, 421, 422

Speaker, i. 224; letter to Lord John,
229 n; ii. 88, 198

Holland, Lady, at Woburn, i. 37, 38;
delicate state of her health, 42;
letters to Lord John, 142, 352; on
the Catholic question, 142; death
of, 420; legacy to Lord John, 420
Holland, Lord (the first), i. 167
Holland, Lord, author of 'Lope de
Vega,' i. 26; at Woburn, 37, 38;
tour in Spain, 40, 41; advises
Lord John to study at Edinburgh,
45; the only remaining Whig in
England,' 52, 53 n; opinion of Lord
John's translation of the Odyssey,
103; made of sterner stuff' than
Lord Lansdowne, 140; in Opposition
in the Wellington administration,
145; in favour of a Central Asso-
ciation, 153; letter on England's
Russian policy, 159; letter on the
Prince de Polignac, 163; urges Lord
John to attack the strongest of the
Tory strongholds in the election of
1831, 176; comment on Lord John's
speech at Totness, 222; letter on the
death of the Duke of Bedford, 354;
opposes the treaty of European
Powers in 1840, 360; death of, 373 i
inscription composed by Lord John
for his monument, 3732

Holy Places, struggle for the possession
of, by the Greek and Latin Churches,
ii. 178; settlement of the dispute,
180, 194

Hood, Tom, pension to his children,
ii. 146

Hope, Professor, i. 47
Horner, Mr., letter to, i. 78
Horsman, Mr., i. 441; proposal to

exempt professional incomes from
the income-tax, ii. 27
Houghton, Lord, his estimate of Lord
John, ii. 470

Howick, Lord (3rd Earl Grey), at the
meeting on the question of the
Speakership, 233, 255; opposes
the suspension of the Canadian con-
stitution, 307; calibre as a Minister,

316; dissatisfied with the conduct of
colonial affairs, 326, 327; attitude
towards the franchise, 338, 339; pro-
position to promote him to the Post
Office, and call him to the House
of Lords, 350; resigns office, 350;
refuses to take office if Lord Palmer-
ston becomes Foreign Secretary, 427,
431, 432; letter to Lord John on
the latter's formation of a Ministry,
428; reasons for including him in the
Ministry, 443; his remonstrance at
Lord Palmerston's conduct of foreign
affairs, ii. 39; reduces the colonial
garrisons, 45; dissatisfaction with
Palmerston, 48; letter to Lord John
on the Hungarian refugees, 50;
views on Irish legislation, 63, 65;
proposes a loan to Canada, 75;
against further expenditure on Ire-
land, 75; his Canadian proposal
before the Cabinet, 77; accused of
suppressing an important despatch,
92; one of the best Colonial Secre-
taries, and the most unpopular of
Ministers, 103; hostility to his colo-
nial policy, 104, 137, 167 n
Howley, Dr. (Archbishop of Canter-
bury), correspondence with Lord
John on the Hampden appointment,
i. 492-496; death of, 498
Hubner, M., ii. 45

Hudson, Sir James (British minister at
Furin), and the charge of jobbery
brought by the Times against Lord
John, ii. 438 n; his correspondence
on the same, 440-443 n
Hume, the historian, i. 107
Hume, Mr., motions on the Civil List,
i. 126; and on the Irish Church,
207 n; in communication with Lord
John on the Speakership, 233; pro-
position to curb Ministerial powers
by limiting the supplies, 234; draws
attention to Orange Lodges in the
army, 275; acts as a stimulant to
Lord John, 344; his appeal to
Lord John against war with France,
365; attacked by Lord John and
called a chartered libertine,' 472 n;
motion censuring the Government
for its action in the Portuguese
revolt, ii. 12; motion on the income-
tax, 28; measure of Radical Reform,

ΙΟΙ

Hummelauer, Baron, i. 371; ii. 40
Hungary, insurrection in, ii. 49, 135
Hunt, Dr., i. 31, 32

Hunt, Leigh, pension to, ii. 146

Huskisson, Mr., i. 151, 152
Hutt, Mr., opposition to the mainte
nance of war ships on the slave
coast, ii. 104, 105, 413 N

IBRAHIM PACHA, defeats the Turks,
i. 360; defeated by them, 377
Income-tax, abolition of, in 1816, i. 91;
increase of, ii. 25

India, government of, transferred to
the Crown, ii. 307
Indian Mutiny, outbreak of, ii. 300
Infantado, Duc d', i. 67
Inglis, Sir Robert, at the Hundreds
Farm, Woburn, i. 170 n; at Grillion's,
318 n; opinion of Lord John, 357 ;
commendation of Lord John's speech
on Irish affairs, 456
Inkerman, battle of, ii. 232
Ionian Islands, suggested transfer of,
to Austria, ii. 36

Ireland: Arms Bill, i. 447; Church Re-
form Bill, 195-200; Coercion Bill,
213, 438; Municipal Bill, 277, 284,
285, 289, 291. 306, 312, 340; Poor
Law Bill, 284, 289, 310, 455;
Registration Bill, 380, 385; Tithe
Bill, 207, 211

Isturitz, Señor (Spanish minister in
London), ii. 3, 9, 40

Italy, revolution in, against the Aus-
trians, ii. 33, 34; the party of Young
Italy and the Old Catholic party, 33;
appeal to France, 41; considerations
for peace with Austria, 46; events
in the south of, 47

JACKSON, Dr., ii. 116
Jacobson, Dr. (Bishop of Chester), i.
495
Jamaica, proposed suspension of its
constitution, i. 332

Jameson, Mrs., pension to, ii. 146
Jarnac, Count, French chargé d'affaires
in London, ii. 2, 5
Jebb, Colonel (Sir Joshua), i. 346
Jeffrey, Lord, i. 46; anecdote of, 185 n
Jellachich, General, bombards Vienna,
ii. 44

Jews, Parliamentary disabilities of, i.

148 Bill for removing those disa-
bilities, ii. 91

Jocelyn, Lord, speech on Irish discon-
tent, ii, 62, 206

Johnson, Mr. Reverdy, ii. 372
Johnston, Mrs. (actress), i. 6
Joinville, Prince de, appointed to the
command of a French fleet, ii. 14;
his scheme for attacking England, 21

Jones, Ernest (Chartist leader), ii. 65
Jones, Gale (secretary to the Corre-
sponding Society), imprisonment for
libel, i. 49

Jones, Sir William, ii. 373
Junot, Marshal, i. 39

KAINARDJI, Treaty of, ii. 194
Keck, Legh (member for Leicester-
shire), i. 149.

Kemble (actor), i. 7, 8, 26, 27
Killeen, Lord (eldest son of Lord Fin-
gall), i. 48

King, Ben, at Cassiobury, i. 143
King, Locke, his motion for the equali-
sation of county and borough fran-
chise, ii, 122; and for the reduction
of county franchise, 293
Kinglake, Mr., his opinion of the
writing of Lord John, ii. 280, 425
Kinnaird, Lord, i. 34

Kinnaird, Miss (afterwards Mrs. Drum-
mond), i. 239, 240; ii. 288
Knowles, Sheridan, pension to, ii. 146
Koller, Baron (Austrian ambassador),
Palmerston's unauthorised despatch
to him, ii. 132

Kossuth, victories of, ii. 44; Lord
Palmerston's proposed reception of
him, 132, 135; his speeches against
Russia and Austria, 135, 136

LABOUCHERE, Mr., at the Colonial
Office, i. 327; in the Cabinet, 349;
ii. 88, 137, 150 n, 167
Lafayette, General, i. 164

Laird, Messrs., and the Alabama, ii.
364

La Marmora, General, ii. 284
Lamartine, M. de, his circular issued

to foreign courts after the flight of
Louis Philippe, 32; declares the
treaties of 1815 at an end, 35; re-
ceives a deputation from Irish agita-
tors begging for aid, 60; his answer
to them, 64

Lamb, Mr., i. 151; see Melbourne,
Lord

Lambert, Henry, i. 6

Lambton, Mr. ; see Durham, Lord
Langdale, Lord, i. 264 n
Lansdowne, Lord, in the Goderich
Ministry, i. 140; 'victim and dupe
of two of the greatest rogues (poli-
tically speaking) in the kingdom,'
141; negotiation with Canning, 142;
honest as the purest virgin,' 143;
vouches for the staunchness of Lord

John, 143; in opposition in the
Wellington administration, 145; in
favour of a Central Association,
153; views on the Catholic question,
153; declines the Foreign Office,
167; discourages concert with
O'Connell, 232 n; share in memo-
randum to Lord Grey, 243; warmly
supports a pension to Moore, 248;
before the Queen on the formation of
the Russell Ministry, 426; on the
risk of asking Mr. Cobden to take
office, 441; communications with
Lord John on the office of Lord
Lieutenant, 469, 470; on school
grants, 471; letter from Lord John
on Irish affairs, 484; ii. 27; inter-
feres to check Lord Palmerston's
foreign policy, 38, 55, 57; his views
on Irish legislation, 61; on the poor
rate in Ireland, 80; on the rating
clause in the Irish Poor Law Bill,
80, 84, 96; attitude on Reform,
102; his objections to Lord John's
Reform Bill, 129; offers his resigna-
tion, 130, 137; suggested as Prime
Minister, 152; letter from Lord Pal-
merston, 158; writes to Palmerston
on Lord John's willingness to take
office, 159, 160; declines to form a
Ministry, 161; Lord John requests
his counsel on his accepting the
leadership of the Commons in the
Aberdeen Ministry, 162; his mode
of dealing with Russian aggression
on Turkey, 183; against Lord John's
scheme of Reform, 200; insists on
its modification, 202; compromise
with Lord John on the matter, 204;
threatens resignation if the Reform
Bill is proceeded with, 210; com-
munications with Lord John on the
remodelling of the War Department,
236; sent for by the Queen to form
a Government, 246; communicates
to Lord John the objections of the
Government to Austrian proposals
regarding the Black Sea, 259 n; pro-
poses Lord John as a member for
the Club,' 289

Landseer, Sir Edwin, his sketches of
Lord Amberley and Lady Victoria
Villiers, ii. 112
Larpent, i. 474 n'

Lauderdale, Lord, i. 34, 45
Layard, Mr. (afterwards Sir A. H.),
contrasts the policy of Lord John-
with that of Lord Aberdeen in the
conduct of the Crimean War, ii.

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