INDEX.
- Aberdeen, Earl of, [85], [145], [175], [182].
- Aberdeen, unveiling of Prince Consort’s statue at, [221].
- Addresses of the French colonels, 1858, [198].
- Adelaide, Princess, of Hohenlohe, asked in marriage by Napoleon III., [168].
- Adelaide, Queen, [12], [13], [27], [28].
- Albany, Duke of. See [Leopold].
- Albert, Prince, birth of, [14];
- childhood of, [25], [65];
- education of, [65];
- first visit to England of, [62];
- character of, [64], [81], [86], [89], [255];
- projected marriage, [25], [65];
- tour in Italy, [65];
- second visit to England, betrothal to the Queen, [66], [70];
- rumored to be a Roman Catholic, [71];
- allowance cut down in House of Commons, [74];
- precedence disallowed in House of Lords, [75], [76];
- marriage of, [79];
- favorable impression produced by, [80], [90], [91];
- difficulties of position of, [80];
- growing political influence of, [85];
- Queen’s devotion to, [67], [69], [85];
- political opinions of, [86], [178];
- religious views of, [87];
- accomplishments and tastes of, [91], [92];
- McLeod, Dr., on, [89];
- Stockmar’s influence on, [112], [118];
- title of Prince Consort conferred on, [115];
- devotion of, to his children and home, [120], [143];
- on the strength of Constitutionalism, [153];
- consults Lord Shaftesbury, [154];
- and Lord Palmerston, [156], [171], [209];
- outbreak of unpopularity against, [157], [182], [183];
- and the Great Exhibition, [173];
- on betrothal of his eldest daughter, [188];
- at Cherbourg, [196-7];
- despatch of, on Trent affair, [208];
- death of, [201-12];
- unveiling of statue of, [221].
- Alexandra, Princess of Wales, [206], [217], [228], [239].
- Alfred, Prince, Duke of Edinburgh and Duke of Coburg, [124], [131], [137], [232], [233].
- Alice, Princess, Grand Duchess of Hesse, [119], [123], [130], [201], [212], [215], [216], [220], [230], [231], [233], [234], [235].
- Alix, Princess of Hesse Darmstadt, [136].
- Anti-Corn Law agitation, [58], [99], [101].
- Arthur, Prince, Duke of Connaught, [127].
- Ashley, Lord. See [Shaftesbury.]
- Assassination, attempted, of Prince Alfred in Australia, [232].
- Attempts on the Queen’s life, [89], [90], [119], [139], [140], [141].
- Balmoral, [135], [136], [137], [138].
- Beatrice, Princess Henry of Battenberg, [127], [128].
- Bedchamber question, [60], [72].
- Belgians, King of the. See [Leopold].
- Bloomfield, Lady, [91] n., [142];
- on betrothal of Prince Frederick William and Princess Royal, [187];
- on Princess Alice, [233].
- Bright, the Rt. Hon. John, [29], [101], [177], [207], [222].
- Brocket, Greville at, [95] n.
- Brougham, Lord, [57], [62].
- Brown, Mr. John, [223].
- Bunsen, Baron, letter from Stockmar to, [116].
- Bunsen, Baroness, [33].
- Cambridge, marriage of Duke of, [12].
- Cambridge, Princess Mary of, [169], [234].
- Cambridge, Prince of Wales at, [210].
- Canada, insurrection in, [56].
- Canning, Lady, [97], [127], [135].
- Canning, Lord, in India, [192], [194].
- Carlyle, Mr. Thomas, on the Queen, [33], [224-6].
- Caroline, Queen, [19], [23].
- Cart, death of, the Prince’s valet, [35].
- Castlereagh, Viscount, [107].
- Catholic Emancipation, [41].
- Charlotte, Princess, [12], [16], [17], [107-110].
- Charlotte, Princess of Prussia, [127].
- Charlotte, Queen, [107].
- Chartism, [58-74] n., [126].
- Cholera, [170].
- Christmas-trees, [120].
- Civil War in the United States, Trent affair, [208].
- Claremont, [109], [166].
- Clarence, Duke of. See [William IV].
- Clarence, Duke of, Prince Albert Victor of Wales, [239].
- Clarendon, Earl of, [170], [171], [177].
- Cobden, Richard, [101], [147], [148], [177], [207].
- Coburg, Duchess of, [13], [25].
- Coburg, death of Duke of, [143].
- Coburg, Duke Alfred of. See [Alfred].
- Connaught, Duke of. See [Arthur].
- Corn Laws, repeal of, [99-101].
- Coronation of George IV., [19].
- Coronation of William IV., [16].
- Coronation of Queen Victoria, [39].
- Coronation service, [39].
- Coup d’état, [106], [162], [163].
- Crimean War, [157], [169], [170], [171], [175-187].
- Cumberland, Ernest, Duke of, [11], [18], [41], [45], [47], [76], [107], [122], [123].
- Darmstadt, diphtheria at, [237].
- Davys, Rev. George. See [Peterborough, Bishop of].
- Derby, Earl of, [90], [169], [199], [247].
- Disraeli, the Rt. Hon. B., Earl of Beaconsfield, [163], [170], [195], [250], [252].
- Dufferin, Marchioness of, and medical women in India, [236].
- Durham, Earl of, [56].
- “Early Years of Prince Consort,” [63].
- East India Company extinguished, [193].
- Edinburgh, Duke of. See [Alfred].
- Empress Eugénie, [184], [197], [237].
- Empress Frederick, [117], [120], [131], [133], [185], [186], [187], [189], [190], [221].
- Eôs, the Prince’s greyhound, [82].
- Exhibition of 1851, [173].
- Financial Reforms of Sir Robert Peel, [103].
- Fortifications of south coast, [207].
- France, death of Prince Imperial of, [237].
- Franco-German War, [232].
- Frederick William I., King of Prussia, [122], [178].
- Frederick William II., King of Prussia and Emperor of Germany, [187], [228], [239].
- Garibaldi, [206].
- General Election, 1837, [51].
- “ “ 1841, [95].
- “ “ 1857, [198].
- “ “ 1859, [247].
- George III., [12].
- George IV., [11], [16], [18].
- German Unity, [86], [105], [107], [117], [178], [239].
- Gladstone, the Right Hon. W. E., [103], [182], [207], [248], [249].
- Gordon, death of General, [238].
- Graham, Sir James, Home Secretary, [96].
- Granville, Earl, [164], [169], [218].
- Greville’s account of Queen’s accession, [47];
- description of Queen’s announcement of her betrothal, [69];
- on Royal Family at Balmoral, [138].
- Grey, Earl, [101].
- Guizot and the Spanish marriages, [145].
- Hanover, Ernest, King of. See [Cumberland].
- Hartley Colliery explosion, [218].
- Hastings, Lady Flora, [59], [72].
- Haynau, General, [159-161].
- Helen, Princess of Waldeck, Duchess of Albany, [238].
- Helena, Princess (Princess Christian of Schleswig-Holstein), [125], [230].
- Herbert, the Hon. Sidney, [180].
- Hesse, Prince Louis of, [202], [217], [225], [228].
- Hesse, Princess Louis of. See [Alice, Princess].
- Hohenlohe, Princess Adelaide of, [168].
- Hohenlohe, Princess Feodore of, [138], [139], [218].
- Holland, Lady, [71].
- Holloway College opened by the Queen, [236].
- Hume, Mr. Joseph, [41], [74].
- Imperial, death of Prince, [237].
- India, Empress of, [194].
- India, medical women for, [236].
- India, Queen’s proclamation after Mutiny, [192].
- Indian Mutiny, [187], [193].
- Ireland, Queen’s visits to, [124], [125], [205].
- Irish Church Disestablishment Bill, [248-51].
- Irish famine, [100], [149].
- Italy, Victor Emmanuel, King of, [206].
- Jameson, Mrs., on the Queen, [38].
- Jordan, Mrs., [17].
- Juarez, [237].
- Jubilee, the Queen’s, [236], [239], [244].
- Kennington Common, Chartist assembly on, in 1848, [151].
- Kent, Duchess of, [16], [17], [20], [21], [29], [35], [37], [79], [123], [200], [201].
- Kent, Duke of, [12], [15], [16], [107].
- Kossuth in England, [161].
- “Leaves from the Journal of our Life in the Highlands,” [34], [188].
- Lehzen, Baroness, [30], [37], [61], [111].
- Leiningen, Prince Charles of, [138].
- Leopold, Prince, afterwards King of the Belgians, [16], [20], [23], [24], [25], [30], [54], [63], [106], [108], [109], [110], [166], [202], [212], [213], [236].
- Leopold, Prince, Duke of Albany, [24], [128], [206], [212], [236].
- “Life of the Prince Consort,” [76].
- Lorne, Marquis of, [124], [220].
- Louis Philippe, [144], [146], [147], [165], [166].
- Louise, Princess, Marchioness of Lorne, [125], [153], [220].
- Lyndhurst, Lord, [57].
- Lyttleton, the Dowager Lady, [124].
- Malmesbury, Earl of, [91], [165], [169], [193], [229], [253].
- Marie, Archduchess of Russia, Duchess of Coburg, [136], [232].
- Martineau, Miss Harriet, on Queen’s early training, [31];
- on Queen’s accession, [49].
- McLeod, Dr., [89], [220].
- Medical women in India, [236].
- Melbourne, Viscount, [52], [60], [78], [94], [95] n., [99] n., [111], [121].
- Mendelssohn on the Queen’s singing, [36].
- Mexico, Emperor Maximilian and Empress Charlotte, [237].
- Mill, Mr. J. S., [56].
- Mitchel, Mr. John, [150].
- “More Leaves from a Journal of our Life in the Highlands,” [34], [223].
- Napoleon III., [162], [166], [167], [168], [184], [185], [195-8].
- Neale’s, Mr., legacy to the Queen, [139].
- Neapolitan insurrection and Lord Palmerston, [159].
- Newcastle, Duke of, [183].
- New Poor Law of 1834, [58].
- Nicholas I., Emperor of Russia, [108], [134], [176], [181].
- Nicholas II., Emperor of Russia, [136].
- Nightingale, Miss Florence, [180].
- Nursery establishment, the Queen’s, [117], [119-131].
- Oaks Colliery explosion, letter from widows to Queen, [240].
- O’Connell, Daniel, [44], [149].
- Orange plot in 1835, [41].
- Orleans family, the, [126], [166].
- Orsini plot, the, [198].
- Osborne, purchase of, [135];
- gardens of, [92], [136];
- Swiss cottage at, [135], [136].
- Oxford’s attempt on the Queen’s life, [90], [119].
- Palmerston Administration, defeat of, in 1858, [198], [199].
- Palmerston, Viscount, [91], [101], [118], [146] n., [156-172], [177], [184], [207-209].
- Paris, Queen’s visit to, [185].
- Peel, Sir Robert, [45], [58], [61], [74], [83], [85], [95-103], [134], [142].
- Peterborough, Bishop of, Queen’s preceptor, [29].
- Portugal, death of King of, [210].
- Precedence of Prince Albert disallowed in House of Lords, [77].
- Press attacks on Prince Albert, [183];
- on Princess Royal’s betrothal, [188].
- Prince Consort. See [Albert].
- Prince of Wales. See [Wales].
- Princess Royal. See [Empress Frederick].
- Prussia, Frederick William I., King of. See [Frederick William I.]
- Prussia, Prince of. See [William I.], King of, and Emperor of Germany.
- Prussia, Frederick William, King of, and Emperor of Germany. See [Frederick William II.]
- Queen. See [Victoria].
- Queen’s Titles Act, [195].
- Queen’s Jubilee, [236], [239], [244].
- Reform Bill, Lord Palmerston’s objections to, [171].
- Regency Bill, 1830, [37].
- Regency Bill, 1840, [89].
- Royal Household, reform of, [132-4].
- Russell, Lord John, [42], [61], [62], [101], [158], [161], [163], [171], [229].
- Russell Administration defeated, 1852, [169].
- Russell, Lady William, [171].
- Russell, Dr. W. H., [180].
- Schleswig-Holstein War, [228].
- Schleswig-Holstein, Prince Christian of, [230].
- Schleswig-Holstein, Princess Christian of. See [Helena].
- Scotland, disturbances in, in 1848, [151].
- Scotland, Queen’s love of, [137], [219], [223].
- Scott, Sir Walter, reference to Princess Victoria, [37].
- Scottish Church, Queen’s reverence for, [220].
- Sebastopol, [183], [186].
- Seeley, Sir John, [252].
- Shaftesbury, Earl of, [59], [83], [99], [154], [155].
- Spanish marriages, the, [145-8], [166].
- Stanley, Dean, [35], [174], [233].
- Stanley, Lady Augusta, [136], [203].
- Stockmar, Baron, [54], [55], [62], [65], [66], [73], [77], [85], [104-118], [145], [148], [191], [202], [255].
- Sussex, Duke of, [19], [47], [89], [90].
- Tait, Archbishop of Canterbury, [248].
- Teck, Duchess of. See [Cambridge].
- Teck, Princess Victoria Mary of, [234], [240].
- Tory Party, outbreak of disloyalty in, [73].
- Victor Emmanuel, King of Italy, [206].
- Victoria, Queen, birth of, [13];
- christening of, [14];
- education of, [20], [28], [34];
- great affection of, for her uncle Leopold, [25];
- appearance of, [32], [33];
- Carlyle on, [33], [224-6];
- Baroness Bunsen on, [33];
- care of, for her household and servants, [34];
- as a musician, [36];
- Whig sympathies of, [44], [71];
- accession of, [46];
- consideration of, for Queen Adelaide, [49], [50];
- on the bedchamber question, [62];
- wishes to defer her marriage, [62], [63];
- betrothal to Prince Albert, [66];
- announces her engagement to the Council, [69];
- unpopularity with the Tories, [72], [77];
- marriage of, [79];
- efforts of, to preserve the purity of her Court, [83];
- religious views of, [88], [130], [131], [219];
- and Lord Melbourne, [52], [53], [94];
- and Sir James Graham, [96];
- and Sir Robert Peel, [61], [72], [94-103];
- Stockmar’s influence on, [111-118];
- attempts on life of, [90], [119], [139], [140], [141];
- birth of children, [119-128];
- magnanimity of, [123];
- good health of, [129], [137];
- as a mother, [129], [130], [131];
- legacy to, [139];
- a good sailor, [142], [143];
- first visit to France, [144];
- and Viscount Palmerston, [156-172];
- on the Haynau incident, [161];
- at the opening of the Great Exhibition, [173], [175];
- and Emperor Nicholas, [176];
- disapproves of Day of Humiliation for Crimean War, [178];
- visits Paris, [185];
- and Cherbourg, [196], [197];
- on her daughter’s marriage, [189];
- Indian Proclamation, [193], [194];
- reviews the Volunteers, [199], [200];
- death of mother, [201];
- death of husband, [201-211];
- unveiling the Prince’s statue at Aberdeen, [221];
- children’s marriages, [227];
- prevents war with Germany, [229];
- interest in providing medical women for India, [236];
- letter of, to Miss Gordon, [238];
- letter of, to the nation, on death of Duke of Clarence, [242];
- activity of, in preventing disputes between the Houses of Parliament, [246-252];
- on the secret of happiness, [255].
- Villiers, the Hon. Charles, [101].
- Volunteer movement, the, [198].
- Wales, Prince of, [117], [121], [185], [187], [205], [217], [228], [239].
- Wales, Princess of, [206], [215], [228], [239].
- Wellington, Duke of, [18], [41], [42], [45], [57], [60], [71], [107], [125], [151], [161], [175].
- Whigs, the Queen’s sympathies with, [44], [72].
- Wilberforce, Bishop of Winchester, [29], [88], [188], [228].
- William I., King of Prussia and Emperor of Germany, [178], [239].
- William II., King of Prussia and Emperor of Germany, [205], [228], [239].
- William IV., [12], [16], [17], [18], [20], [22], [23], [24], [46], [51], [111].
- Windsor, housekeeping at, [134].
- Wynn, Miss, account by, of Queen’s accession, [47].
- York, Duchess of, [243].
- York, Duke of, Queen’s uncle, [17].
- York, Duke of, Prince George of Wales, [243].
- York, Prince Edward of, [243].
Messrs. Roberts Brothers’ Publications.
THE RIGHT HONORABLE
WILLIAM E. GLADSTONE
A Study from Life
By HENRY W. LUCY.
12mo. Cloth. Portrait. Price, $1.25.
The obvious difficulty of writing within the limits of this volume a sketch of the career of Mr. Gladstone is the superabundance of material. The task is akin to that of a builder having had placed at his disposal materials for a palace, with instructions to erect a cottage residence, leaving out nothing essential to the larger plan. I have been content, keeping this condition in mind, rapidly to sketch, in chronological order, the main course of a phenomenally busy life, enriching the narrative wherever possible with autobiographical scraps to be found in the library of Mr. Gladstone’s public speeches, supplementing it by personal notes made over a period of twenty years, during which I have had unusual opportunities of studying the subject.—Author’s Preface.
Mr. Lucy begins with the boyhood and early home life of his subject, and in a series of twenty-six graphic chapters, some of the titles of which are “Member for Newark,” “Chancellor of the Exchequer,” “Premier,” “Pamphleteer,” “The Bradlaugh Blight,” “Egypt,” “The Kilmainham Treaty,” “The Stop-Gap Government,” “Home Rule,” “In the House and Out,” Mr. Lucy has drawn, we believe, the most accurate portrait of one of the greatest men of the century yet drawn, and has told most graphically, tersely, and at the same time comprehensively, the story of a great career not yet finished. We have nowhere seen a better description of Mr. Gladstone’s methods, of his strength and weakness as a debater, than Mr. Lucy gives us.—Boston Advertiser.
Mr. Lucy entitles his new book on Gladstone “A Study from Life.” It is more than this, for the book covers rapidly his whole life, from birth to the present time, describing with tolerable clearness the great events of which he has been a part. For an outline biography the reader will find this narrative satisfactory and readable. But the greatest interest attaches to those incidents in Gladstone’s life of which the writer has been an eye-witness. He describes with great vivacity the parliamentary function known as “drawing old Gladstone out.”—Advance.
Roberts Brothers, Boston, have just published an interesting book by Henry W. Lucy, entitled “Right Honorable W. E. Gladstone: A Study from Life.” Though not necessarily so intended, this history of Gladstone is virtually the history of his country during the period of his ascendency at least, and the book is valuable from that standpoint, because it is evidently fairly conceived and executed. The sketch of Mr. Gladstone is that of an admirer, but that will not tell against it with the world at large, which is alone an admirer of the “Grand Old Man.” Beginning with his boyhood, it pictures him with friendly but faithful hand to the end of his career as head of the English Government, in language which gives an additional charm to the book, tracing his course from the day he became Member of Parliament till he was the acknowledged champion of Home Rule, and showing how, as his mind developed with experience, it cast off original errors growing larger day by day.—Brooklyn Citizen.
Sold by all Booksellers. Mailed, postpaid, on receipt of price, by the Publishers,
ROBERTS BROTHERS, Boston.