647.
To Lord Sheffield.
St. James's Street, four o'clock, Tuesday, Jan. 7, 1794.[335]
RETURN TO LONDON.
*This date says every thing. I was almost killed between Sheffield-place and East Grinsted, by hard, frozen, long, and cross ruts, that would disgrace the approach of an Indian wigwam. The rest was something less painful; and I reached this place half dead, but not seriously feverish, or ill. I found a dinner invitation from Lord Lucan; but what are dinners to me? I wish they did not know of my departure. I catch the flying post. What an effort! Adieu, till Thursday or Friday.*
Gibbon died at 76, St. James's Street, on January 16, 1794. He was buried in Lord Sheffield's family burial-place in Fletching, Sussex.
LAST MOMENTS OF GIBBON.
The following account of his last moments is given by Lord Sheffield in his edition of Gibbon's Miscellaneous Works (1814), vol. i. pp. 422-425:—
"After I left him on Tuesday afternoon, the fourteenth, he saw some company, Lady Lucan and Lady Spencer, and thought himself well enough at night to omit the opium draught, which he had been used to take for some time. He slept very indifferently; before nine the next morning he rose, but could not eat his breakfast. However, he appeared tolerably well, yet complained at times of a pain in his stomach. At one o'clock he received a visit of an hour from Madame de Sylva, and at three, his friend, Mr. Craufurd, of Auchinames, (for whom he had a particular regard,) called, and stayed with him till past five o'clock. They talked, as usual, on various subjects; and twenty hours before his death, Mr. Gibbon happened to fall into a conversation, not uncommon with him, on the probable duration of his life. He said, that he thought himself a good life for ten, twelve, or perhaps twenty years. About six, he ate the wing of a chicken, and drank three glasses of Madeira. After dinner he became very uneasy and impatient; complained a good deal, and appeared so weak, that his servant was alarmed. Mr. Gibbon had sent to his friend and relation, Mr. Robert Darell, whose house was not far distant, desiring to see him, and adding, that he had something particular to say. But, unfortunately, this desired interview never took place.
"During the evening he complained much of his stomach, and of a disposition to vomit. Soon after nine, he took his opium draught, and went to bed. About ten, he complained of much pain, and desired that warm napkins might be applied to his stomach. He almost incessantly expressed a sense of pain till about four o'clock in the morning, when he said he found his stomach much easier. About seven, the servant asked, whether he should send for Mr. Farquhar? he answered, no; that he was as well as he had been the day before. At about half past eight, he got out of bed, and said he was 'plus adroit' than he had been for three months past, and got into bed again, without assistance, better than usual. About nine, he said that he would rise. The servant, however, persuaded him to remain in bed till Mr. Farquhar, who was expected at eleven, should come. Till about that hour he spoke with great facility. Mr. Farquhar came at the time appointed, and he was then visibly dying. When the valet de chambre returned, after attending Mr. Farquhar out of the room, Mr. Gibbon said, 'Pourquoi est-ce que vous me quittez?' This was about half past eleven. At twelve, he drank some brandy and water from a tea-pot, and desired his favourite servant to stay with him. These were the last words he pronounced articulately. To the last he preserved his senses; and when he could no longer speak, his servant having asked a question, he made a sign, to shew that he understood him. He was quite tranquil, and did not stir; his eyes half-shut. About a quarter before one, he ceased to breathe.
"The valet de chambre observed, that Mr. Gibbon did not, at any time, shew the least sign of alarm or apprehension of death; and it does not appear that he ever thought himself in danger, unless his desire to speak to Mr. Darell may be considered in that light."
[INDEX.]
[Names, etc., marked with an asterisk occur only in the notes; where names occur in both text and note (on different pages), the numerical note-references are printed in italics.]
A
Abercromby, General, ii. 276, 285
Abingdon, Earl of, i. 90
Abingdon, Lady, i. 90
Abington, Mrs. (Fanny Barton), ii. 4
Abolition of Slave Trade, the, ii. 239, 294
Acland, Colonel John Dyke, i. 325
*Acland, Sir Thomas, i. 273
Acton, Dr., his kindness to Gibbon, i. 36, 37;
his misfortunes, i. 67
Acton, Mrs., Gibbon's opinion of, i. 38
*Acton, Lord, i. 37
*Acton, Sir John F. E., i. 37
Adam, Père, i. 92
Addington, Dr. Anthony, attends Gibbon's father, i. 122;
predicts recovery of George III., i. 122;
attends Godfrey Clarke, i. 238, 241
*Adelaide, Madame, i. 326; ii. 292
*Aitken ("John the Painter"), the Bristol incendiary, i. 301
Albemarle, Lady, i. 207
Alien Bill, the, ii. 363
*Allen, Ethan, i. 270
Almack's Club, i. 283
Althorpe, Lord, ii. 18
America, resolutions of Congress, i. 242;
Declaration of Independence, i. 283;
troubles with, i. 249-251, 256-265 passim, 270, 272, 278, 284, 287 et seq., 316, 324, 325, 329; ii. 9, 25, 69, 151;
treaty with France, i. 333
Amherst, Colonel, i. 174
*Amory, Thomas, The Life of John Buncle, i. 189
*Amyand, Sir George, ii. 184
Ancaster, Duchess of, ii. 300, 315
Ancram, Earl of, ii. 275
Andrews, Richard, ii. 126, 138, 184
*Annual Register, quoted, i. 17, 108, 146, 156, 220, 371
*Anselme, General, ii. 314
Apsley, Lord, i. 149
*Arbuthnot, Admiral, i. 363, 384
Arles, Archbishop of. See Dulau, J. F. M.
Armitstead, Mrs., marries C. J. Fox, ii. 179
*Arnold, Benedict, i. 270, 275, 294
*Arnould, Sophie, ii. 211
Arras, Bishop of (M. H. de Conzie), ii. 266
*Articles, Parliament and the XXXIX., i. 147
Ashburnham, Lord, i. 225; ii. 305
Ashburton, Lord, i. 90, 238;
Madras Council prosecution, i. 362;
Chancellor of Duchy of Lancaster, ii. 13, 96
Ashby, Mrs., i. 253, 287; ii. 22
Associations, formed to support the Government, ii. 349, 352
*Astley, Sir John, i. 148
Aston, Lady, i. 38; ii. 135
Aston, Sir Willoughby, i. 38; ii. 135
Atwood's Club, Gibbon joins, i. 152
Auckland, Lord (William Eden), American Commissioner, i. 332;
Gibbon's colleague on Board of Trade, i. 366;
his advice to Gibbon, i. 387;
M.P. for Woodstock, i. 390;
created a peer, ii. 25;
squib on his mission to France, ii. 148;
signs treaty between England and France, ii. 152;
Gibbon's claret, ii. 282, 288;
at the Hague, ii. 365;
Gibbon's host at Beckenham, ii. 395, 397;
his Journal and Correspondence quoted, ii. 19, 35, 57, 92, 157, 158, 162, 172, 265, 397-399
Augusta, Princess (Duchess of Brunswick), i. 65, 149
Austria, Emperor Leopold of, his meeting with King of Prussia at Pilnitz, ii. 271
Austria, Empress Maria Theresa of, i. 394
*Autobiography, Gibbon's, quoted, i. 25, 29, 173
*Avranches, Bishop of, ii. 324
B
Bach, Johann Christian, appointed Director of Public Concerts in London, i. 204
*Baddeley, Mrs., i. 146
Bagshot camp, review at, ii. 304
Baker, the Jesuit, receives Gibbon into Roman Catholic Church, i. 1
*Ball, Dean of Chichester, i. 399
Balsamo, Giuseppe. See Cagliostro, Comte de
Baltimore, Lord, i. 91
*Bankes, Mr., M.P. for Corfe Castle, ii. 97
Banks, Sir Joseph, ii, 218, 226, 239
Barazzi, M. (Banker at Rome), i. 71, 72
Barbary, and Spain, i. 265
Barré, Colonel Isaac (the Black Musqueteers), i. 26, 145, 238, 240, 250;
Paymaster of the Forces, ii. 19
*Barri, Madame du, i. 313, 314
*Barrington, Viscount, i. 349
*Barrington, Sir J., i. 89
Barrington, Shute (Bishop of Durham), i. 195
Barrymore, Lord, ii. 303
Barthélemy, Marquis de, ii. 355, 370
Bartoli, M., i. 59
Barton, Mr., i. 142, 193
Barton, George (Lord Sheffield's footman), i. 250, 252
Bassano, Duc de, ii. 367
Bathurst, Earl, i. 341, 393
Batt, John Thomas ("Lawyer Batt"), Master in Chancery, and Commissioner for auditing Public Accounts, i. 191, 196, 216, 240, 261, 265, 273, 279, 390; ii. 136, 158, 163, 218, 225, 239, 244, 313, 330, 349
Batten, Mr., i. 162
*Bavaria, Elector of, i. 334
Bavois, Madame de (Miss Comarque), i. 82, 83, 220
Bayley, Mr., i. 17, 119, 152, 249
Bayley, Dr., ii. 394
Beauchamp, Lord, i. 247, 393; ii. 6, 32, 102
Beauclerk, Lady Diana, i. 82, 279, 304, 348
Beauclerk, Topham, i. 82, 279, 280, 299, 304, 333, 348
*Beaumarchais, i. 371
*Beaumont and Fletcher's Knight of the Burning Pestle, i. 284
Beauvais, Bishop of, ii. 342
Beauvau, Princess de, i. 314, 319
*Beckford, Lord Mayor, presents "Remonstrance" to King, i. 113
*Beckford, Mr., and Gibbon's library, ii. 300
Bedford, Duchess of, i. 262
Bedford, Duke of, ambassador to France, i. 30, 32, 35;
and the British Coffee-House, i. 201
*Bedford Correspondence, the, quoted, i. 28
Belmore, Lady, ii. 275
*Belmore, Lord, ii. 275
Bellamont, Lord, his duel with Lord Townshend, i. 180, 182
*Benfield, Paul, i. 308
*Bengal, famine in, i. 184
*Bentinck, Lord Edward, ii. 350
Beriton, Gibbon's Hants Estate, i. 128, 153; ii. 6, 138, 175, 182, 189, 199 et seq., 222 et seq., 227, 234, 240
Berkeley, Lord, i. 58, 74
Berne, Canton of, ii. 283, 295, 299, 316, 370
*Berry, Miss, on Gibbon's library, ii. 301
Bertrand-Molleville, Marquis de, ii. 311, 329
Besançon, Gibbon at, i. 36
*Besson, Madame, i. 60
*Best's Personal and Literary Memorials quoted, i. 396
*Biographie Universelle, ii. 326
Birch, Rev. Dr. Thomas, ii. 366
*Biron, Duc de, ii. 290
Biron, Duchesse de, ii. 289, 324, 333
Black Musqueteers, the, i. 26
Blackstone's Commentaries, quotation from, ii. 205
Blessington, Earl of, i. 2
Blondel, Gibbon's valet, ii. 124, 131
Board of Trade, Gibbon appointed Commissioner of, i. 354, 366;
vote passed against: Burke on value of, i. 378;
suppressed, ii. 14
Bobbin, Benjamin, i. 35
Boissier, i. 94, 105
Bolingbroke, Lady (Lady Diana Spencer), i. 82, 85
Bolingbroke, Lord, "the Bully," i. 82, 85, 312
*Bollmann, M., ii. 292
Bolton, Duke of, i. 39, 44, 153
Bolton, Theophilus, i. 81
*Bombelles, Madame de, ii. 115
*Bondeli, Julie von, her account of Gibbon and Mdlle. Curchod, i. 40
*Bonfoy, Captain Hugh, R.N., i. 189, 265
Bonfoy, Mrs. Hugh (née Eliot), i. 189, 220, 266; ii. 386
Bonham, Mr., ii. 175, 182
Bontemps, Madame, i. 31, 35
Boodle's Club, Masquerade given by, at the Pantheon, i. 212, 215
Bordot, M., i. 22
Borromean Islands, i. 57
Boston, attack upon the teaships in the harbour, i. 205;
Port Bill, i. 206, 208;
investment of, i. 257, 258
*Boswell's Life of Johnson quoted, i. 273
*Boufflers, Duc de, ii. 289
*Boufflers, Marquise de, i. 312
Bouillé, Marquis de, ii. 254, 256, 270, 285, 286, 329
Bouillon, Duc de, ii. 256, 334
Bouillon, Madame de, ii. 334
Boulogne, Gibbon at, i. 27
Bourbon, Abbé de, ii. 115
Bourbon, Duc de, ii. 237, 269
Bourcard, M., ii. 45
Boydell, John (Lord Mayor), his edition of Shakespeare, ii. 276, 359, 374
Bradley, Thomas, i, 35
*Bramston's The Man of Taste, i. 124
*Brandt, i. 143
*Brathwaite, Colonel, ii. 19
*Brentès, Madame de, i. 81
Bricknall, Mr. Gibbon's lawyer, i. 131, 133, 141, 150, 153
Bridgewater, Duke of, i. 27, 28
*Brienne, Cardinal de (Archbishop of Sens), ii. 162, 181
Brighton, Gibbon's house at, ii. 3, 7
Brissoné, Madame de, i. 2
Brissot, J. Pierre (de Warville), ii. 258, 259, 318, 325, 350
*Bristol, Earl of, i. 21, 265; ii. 15
Bristol, Countess of. See Kingston, Duchess of
Bristol, toll-gate riots at, ii. 390
Bristow, Miss, ii. 105, 117
British coffee-house, the resort of Scotchmen, i. 201
Broglie, Duc de, ii. 269
Bromwich, Mr., i. 93
*Brooke, Member of Madras Council, i. 362
*Brooklyn, battle of, i. 287
*Brooks's Club, i. 283, 376
Brown, Lancelot (the landscape gardener known as "Capability Brown"), i. 203
Bruce, James, of Kinnaird, ii. 226
Brunswick, Antiquities of the House of, ii. 228-232
Brunswick, Hereditary Prince of, ii. 115, 117
Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, Duchess of, (Princess Augusta of Wales), i. 65, 149
Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, Duke of, i. 149, 272, 277;
Commander-in-Chief of Austrian and Prussian armies, ii. 311, 319;
his retreat, ii. 319, 326, 346;
his manifestoes, ii. 368
*Brydges, Sir Egerton, ii. 302
Buckinghamshire, Lord, i. 394; ii. 275
Budé, General, ii. 302, 327
*Bull, Lord Mayor, i. 201
*Burges, Sir James Bland, his account of Gibbon's first meeting with Pitt, ii. 28
Burgoyne, General John, his motion on the E. I. Co., i. 184;
in America, i. 249, 291;
his surrender at Saratoga, i. 324, 325;
refused admission to Court, i. 338
*Burgoyne's Maid of the Oaks, i. 219
Buriton. See Beriton
Burke, Edmund, i. 148;
Goldsmith's Epitaph, i. 202;
meeting at Captain Horneck's, i. 207;
description of, in Goldsmith's Retaliation, i. 210;
"a watermill of words and images," i. 240;
"a Committee of Oblivion," i. 248;
the New York Remonstrance. i. 256;
on E. I. Co., i. 294;
Tickell's Anticipation, i. 348;
the Madras Council prosecution, i. 362;
his Establishment Bill, i. 376; ii. 28;
on literary value of Board of Trade, i. 378;
Paymaster-General, ii. 18, 34;
Sheridan sinks into arms of, ii. 172;
criticises Dr. Price's work, ii. 210;
his Reflections on the Revolution in France, ii, 237, 249;
Gibbon's opinion of, ii. 237, 251;
his speech on Quebec Bill, ii. 246;
his strictures on Lally, ii. 274;
attacks Paine's Rights of Man, ii. 297;
"Mr. Fox's coach stops the way," ii. 306;
Irish Roman Catholics, ii. 321;
Philosophers in France, ii. 325;
plan for settlement of French refugees, ii. 331
*Burney, Dr., ii. 375
*Burney, Miss, i. 148;
on Miss Sarah Holroyd, i. 181;
Lawyer Batt, a "prime favourite" of, i. 240;
on Lord Eliot, i. 273;
her reference to "Pliny" Melmoth, i. 326;
her opinion of Lord Sheffield, i. 392;
Lady Miller at Bath, ii. 2;
Lady E. Foster, ii. 15;
Madame de Staël at Dorking, ii. 375
Burrard, Sir H., ii. 84, 93
Burtenshaw's Manifesto, i. 221, 228
*Burton, Rev. David, Canon of Christ Church, ii. 135
Bute, Lord, i. 45, 50, 82;
the Ministerial Club, i. 84;
the Irish Catholics in arms, ii. 350
Byng, John, i. 60
*Byron, Lord, his definition of "ridotto," i. 124;
his attack on Hayley, i. 398
C
Cadell, Thomas, Gibbon's publisher, i. 222, 279, 282, 285, 364; ii. 152, 157, 158, 176, 243, 282;
Gibbon's letter to, ii. 313
Cadogan, Dr., ii. 123, 310
Cagliostro, Comte de (Giuseppe Balsamo), ii. 45, 54
Calonne, Chas. Alexandre de, ii. 162, 237, 269
Cambis, Madame de, i. 312; ii. 290
*Cambis, Vicomte de, i. 312
Cambridge, Richard O., i. 108, 279; ii. 226;
his family called by Gibbon "eloquent nymphs of Twickenham," i. 192, 197;
"the Cantabs," i. 228, 233
Camden, Lord, i. 149, 333;
President of the Council, ii. 13, 306
*Campazas, Friar Gerund de, i. 144
*Campbell, Lord, and the Rosslyn MSS., ii. 372
Cane, Eliz. Bridget (Mrs. Armitstead), ii. 179
Caplin, Gibbon's servant, i. 197, 230, 248; ii. 8, 9, 59, 110, 119, 131, 166
*Carey, General, i. 282
*Carhampton, Earl of, i. 146
Carleton, Sir Guy (Gov.-General of Canada), i. 270, 276, 277, 286, 290;
siege of Ticonderoga, i. 294
Carlisle, Lord, his opinion of Madame Geoffrin, i. 29;
appointed American Commissioner, i. 332;
Lord Privy Seal, ii. 34
Carmarthen, Marquis of, ii. 28, 86, 327
Carnarvon, Marquis of, i. 39, 44; ii. 303
*Carnatic, Nabob of the, i. 209, 308
Carter, Miss, ii. 135
Castries, Marquis de, ii. 210, 267, 269
Catch Club, The Noblemen and Gentlemen's, i. 200, 283
Catherine, Empress of Russia, i. 158, 270; ii. 247
*Cavendish, Lord George, i. 232; ii. 350
Cavendish, Lord John, his amendment on American affairs, i. 240, 273; ii. 32;
Chancellor of Exchequer, ii. 13, 18, 34
Cazalès, Jacques Marie de, ii. 252, 269, 274
Celesia, Madame (née Mallet), i. 18, 21, 62, 124
Celesia, Pietro Paolo, i. 18, 20, 62
Chandieu, Mdlle. de, ii. 43
*Charlemont, Lord, i. 85
*Charles Emanuel III., King of Sardinia, i. 58
Charles X. (Comte d'Artois), ii. 203, 204, 251, 266
Charrières, Madame de, ii. 43
Chateauneuf, M. de, French Resident at Geneva, ii. 317
Chateau-Vieux, Swiss regiment of, ii. 270
*Chatham, Earl of, returns to public life, i. 112;
his American Bill, i. 251;
his boast, i. 290;
conciliation for America, i. 324;
his death, i. 338
Chatillon, Marie Jeanne de. See Bontemps, Madame
Chauvelin, M., ii. 362, 366, 367, 370
Chelsum, Dr. James, on Decline and Fall, i. 295
*Chermont d'Amboise, Marquis de, i. 314
Chesterfield, Lord, i. 25, 150, 158;
his Letters, i. 195;
his Portraits, i. 313
*Cheyte Singh, Rajah of Benares, ii. 26
Chichester, Earl of (Lord Pelham of Stanmer), i. 200
Chichester, Lady, i. 200
*Child, Mr., author of English and Scottish Popular Ballads, i. 283
*Chimay, Prince de, i. 312
Choiseul, Duc de, i. 312, 314, 318; ii. 286
Cholmondeley, Earl, i. 262
Christian VII., King of Denmark, i. 143
Christie, Mr., ii. 69, 83
*Chudleigh, Miss. See Kingston, Duchess of
*Cibber and Vanbrugh's The Provoked Husband, i. 366; ii. 29
*Clare, Lord, i. 132
Clarges, Lady (née Skrine), ii. 135
*Clarges, Sir Thomas, ii. 135
Clarke, Godfrey Bagnal, Gibbon's intimate friend, i. 144, 148, 155, 201, 205, 208, 211, 214, 219, 222-224, 229, 232, 238, 241, 244
Clarke, George Hyde, i. 61
*Clarke, Jervoise, i. 89, 90
Clavière, Etienne, ii. 315
*Cleland, John, i. 53
*Clermont-Tonnerre, ii. 329
Cline, Henry, ii. 393
Clinton, Sir Henry, i. 349, 384; ii. 71, 153, 240, 377
Clinton, General Sir William, i. 249, 300; ii. 71
Clive, Lord, i. 184, 238
Clive, Mrs., i. 175
Coalition Ministry, the (1783), ii. 34, 86, 92
Cobham, Lady, i. 314, 316
*Coblentz, the rallying-point of the Emigrés, ii. 265
Cocoa-Tree Tavern, i. 84
*Coke, T. W., M.P. for Norfolk, ii. 33
Coleraine, Lord, i. 146, 148, 310
Colman, George, "The Luminous Historian," etc., i. 59; ii. 154;
Gibbon's opinion of The Man of Business, i. 202;
his description of Gibbon in Random Records, i. 213
Comarque, Miss. See Bavois, Madame de
Concord, the March to, i. 257
*Conches, M. Feuillet de, ii. 257, 352
Condé, Louis Joseph, Prince de, ii. 237, 265, 269
Congress, American, i. 242, 250
Conway, General, i. 84, 85, 287;
Commander-in-Chief, ii. 13, 18, 20, 32
Conway, Hon. and Rev. Edward, ii. 112
Conway, Hon. William, ii. 7, 18, 20, 32
Conway, T., i. 247
Conzie, Marc Hilaire de (Bishop of Arras), ii. 266
*Cook, Captain, ii. 218
*Cooke, Dr., Provost of King's, Cambridge, i. 108, 157
*Cooke, Thomas, known as "Hesiod" Cooke, i. 284
*Cooper, John, M.P. for Downton, i. 250
*Coote, Sir Eyre, ii. 26
Corcelles, Madame de, ii. 43
*Corisande, La belle, ii. 265
*Cork, Earl of, i. 34
Corn Regulation Bill, ii. 239
*Cornelys, Mrs. Theresa, and the Soho Masquerades, i. 131
Cornwallis, Hon. F. (Archbishop of Canterbury), i. 319
Cornwallis, Lord, in America, ii. 171;
campaign against Tippoo, ii. 275, 285
Courtenay, Hon. Charlotte, ii. 24
Courtenay, Harry, i. 18
Courtenay, Lord, ii. 24
Coventry election petition, i. 393
Cowper, Earl, i. 65
*Cowper, William, i. 83
Coxheath Camp, i. 340, 346;
Lord Sheffield at, ii. 18, 25
*Cradock, Joseph, i. 143
*Craon, Prince de, i. 314
Crauford, "Fish," ii. 67
*Crauford, "Flesh," ii. 67
Crauford, Mrs., Gibbon's landlady, ii. 164
Craufurd of Auchinames, ii. 388, 400
Craven, Lord, i. 148
*Crewe, Lord, ii. 350
*Cromwell, Major Henry, ii. 72
Cromwell, Oliver (solicitor), ii. 72
*Crosby, Lord Mayor Brass, i. 130
Crousaz, Catherine, ii. 81
Crousaz, Madame de. See Montolieu, Madame de
Cumberland, Duchess of (Mrs. Horton), i. 146, 150, 154
Cumberland, Duke of, i. 146, 149, 150, 154; ii. 3, 111
*Cumberland's Fashionable Lover, i. 143
*Cunningham, Captain, i. 310
Curchod, Mdlle. Suzanne. See Necker, Madame
Custine, Adam de, his incursion into Germany, ii. 319, 332
Cuthbert, Dr., attends Gibbon's father, i. 115
D
d'Agnesseau, Madame, ii. 333
*d'Allonville, Comte, ii. 326
Dalrymple, Sir John, Memoirs of Great Britain and Ireland, i. 131
Damas, Comte, ii. 286
Damer, Hon. John, i. 139, 144, 287
*Damer, Hon. Lionel, ii. 350
*d'Arblay, Madame, Diary and Letters, quoted, i. 108; ii. 15, 211, 284, 302
Darby, Captain, i. 257, 258, 260
*d'Argenteuil, M., i. 294
d'Argout, Comte, ii. 280
Darrel, Mr., i. 7, 20, 74
Darrel, Mrs., i. 7, 17, 38
Darrel, Robert, ii. 34, 280, 376, 400
Dartmouth, Lord, i. 258, 278
d'Artois, Comte (Charles X.), ii. 203, 204, 251, 266
*d'Assas, Chevalier, ii. 204
d'Augny, M., i. 31, 35
*d'Aunoy, Madame, Mémoires de la Cour d'Espagne, quoted, i. 202
*Davis, Henry Edward, i. 355
*Davy, Sir Humphrey, i. 139
Dawkes, Mrs., i. 204
*d'Ayen, Duc, i. 305; ii. 333
*Dean, Sir Robert, i. 85
Deane, Silas, i. 301, 334; ii. 66
Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, History of, i. 259, 261, 264, 275, 277, 279, 285, 295, 304, 342, 355, 366, 396; ii. 21, 119, 143, 152, 170, 230
Deffand, Madame du, on Madame Geoffrin, i. 29;
on Voltaire's La Princesse de Babylone, i. 91;
her reference to the Neckers, i. 281;
her life in Paris described by Gibbon, i. 312;
on Gibbon and Madame de Cambis, i. 313;
on Bishop of Arras, ii. 266
*Deffand, Marquis du, i. 312
*Defoe's Memoirs of Captain Carleton, i. 273
*de la Borde, Jean Benjamin, ii. 54
Delacour, Dr., i. 268, 304, 336, 337, 394; ii. 10
*Delaval, Lord, ii. 275
*Delaval, Sir Francis, ii. 275
*de la Warr, Lord, i. 107
*d'Enghien, Duc, ii. 237
Denhoff, Countess, i. 149
Denmark, Christian VII., King of, i. 143
Denmark, Juliana Maria, Queen Dowager of, i. 143
Denmark, Queen Caroline Matilda of, i. 143
Denmark, Revolution in, i. 143, 144, 146, 149
*d'Ennery, Comte, ii. 280
Denton, Mrs., i. 130
Denys, Madame (Voltaire's niece), i. 43, 92
*Derry, Bishop of, ii. 15, 388
d'Estaing, Comte, i. 337, 350, 370, 384, 395
Devonshire, Duchess of, i. 33, 370; ii. 300, 310, 312, 315, 319, 327, 339, 388
Devonshire, Duke of, ii. 15, 305
Deyverdun, George, Gibbon's intimate friend, i. 82, 83, 110, 158, 188-214 passim, 232, 236, 255, 262, 291;
offers his house to Gibbon, ii. 41, 108;
his description of Lausanne society, ii. 43;
Gibbon's host at Lausanne, ii. 75 et seq.;
Gibbon's opinion of, ii. 89, 118;
his illness, ii. 176, 179, 188;
and death, ii. 194, 207, 229;
Gibbon's letters to, ii. 35, 45, 54;
his letters to Gibbon, ii. 39, 52
*d'Haussonville, M., his Salon de Madame Necker, i. 40, 41
*d'Hénin, Prince, ii. 211
d'Hénin, Princess, ii. 211, 290, 322, 324, 329, 334, 342, 349, 377
Diary, the (newspaper), ii. 351, 370
*Dictionary of National Biography quoted, i. 283
Digby, Captain, i. 334
*Dillon, Mr., i. 180
*Dillon, General, murdered, ii. 299
*Disraeli's Calamities of Authors quoted, i. 23
*Dodsley's tragedy of Cleone, i. 18
Dorchester, Earl of, i. 139; ii. 350
d'Orleans, Regent Duc, i. 312, 326
Dorset, 1st Duke of, i. 139
Dorset, 3rd Duke of, Ambassador at Paris, i. 226; ii. 86
*d'Orvilliers, Count, i. 349
Douglas, Lady Catherine, ii. 377, 387
*Dowling, Surgeon, ii. 295
Down, Charles, i. 244
Downes, Rev. Dr. Dive, i. 205
Downshire, Marquis of, ii. 5
Draper, General Sir William, ii. 22
*Drouet, Postmaster, ii. 254, 326
Drummond, Andrew, i. 71
Duane, Mr., i. 201, 218, 226, 234, 261, 264
Dulau, J. F. M. (Archbishop of Arles), ii. 322, 325;
his murder described, ii. 333, 341
*Dummer, Thos. Lee, i. 90, 250
Dumont, M., ii. 258
Dumouriez, M., ii. 299, 319, 326, 368
Duncannon, Lady, ii. 310, 312
Duncannon, Lord, ii. 18, 19
*Duncombe, Thomas, i. 250
Dundas, Hon. Henry (afterwards Lord Melville), Treasurer of Navy, ii. 19, 86;
Lord Advocate, ii. 85;
Secretary of State, ii. 247, 306;
Abolition of Slave Trade, ii. 294;
suggests coalition between Pitt and Fox, ii. 306;
king's message for augmentation of forces, ii. 365
Dunning, John. See Ashburton, Lord
d'Ursel, Duke, ii. 83
Dutch, fears of war with, i. 348, 353
Dutens, Louis, i. 56, 59
*Dutensiana, i. 314
Dux, George, i. 52
E
*Eames, John, i. 89
Eardley, Lord (Sir Sampson Gideon), i. 225, 332; ii. 216
East India Company, the, i. 184, 186, 209, 308; ii. 85
*Eccentricities for Edinburgh quoted, i. 59
*Eden, Sir Robert, ii. 397
Eden, William. See Auckland, Lord
Egerton, Sir Thomas, i. 148
Egremont, Lord, i. 247, 249; ii. 175, 182, 305, 388
Elgin, Thomas, Lord, Envoy at Brussels, ii. 383
Elkin, Sir George, i. 16
Eliot, Captain John, i. 62
Eliot, Hon. Edward James, i. 390, 394; ii. 19, 20, 22, 143
Eliot, Hon. John, i. 217, 229, 380
Eliot, Lady, i. 98, 110, 122, 131, 132, 365
Eliot, Lord (of St. Germans), i. 70, 84, 183, 188, 193, 228, 230, 231, 254, 273, 342, 367, 369, 374;
Gibbon's appeal to and defence, i. 385, 389
Eliott, Admiral Sir George A. See Heathfield, Lord
Elizabeth, Queen, story of Lord Essex's ring, i. 276
Elliot, Grey, ii. 69
*Elliot, Lady, ii. 374
Elliot, Sir Gilbert, i. 251;
on treaty between France and U. S. A., i. 333;
his daughter's marriage, ii. 25;
his Life and Letters quoted, ii. 172, 306, 351, 374;
his support of Government, ii. 305;
Duke of Portland's views of Alien Bill, ii. 363
Ellis, George, editor of Fabliaux, etc., i. 139;
Sir Walter Scott on, ii. 184;
lines on Pitt in Rolliad, ibid.
Ellis, Governor Henry, i. 73
*Elliston, Mrs., of South Weald, i. 70
Elmsley, Peter, the bookseller, i. 372; ii. 60, 94, 105, 113, 126, 158, 214, 314, 388
*Elstob, Lewis, i. 118, 372
Elstob, Mrs., i. 372
Ely, Lady, i. 266
Ely, Lord, i. 265
Ely, Madame, ii. 386
Erskine, ii. 297
Essai sur l'étude de la Littérature, Gibbon's first published work, i. 20, 80
Essex, Earl of, i. 276
Establishment Bill, i. 376
Etienne, Gibbon's valet, ii. 243, 253
Exchequer Bills, issue of, ii. 382
Exeter, Lord, i. 65
Exilles, Fort, i. 59
*Eyre, Mr., printer, i. 263
F
*Falkland, Lord, i. 282
*Fanshaw, Miss, ii. 284
Farquhar, Sir Walter, ii. 393, 395, 398, 401
*Farquhar's The Twin Rivals, ii. 102
Faukier, Mr., i. 163
Featherstonhaugh, Lady, i. 232, 235, 246, 249
Featherstonhaugh, Sir H., i. 162, 214, 235, 247, 249
Featherstonhaugh, Sir M., i. 56, 67, 83, 84, 131, 162, 247
Fenestrelle, Fort, i. 59
*Ferguson, Lieut. James, killed by Captain Roche, i. 209
Ferrières, M. de, ii. 318
*Fersen, Comte de, ii. 292
*Feuchéres, Madame de, ii. 237
Firth, Miss, ii. 82, 91, 98, 334;
Gibbon's letter to, ii. 98;
and Severy's studies, ii. 167
Fischer, M., ii. 260, 283, 375
*Fitzherbert, Mrs., ii. 150
Fitzjames, Duchess of, ii. 324
Fitzmaurice, Lord. See Shelburne, Earl of
Fitzpatrick, Lady Mary. See Holland, Lady
Fitzroy, Mrs., i. 90
Fitzwilliam, Lord, ii. 305
Flanders, invasion of, ii. 299
*Fleming, Sir John, i. 261
Flood, Henry, i. 264
Florence, Gibbon at, i. 63
*Floyer, Mr., Member of Madras Council, i. 362
Foley, Mr., English banker at Paris, i. 33, 36
Foote, Samuel, his Bankrupt, i. 192;
A Trip to Calais stopped by Duchess of Kingston, i. 265
Ford, Mrs., Gibbon's housekeeper, i. 192; ii. 8
Fordwich, Lord. See Cowper, Earl
Fort Louis, surrender of garrison to Austrians, ii. 396
Foster, Lady Elizabeth, described by Gibbon as "a bewitching animal," "goddess," "still adorable," "Bess," etc., ii. 15, 81, 117, 300, 308, 310, 312, 319, 339, 388;
Gibbon's letter to, on Lady Sheffield's death, ii. 380
Foster, John. See Oriel, Lord
*Foster, John Thomas, ii. 15
Fothergill, Dr., i. 177
Fowler, Mr., ii. 340
Fox, Charles James, supports Church of England, i. 148;
Royal Marriage Bill, i. 151;
his debts, i. 198, 264;
on troubles with America, i. 249, 256, 303, 324, 328;
the king's debts, i, 308;
on the Canadian Expedition, i. 333;
Tickell's Anticipation, i. 348;
his lines on Gibbon as Commissioner of Trade, i. 354;
on Sheffield's Regiment of Horse, i. 380;
M.P. for Westminster, i. 388, 390;
"the black Patriot," ii. 4;
Secretary of State, ii. 13, 34;
resigns office, ii. 18;
and American independence, ii. 25;
George III.'s behaviour to, ii. 34;
sale of his library, ii. 68;
his two India Bills, ii. 86;
Gibbon's opinion of, ii. 85, 92, 96, 251, 356, 360, 372;
suggested union with Pitt, ii. 92, 306, 307, 330;
no compromise, ii. 97;
his "Martyrs," ii. 102;
"the man of the people," ii. 179;
his marriage, ibid.;
twelve hours' talk with Gibbon, ii. 180;
speech on treaty between Russia and Turkey, ii. 246;
on Abolition of Slave Trade, ii. 294;
his half-support of Grey's motion, ii. 297, 320;
"but fifty followers," ii. 305;
rejoices at retreat of Prussians, ii. 320;
"detestable" on French affairs, ii. 330;
on the calling out of the Militia, ii. 349, 350;
his motion for an Embassy to France, ii. 350, 353;
opposes Alien Bill, ii. 364;
Duke of Portland's adherence to, ii. 367, 368;
opposes augmentation of forces, ii. 368
Fox, Hon. Stephen. See Holland, 2nd Lord
France, fears of war with, i. 289, 317;
treaty with America, i. 333;
war with, i. 339; ii. 362, 374;
treaty with England, ii. 152;
war declared against Francis Joseph, ii. 279;
war with Austria and Prussia, ii. 319;
treaty with Geneva, ii. 325, 331, 345;
war with England, Holland, and Spain, ii. 362, 374
Francillon, M., ii. 283
*Francis Joseph, of Austria, ii. 279, 292
Frankland, Miss Anne (Lady Chichester), i. 200
*Frankland, Sir Thomas, i. 200
Franklin, Dr., i. 162, 243, 310, 313
Fraser, General, i. 264, 299, 363
Fraser, General Simon, i. 325
Fraser, Mrs., "Donna Catherina," i. 300; ii. 105, 117
Fredennick, M., ii. 260
*Frederick the Great, i. 158; ii. 210
Frederick II. of Prussia, i. 143; ii. 137
Frederick William of Prussia at Pilnitz, ii. 271
French Revolution, ii. 246, 249, 270, 287, 293, 311;
massacres of September, 1792, ii. 312, 321, 351;
and Ireland, ii. 320;
murder of Louis XVI., ii. 360, 365
Frey, M., escorts Gibbon to Lausanne, i. 1
*"Friends of the People," an association for reform of representative system, ii. 297
Fullarton, Colonel, ii. 168
Fuller, Miss, called "Sappho" by Gibbon, i. 196, 198, 202, 208, 241
Fuller, Rose, i. 196, 208
G
Gage, General, i. 206, 257, 258, 260, 266
Gage, William Hall, Viscount, "the green plumb," i. 225, 227
*Galovkin, Comte Fédor, i. 81
*Gansel, Major-General, i. 109
Garrick, David, as "Sir John Brute," i. 19;
Gibbon a friend of, i. 201, 289, 333;
in Hamlet, i. 203;
letter from Gibbon to, quoted, i. 317
Gascoyne, Bamber, i. 366
*Gates, General, i. 325
Gazette, the, i. 257, 392
*Gazetteer, the, i. 146
Gee, Mr., i. 3, 6
*Genlis, Comte de, i. 326
Genlis, Madame de, her opinion of Madame de Cambis, i. 313;
of Princesse de Beauvau, i. 314;
on Decline and Fall, i. 326;
on Dr. Tissot's skill, ii. 77;
her story of Gibbon and Madame de Montolieu, ii. 154
Geneva, threatened by French, ii. 317, 322;
the Government at, ii. 318;
treaty with France, ii. 325, 331, 345;
new constitution of, ii. 370
Genoa, Gibbon at, i. 61
Gentleman's Magazine cited, ii. 289, 301, 302, 314, 349
Geoffrin, Madame, i. 29
*George II., ii. 321
George III., i. 45;
grants pension to M. de Viry, i. 56;
his intervention in Denmark, i. 143;
Royal Marriage Bill, i. 154;
reviews fleet at Spithead, i. 186;
the King's speech and America, i. 238;
negotiates for hire of Russian mercenaries, i. 270;
and Sir H. Palliser's leg, i. 356;
his behaviour to Fox, ii. 34;
refuses to dismiss ministers, ii. 100;
his illness and recovery, ii. 181, 191;
and Lally, ii. 285;
reviews troops at Bagshot, ii. 304;
proclaims tumultuous meetings, etc., ii. 305;
Lally's Plaidoyer, ii. 375.
George IV. See Wales, Prince of
Germain, Lady George, i. 328
Germain, Lord George. See Sackville, Lord
*Germain, Sir John, i. 198
Germanie, M. de, ii. 291
*Gibbon, Mrs., née Porten (Gibbon's mother), i. 2
Gibbon, Mrs., née Patton (Gibbon's stepmother), her opinion of Miss Catherine Porten, i. 2;
marries Gibbon's father, i. 7;
Gibbon's inquiries about, i. 8;
subjects of Gibbon's letters to:—
Dr. Turton, i. 16, 114, 150, 371;
money troubles, i. 19, 352, 359;
his own health, i. 83, 114, 150, 158, 246, 321, 322, 371, 377-379, 399; ii. 12, 108, 129, 141, 166, 248;
his father's accident, i. 26;
Paris and the Parisians, i. 28-32, 315, 320;
Duke of Bedford, i. 30, 32;
M. d'Augny: Madame Bontemps, i. 31;
Dr. Acton at Besançon, i. 36;
his life at Lausanne, i. 39, 42, 49, 50; ii. 76, 88-141 passim, 177;
Mdlle. Curchod, i. 40;
Voltaire, i. 43, 91;
Lady M. W. Montagu's Letters, i. 53;
his tour in Italy, i. 63;
English visitors at Lausanne, i. 65;
Rome to Naples, i. 73;
Venice, i. 75;
Deyverdun and Miss Comarque, i. 83;
the "School of Vice," i. 84;
Ranelagh Gardens, i. 89;
his father's reproaches, i. 98;
his father's illness and death, i. 97, 105, 106, 118;
fall of the ministry, i. 112;
the "Remonstrance" debate, i. 113;
Lenborough, i. 126, 158, 182, 185, 187, 210, 289;
Beriton, i. 128, 153; ii. 175, 206, 248;
"the formal Mr. Bricknall," i. 131-133, 141;
Danish revolution, i. 143;
Royal Marriage Bill, i. 154;
house-hunting in London, i. 171, 172, 175, 179;
James Scott's death, i. 177;
the Townshend-Bellamont duel, i. 180, 182;
his "notions" of London life, i. 188;
his friend Deyverdun, i. 188, 210, 262; ii. 89 et seq., 177, 207;
"an approaching daughter-in-law," i. 197;
Johann C. Bach, i. 204;
masquerade at Pantheon, i. 215;
"Mrs. Gibbon of Northamptonshire, not of Bath," i. 216;
Madame de Bavois, i. 220;
offer of a seat in Parliament, i. 230, 231;
M.P. for Liskeard, i. 234;
Godfrey Clarke's illness and death, i. 238, 244;
his Parliamentary life, i. 248, 253, 289, 325, 331, 365, 373;
his History, see Decline and Fall;
story of Essex's ring, i. 276;
the Neckers, i. 283, 306, 320; ii. 122;
Garrick, i. 289;
two answers to his History, i. 295;
Dr. Hunter's Anatomy Lectures, i. 304;
her groundless fears, i. 305, 306;
his Paris friends, i. 315;
Duke of Richmond, i. 316;
Madame de Genlis, i. 326;
at Coxheath Camp, i. 346;
his views on matrimony, i. 351;
a Lord of Trade, i. 366, 378;
Lord Eliot, i. 369, 374, 386, 391;
his Mémoire Justificatif, i. 371;
Mrs. Williams, i. 372, 374;
Irish trade, i. 373;
Lord Sheffield's first speech, i. 380;
a dissolution expected, i. 380;
the Gordon riots, i. 381, 382;
Sheffield and the Northumberland Militia, i. 381;
Sir Henry Clinton, i. 384;
weary of political life, i. 391;
George Scott's death, i. 393;
M.P. for Lymington, ii. 1;
at Brighthelmstone, ii. 3, 7;
Hayley, the poet, ii. 8, 17;
North's resignation, ii. 13;
Board of Trade suppressed, ii. 14;
Lady Elizabeth Foster, ii. 15;
Rockingham's death, ii. 17;
at "Single-Speech" Hamilton's house, ii. 21;
Mrs. Ashby, ii. 22;
Pitt, ii. 28;
Mrs. Siddons, ii. 29;
the Coalition Ministry, ii. 34;
retires from Parliament, ii. 58;
his Lausanne plans, ii. 58, 61, 64, 71;
his propensity for happiness, ii. 88;
society at Lausanne, ii. 89, 90, 122;
climate at Lausanne, ii. 129;
changes in English politics, ii. 131;
a regimen of boiled milk, ii. 142;
his house and garden, ii. 142, 248;
a ministry of respectable boys, ii. 143;
intention to visit England, ii. 155;
the two Mr. Gibbons, ii. 159;
Sheffield Place, ii. 160;
Bath, ii. 161;
his compliment to Lord North, ii. 170;
Cadell's discretion, ii. 176;
Hugonin's neglect, ii. 207;
the French Revolution, ii. 249, 308;
the Sheffields' visit to Lausanne, ii. 309;
her illness and recovery, ii. 348;
his return to England, ii. 381, 384;
at Althorp, ii. 391;
his illness, ii. 394, 398.
Her letters to Gibbon, ii. 385, 399
Gibbon, Edward (father), subjects of his son's letters to:—
First impressions of Lausanne, i. 1;
Voltaire, i. 5;
a stepmother, i. 10;
studies under Pavillard, ibid.;
proposed Swiss tour, i. 13;
Holland, i. 15;
Sir George Elkin's marriage, i. 16;
the Lottery, i. 17;
King's Scholars' play, i. 18;
the Celesias, i. 18, 62;
Dr. Maty: Mdlle. de Vaucluse and M. Celesia, i. 20;
his London friends, i. 21;
hopes of Parliament, i. 23, 45;
paternal doubts and suspicions, i. 34;
Taafe, i. 35;
gambling losses, i. 36, 47;
Dr. Acton and Besançon, i. 37;
the Swiss Militia, i. 38;
financial troubles, i. 45-48, 51, 52, 55, 69, 71, 73, 93-107 passim;
Mont Cenis, i. 55;
Turin, i. 56;
Venice, i. 61;
his friend Guise, i. 62;
Rome, i. 66;
Trajan's Pillar, i. 67;
Barazzi the banker, i. 71;
Sir T. Worsley, i. 78;
a burgess of Newtown, i. 88;
the Putney Writings, i. 93;
Gosling's mortgage, i. 94, 95.
His death, i. 117
Gibbon, Edward—
1753-1772.
Under Pavillard's care at Lausanne, i. 1;
a gambling scrape: his appeal to Aunt Catherine, i. 3, 4;
Voltaire at Geneva, i. 5, 43;
his father's second marriage, i. 7;
his plans and studies, i. 9-11;
his father's silence, i. 13;
returns to England, i. 15;
the Lottery, i. 17;
the Celesias, i. 18, 20;
distressed for money, i. 19;
his quarrel with Dr. Maty, i. 21;
a seat in Parliament—ambitions, hopes, and fears, i. 23, 45;
in the Hants Militia, i. 25, 87;
at Boulogne, i. 27;
friends and acquaintances in Paris, i. 28, 33;
Thomas Bradley's affair, i. 35;
Dr. Acton at Besançon, i. 36;
with his old acquaintance at Lausanne, i. 38 et seq.;
Mdlle. Curchod, i. 40, 81;
the fall of our tyrant, i. 44;
unhappy circumstances of our estate, i. 47;
a mixture of books and good company, i. 49;
Lady M. W. Montagu's Letters, i. 53;
proposed tour in Italy, i. 54;
Turin, i. 55, 58;
Borromean Islands, i. 57;
his snuff box and the King of Sardinia's daughters, i. 58;
Milan, i. 60;
Genoa, i. 61;
Florence, i. 63;
Englishmen at Florence, i. 65;
Rome, i. 67 et seq.;
ways and means, i. 69, 100 et seq., 127, 136, 165-170;
the very worst roads in the universe, i. 73;
least satisfied with Venice, i. 75;
Austrian etiquette, i. 80;
separations increase daily, i. 82;
the "School of Vice," i. 84;
"Monsieur Olroy's" marriage, i. 85;
a burgess of Newtown, i. 88;
Ranelagh Gardens, i. 89;
Voltaire ruined, i. 91;
the Putney Writings, i. 93, 105;
paternal doubts and suspicions, i. 98;
the deed of trust, i. 99, 101;
Wentzel, the oculist, i. 105;
the plain dish of friendship, i. 108;
the "Remonstrance" debate, i. 113;
his father's illness and death, i. 115, 117, 121, 122;
Aunt Hester's kind letter, i. 121;
detained by Ridottos, i. 124;
the Soho masquerade, i. 131;
the eternal Bricknall, i. 133;
"Farmer Gibbon of no use!" i. 138;
"Quis tulerit Gracchos," i. 140;
these Denmark affairs, i. 143, 149;
Royal Marriage Bill, i. 146, 151, 154;
the Pantheon, i. 147;
Worthy Champions of the Church, i. 148;
the business of Lord and Lady Grosvenor, i. 149;
Dr. Nowell's sermon, i. 151;
Sir R. Worsley, i. 153;
Lord Sheffield's editorial methods, i. 155;
Deyverdun's arrival, i. 158 (see also Deyverdun, George);
Master Holroyd's death, i. 160;
a sprained ankle, i. 161;
the loud trumpet of advertisements, i. 163;
a tenant for Beriton, i. 165;
Lady Rous' house, i. 171-175;
North's somnolence, i. 173;
James Scott's death, i. 177
1773-1783.
Bellamont-Townshend duel, i. 180;
a due mixture of study and society, i. 183;
the E. I. Co., i. 184, 186, 209, 308; ii. 85;
sale of Lenborough, i. 186; ii. 83;
Hume: W. Robertson, i. 190;
Foote's Bankrupt, i. 192;
the beauties of Cornwall, i. 194;
declines publication of Chesterfield's Letters, i. 195;
an approaching daughter-in-law, i. 197;
Fox's debts, i. 198;
Kelly's School of Wives, i. 199;
a dinner at the "Breetish" Coffee House, i. 201;
Colman's Man of Business, i. 202;
heads of a convention, i. 205;
Boston Port Bill, i. 206;
Mrs. Horneck, i. 207;
great news from India, i. 209;
receiving one friend and comforting another, i. 210;
Johnson and Gibbon—a contrast, i. 213;
Boodle's triumph, i. 215;
all the news of Versailles, i. 218;
Lord Stanley's fête champêtre, i. 219;
Madame de Bavois, i. 220;
Godfrey Clarke's illness and death, i. 223, 238, 244;
a new man for the county, i. 225;
Romanzow's victory, i. 227;
offer of a seat, i. 228;
M.P. for Liskeard, i. 229;
dissolution and election, i. 231;
Wilkes at the Mansion House, i. 231;
a visit to Bath, i. 231;
his anxiety for Mrs. Holroyd, i. 237;
deep in America, i. 243 (see also America);
a party of foxhunters, i. 247;
troops for America, i. 249;
North's conciliatory scheme, i. 251;
a silent member, i. 253;
presentation at Court, i. 255;
the march to Concord, i. 257;
a great historical work, i. 259;
his History going to press, i. 261;
nothing new from America, i. 265;
his dog the comfort of his life, i. 267;
his stepmother's small-pox, i. 268;
difficulty in raising troops, i. 271;
at work on his History, i. 273;
the book almost ready, i. 275;
story of Essex's ring, i. 276;
his History published, i. 279;
the Neckers in London, i. 281, 282;
poor Mallet, i. 283;
Dr. Porteous, i. 285;
an Irish edition of the Decline and Fall, i. 288;
fears of French war, i. 289;
Howe's proclamation, i. 291;
Suard translates his History, i. 293;
two answers to his book, i. 295;
Septehênes' translation of Decline and Fall, i. 297;
a war of posts, i. 299;
"John the Painter," i. 301;
his uniform life, i. 302;
Hunter's Lectures, i. 304;
his stepmother's groundless fears, i. 306;
starts for Paris, i. 309;
pleasures and occupations in Paris, i. 311;
his success in French society, i. 313;
his friends and acquaintances, i. 315;
no risk of war with France, i. 317;
Duc de Choiseul, i. 318;
a martyr to gout, i. 321;
weary of the war, i. 323;
Saratoga, i. 324;
Madame de Genlis, i. 326;
London a dead calm and delicious solitude, i. 327;
conciliation for America, i. 329;
suing for peace, i. 331;
war with France, i. 333;
his private affairs, i. 335;
"in attendance of my Mama," i. 336;
d'Estaing's fleet, i. 337;
Keppel and the French frigates, i. 339, 343;
Coxheath Camp, i. 340, 346;
Brighton unsuitable, i. 345;
Paul Jones, i. 347;
battle of Ushant, i. 349;
an effort of friendship, i. 351;
advice to his stepmother, i. 352, 362;
prospect of a place, i. 355;
Palliser and Keppel, i. 356;
his plans of economy, i. 359;
Parliament and the Roman Empire, i. 361;
a crestfallen ministry, i. 363;
at work on his second volume, i. 365;
a Lord of Trade, i. 366, 373;
disclaims the History of Opposition, i. 369;
his Mémoire Justificatif, i. 371;
Holroyd for Coventry, i. 375;
Rodney's victory, i. 376;
"a mighty unrelenting tyrant, called the Gout," i. 377;
Gordon Riots, i. 380;
his two volumes in the press, i. 382;
his seat uncertain, i. 385;
another seat promised, i. 387;
M.P. for Lymington, i. 387, 400; ii. 1;
defends his conduct in Parliament, i. 389;
weary of political life, i. 391;
the Coventry election, i. 393;
Holroyd created Lord Sheffield, i. 395;
the reception given to his two volumes, i. 397;
his annual Gout-tax, i. 399;
his house at Brighton, ii. 3;
French and Spanish ships in the Channel, ii. 5;
Brighton in November, ii. 7;
William Hayley, ii. 8, 17;
his advice in a quarrel, ii. 9;
noise and nonsense of Parliament, ii. 11;
fall of North's ministry, ii. 13;
his loss of office, ii. 14;
Rockingham's death, ii. 17;
Shelburne's ministry, ii. 19;
immersed in the Roman Empire, ii. 21;
his Hampton Court Villa, ii. 23;
Lord Loughborough's marriage, ii. 24;
relief of Gibraltar, ii. 25;
enthusiasm for Sir George Eliott, ii. 27;
Pitt, ii. 28;
Mrs. Siddons, ii. 29;
the dearth of news, ii. 31;
Shelburne resigns, ii. 33;
Coalition Ministry, ii. 34;
his view of English politics, ii. 37;
proposes to settle abroad, ii. 38;
Deyverdun offers his house, ii. 41;
Lausanne society, ii. 43;
his gratitude to Deyverdun, ii. 45;
his hesitation to accept, ii. 47;
his friend and valet, ii. 49;
hopes of a political place, ii. 51;
social habits at Lausanne, ii. 52;
decides to leave England, ii. 55;
plan of joining Deyverdun, ii. 57;
his departure necessary, ii. 58;
his reasons, ii. 61;
his preparations, ii. 63;
farewell to Sheffield Place, ii. 65;
the Peace of Versailles, ii. 67;
his departure delayed, ii. 69;
the Sheffields' kindness, ii. 71
1783-1794.
His journey through France, ii. 73;
the Abbé Raynal, ii. 75;
the charms of Lausanne, ii. 77;
a pension, for Miss Holroyd, ii. 79;
proud of Fox, ii. 85;
North's insignificance, ii. 87;
his daily life, ii. 89;
the zeal and diligence of Sheffield's pen, ii. 91;
sale of his seat, ii. 93;
a factious opposition, ii. 95;
arrival of his books, ii. 97;
a happy winter, ii. 99;
Parliament dissolved, ii. 101;
a free-spoken counsellor, ii. 103;
English friends, ii. 105;
the reign of sinecures over, ii. 107;
his house and garden, ii. 108;
his hospitalities, ii. 111;
his pecuniary affairs, ii. 112;
a list of his acquaintances, ii. 115;
Prince Henry of Prussia and Mdlle. Necker, ii. 117;
thoughts of marriage, ii. 118, 220;
loses Caplin, ii. 119;
invites the Sheffields, ii. 120;
a temperate diet and an easy mind, ii. 123;
his establishment at Lausanne, ii. 125;
Pitt a favourite abroad, ii. 127;
a young man at fifty, ii. 129;
changes in English politics, ii. 131;
his reported death, ii. 132;
a curious question of philosophy, ii. 133;
his countrymen at Lausanne, ii. 135;
Achilles Pitt and Hector Fox, ii. 136;
his History delayed, ii. 139;
his health improved, ii. 141;
"glories of the landskip," ii. 142;
Aunt Kitty's death, ii. 144;
books longer in making than puddings, ii. 147;
hopes to visit England, ii. 149, 155;
building a great book, ii. 151;
a citizen of the world, ii. 153;
his arrival in London, ii. 157;
the two Mr. Gibbons, ii. 159;
visits his stepmother, ii. 161;
a miserable cripple, ii. 163;
an unlucky check, ii. 165;
an act of duty at Bath, ii. 167;
his work and friends, ii. 169;
the horrors of shopping and packing, ii. 171;
dines with Warren Hastings, ii. 173;
sale of Beriton, ii. 175, 189;
back at Lausanne, ii. 177;
Deyverdun ill, ii. 179, 187;
George III. insane, ii. 181;
Hugonin dead, ii. 183;
Hugonin's deceit, ii. 185;
George III. recovers, ii. 191;
"the Saint ripe for heaven," ii. 193;
Deyverdun's death, ii. 194, 207;
"fierce and erect, a free master," ii. 197;
a defect in Beriton title, ii. 199;
his idea of adopting Charlotte Porten, ii. 201;
a life interest in Deyverdun's house, ii. 203;
the authority of Blackstone, ii. 205;
Deyverdun's loss irreparable, ii. 207;
France's opportunity, ii. 209;
French exiles at Lausanne, ii. 210;
"dirty land and vile money," ii. 213;
legal forms benefit lawyers, ii. 215;
Sheffield M.P. for Bristol. ii. 216;
Aunt Hester's will, ii. 218, 225;
a comfortless state, ii. 221;
his Madeira almost exhausted, ii. 223;
Bruce's Travels, ii. 226;
M. Langer, ii. 227;
history of the Guelphs, ii. 229;
servitude to lawyers, ii. 231;
seriously ill, ii. 233;
an annuity for Newhaven, ii. 235, 240;
Burke's Reflections, ii. 237;
Corn Law and Slave Trade, ii. 239;
a bargain with the Sheffields, ii. 243;
snugness of his affairs, ii. 245;
danger of Russian war, ii. 247;
effects of French Revolution, ii. 249;
Burke a rational madman, ii. 251;
Sheffield an anti-democrat, ii. 253;
flight and arrest of Louis XVI., ii. 255, 286;
the crisis in Paris, ii. 257;
Sheffield at the Jacobins, ii. 259;
safe in the land of liberty, ii. 261;
Switzerland's strange charm, ii. 263;
Coblentz and white cockades, ii. 265;
the sights of Brussels, ii. 267;
military forces on French frontier, ii. 269;
the Pilnitz meeting, ii. 271;
a distressful voyage, ii. 273;
Lally, ii. 274;
the demon of procrastination, ii. 277;
peace or war in Europe? ii. 279;
an amazing push of remorse, ii. 281;
Maria's capacity, ii. 283;
Lally Tollendal, ii. 284;
the hideous plague in France, ii. 287;
Massa King Wilberforce, ii. 289;
a month with the Neckers, ii. 291;
Jacques Necker, ii. 292;
the march of the Marseillais, ii. 293;
an asylum at Berne, 295;
democratic progress in England, ii. 297;
Gallic wolves prowl round Geneva, ii. 299;
the destiny of his library, ii. 301;
his Tabby apprehensions, ii. 303;
Opposition and Government, ii. 305;
the attempted Pitt-Fox union, ii. 306;
taint of democracy, ii. 309;
Brunswick's march on Paris, ii. 311;
every day more sedentary, ii. 313;
French invasion of Savoy, ii. 314;
Geneva threatened, ii. 316;
prepared for flight, ii. 319;
the Irish at their old tricks, ii. 321;
the liberty of murdering defenceless prisoners, ii. 323;
Sheffield's emigrants, ii. 324;
Brunswick's strange retreat, ii. 326, 346;
occupants of the hotel in Downing Street, ii. 329;
the Geneva flea and the Leviathan France, ii. 331;
the Gallic dogs' day, ii. 333;
neither a monster, nor a statue, ii. 335;
Severy's state hopeless, ii. 336;
France's cruel fate, ii. 337;
Archbishop of Arles' murder, ii. 339-342;
common cause against the Disturbers of the World, ii. 343;
Montesquieu's desertion, ii. 345;
Necker's defence of the king, ii. 347;
associations in London, ii. 349, 353;
"Is Fox mad?" ii. 350;
Sheffield's speech, ii. 353;
the Egaliseurs, ii. 355;
the great question of peace and war, ii. 358;
the Memoirs must be postponed, ii. 359;
a word or two of Parliamentary and pecuniary concerns, ii. 362;
Duke of Portland and Fox, ii. 363, 367;
Louis XVI. condemned to death, ii. 365;
a miserable Frenchman, ii. 367;
poor de Severy is no more, ii. 369;
his letter of congratulations to Loughborough, ii. 372;
the Pays de Vaud, ii. 373;
Madame de Staël at Dorking, ii. 375;
a pleasant dinner-party in Downing Street, ii. 377;
Lady Sheffield's death, ii. 379;
the cannon of the siege of Mayence, ii. 382;
safe, well, and happy in London, ii. 384;
intends to visit Bath, ii. 387, 389;
Lord Hervey's Memorial, ii. 388;
a tête-à-tête of eight or nine hours daily, ii. 390;
at Althorpe, ii. 391;
a serious complaint, ii. 393;
hopes of a radical cure, ii. 395;
in darkness about Lord Howe, ii. 397;
reaches St. James's Street half-dead, ii. 400;
account of his last moments, ii. 400, 401
Gibbon, Miss Hester (Gibbon's aunt), "the Northamptonshire Saint," i. 7, 134, 244, 295, 398; ii. 91, 185, 187, 190, 193, 218, 222, 225;
Gibbon's letters to, i. 15, 121
Gibbon, John, Bluemantle Pursuivant at Arms, ii. 162
Gibraltar, relieved by Rodney, i. 276;
by Howe, ii. 19, 25, 27;
defended by Lord Heathfield, ii. 25
Gideon, Sir Sampson (Lord Eardley), i. 225, 332; ii. 216
Gilbert, Mr., of Lewes, i. 244, 248, 295
Gilbert, Bett, i. 7
Gilliers, Baron de, ii. 330, 377
Glenbervie, Lord (Sylvester Douglas), ii. 180
Gloucester, Duchess of, i. 173
*Gloucester, Duke of, i. 131;
his clandestine marriage, i. 146;
on Decline and Fall, i. 396
Glynn, Serjeant, the advocate of Wilkes, i. 90
Godolphin, Lord, i. 172
Goldsmith, Oliver, Gibbon's friendship with, i. 191, 202;
his "Captain-in-Lace," i. 207;
quotation from his Retaliation, i. 210
*Gonchon, M., ii. 352
Gordon, Duchess of, ii. 157, 164, 168
Gordon, Lord George, i. 376;
"No Popery" riots, i. 380;
sent to the Tower, i. 382
Gordon Riots, the, i. 381
Gosling, the banker, i. 94, 126, 166-168, 332; ii. 110. 281
Gosling's mortgage, i. 94, 116, 126, 166, 187
Gould, Colonel. i. 114, 159, 274
Gould, Mrs., i. 114, 159, 272, 274; ii. 386
Gouvernet, Comte de la Tour-du-Pin, ii. 329
Gower, Lord, i. 148; ii. 86, 255, 311, 360
*Grafton, Duchess of, i. 27
Grafton, Duke of, i. 26, 90, 112, 278, 377;
Lord Privy Seal, ii. 13
*Grammont, Duc de (de Guiche), i. 89; ii. 203, 265, 266
*Granby, Marquis of, i. 192
Grand, M., banker at Lausanne, i. 4, 61, 74, 81
Grand, Mdlle. Nanette. See Prevôt, Madame
Grantham, Lord, ii. 19
*Grasse, Comte de, ii. 16
Graves, Admiral Lord, i. 384
Gray, Booth, i. 254, 264
Grenville Act, the, i. 233
*Grenville Correspondence, i. 44
*Grenville, George, i. 45, 85, 233, 243
Grenville, James, ii. 19, 93
Grenville, Lord, ii. 362, 366
*Greville, Hon. Charles, i. 366
Grey, Mr., and the "Friends of the People" resolution, ii. 297, 305, 320
Grey, Sir Charles (afterwards 1st Earl), ii. 396
Grey, Sir W. de. See Walsingham, Lord
*Grey, Thomas de, i. 366
*Grimaldi, Marquis Jeronymo, i. 30
Grimstone, Mrs., ii. 339
Grosvenor, Lady, i. 149
Grosvenor, Lord, i. 82, 149
Guiche, Duc de. See Grammont, Duc de
Guilford, 1st Lord, ii. 86, 164, 238
Guilford, 2nd Lord. See North, Lord
Guines, Duc de, ii. 210
Guise, Sir William (Gibbon's intimate friend), i. 40, 50, 56, 61, 63, 79, 80, 82, 87, 195
Gunning, Sir Robert, British Envoy at Petersburg, i. 270
*Gustavus III., King of Sweden, ii. 279
H
Hague, the, Gibbon at, i. 15
*Hailes, Daniel, ii. 86
*Hales, Sir Philip, i. 250
Hall, James, i. 26
*Hallifax, Sir Thomas, i. 393
*Hamilton, Emma, Lady, i. 74, 214
*Hamilton, Lord Archibald, i. 148
Hamilton, Sir William, British Minister at Naples, i. 74
Hamilton, William Gerard ("Single-Speech"), i. 343; ii. 21, 31, 396
Hammersley's Bank, ii. 303
Hamond, Sir Andrew Snape, R.N., ii. 81, 93
Hampden, Lord, ii. 135
Hampshire Militia, i. 25, 109;
Gibbon major in, i. 51;
colonel, i. 87;
"father" of, i. 346
Hanger, William (Lord Coleraine), i. 146, 148, 310
Hanley, Mrs., ii. 159
Harbord, Hon. Harbord (afterwards Lord Suffield), i. 250, 252
Harcourt, Earl of, i. 9
Harcourt, Mr., i. 232, 233
Hardy, Sir Charles, i. 347; ii. 72
Hare, James, politician and wit ("the Hare and many Friends"), i. 201
Harris, John, Lenborough Estate Agent, i. 95, 127, 165, 167, 170; ii. 104
Harrison, John Butler, Gibbon's opinion of, i. 27
Harrison, Mrs., i. 87
Hartley, David, M.P. for Kingston-upon-Hull, i. 240
Harvey, Stephen, i. 95
Hastings, Marquis of. ii. 396
Hastings, Warren, i. 209, 349;
Governor-General of India, ii. 26, 85;
his trial, ii. 172;
Gibbon dines with, ii. 173
*Hawkins, Sir Cæsar, ii. 393
Hayes, Mrs., i. 21
Hayley, Mrs., i. 399; 11, 14
*Hayley, Thomas, ii. 17
Hayley, William, i. 398; ii. 8, 162;
his Essay on Epic Poetry, etc., ii. 17, 21
*Hayti, independence of, ii. 280
*Hazlitt, on Thos. Amory, i. 189
Heathfield, Admiral Lord, his defence of Gibraltar, ii. 25, 27;
his Sussex estate, ii. 240
Heberden, Dr. William, called by Dr. Johnson "Ultimus Romanorum," i. 83
Helvétius, Claude Adrien, author of De L'Esprit, i. 29
*Hénault, President, i. 312
Henley, Lord. See Northington, Lord
*Henry, Robert, ii. 23
Herbert, Lady Charlotte, ii. 106
*Herbert, General the Hon. W., ii. 375
Herefordshire Militia, and the Bristol riots, ii. 390
*Hertford, Lord, i. 190; ii. 32;
interdicts Foote's The Capuchin, i. 265
Hervey, Lady ("Molly Lepel"), i. 21, 29
Hervey, Lady Elizabeth. See Foster, Lady Elizabeth
*Hervey, Bishop (of Derry), ii. 388
*Hervey, Lord, the "Sporus" of Pope's Prologue to the Satires, i. 21
Hervey, John Augustus, Lord, Ambassador at Florence, ii. 388
Hesse, Landgrave of, i. 272, 277
Hesse-Rheinfels-Rothenburg, Prince Charles of, ii. 332
*Hill, Dr. G. B., i. 83, 273
Hill, Sir Roger, i. 139; ii. 4
Hillsborough, Lord (Marquis of Downshire), ii. 5
Hobart, Harry, i. 212
Hobson, Mrs. (Miss Comarque and Madame de Bavois), i. 82, 83, 220
*Holcroft, Thomas, ii. 154
Holland, Lady (Lady Mary Fitzpatrick), i. 247
Holland, Lady (Elizabeth Vassall), ii. 257
Holland, 1st Lord, i. 198
Holland, 2nd Lord (Stephen Fox), i. 198, 247
*Holland, 3rd Lord, ii. 257
Holland, Gibbon in, i. 15;
fears of war with, i. 348, 353;
war with France, ii. 362;
"abject state" of, ii. 376
*Holland's Memoirs of the Whig Party quoted, ii. 388
Holmes, Mayor of Newtown, i. 88
*Holmes, Sir Robert, i. 89
Holmet, i. 89
Holroyd, Hon. Maria (afterwards Lady Stanley of Alderley), her letters to Gibbon, ii. 157, 167, 216, 245, 271, 273, 322, 340, 353;
Gibbon's letters to, ii. 259-266, 337
Holroyd, Isaac, i. 180, 237
Holroyd, J. B. See Sheffield, Lord
Holroyd, John William, i. 160
Holroyd, Miss Sarah M., i. 180, 237, 336, 342, 345
Holroyd, Mrs. (Sheffield's mother). Gibbon's letter to, i. 160
Home, John, author of Douglas, etc., i. 202
*Hood, Lord, ii. 179
Horneck, Captain Charles, i. 207
Horneck, Mrs., i. 207
*Hornsby, William, President of Bombay Council, ii. 85
Horton, Mrs. (Duchess of Cumberland), i. 146, 150, 154
*Hotham, Commodore, i. 349
Howe, Admiral Lord, i. 283, 291, 332;
the relief of Gibraltar, ii. 19, 25, 27;
First Lord of Admiralty, ii. 86;
dock-yards shut to strangers, ii. 173;
his search for the French fleet, ii. 397
Howe, General Sir William, his campaign in America, i. 249, 287, 300, 303;
his American mission, i. 283, 332;
occupies New York, i. 290;
captures Fort William, i. 298;
captures Philadelphia, i. 323
Howe, Thomas, i. 91
Hugonin, Francis, i. 7, 128, 157, 163-165, 196, 199, 213, 246, 277, 344, 348; ii. 138, 183, 185, 234
Hume, David, i. 8, 22;
referred to in Mason's satire, i. 190;
his essay on Polygamy and Divorces, i. 202;
his Philosophical Works quoted, i. 203;
Parisian civilities to, i. 307
Hume, Sir Abraham, i. 201, 255, 261
Hunter, Dr. John, his Lectures on Anatomy attended by Gibbon, i. 302, 304, 307
Huntingtower, Lord, i. 2
*Hutcheson, Archibald, M.P. for Hastings, i. 398
Hutcheson, Mrs., i. 398
Hutchinson, Governor Thomas, History of the Colony of Massachusetts, i. 206, 240, 243, 247, 257, 258
Hyder, Ali, i. 209; ii. 26
*Hylton, Sir R., i. 111
I
*Impey, Sir Elijah, ii. 86
India, i. 349, 350, 357; ii. 280
Ireland, debates on, i. 338, 373; ii. 115, 137;
effects of French Revolution on, ii. 320;
Roman Catholics v. Protestants, ii. 320, 343, 350
Irish Parliament, i. 196
*Irnham, Lord (Earl of Carhampton), i. 146
*Irvine, Lord, i. 247
Italy, Gibbon's tour in, i. 64
J
Jackson, Richard, ii. 19
*Jacobin Club, the, ii. 305
Jamaica, Light Dragoons for, ii. 289
Jenkinson, Charles. See Liverpool, Lord
Jenyns, Soame, i. 366, 391; ii. 94
*Jephson, Robert, author of tragedy of Braganza, i. 252
"John the Painter" (Aitken), i. 301
Johnson, Dr. Samuel, on Lord Bolingbroke, i. 8;
his description of Dr. Maty, i. 18;
on courts and camps, i. 25;
Lady Diana Beauclerk, i. 82;
Dr. Heberden, i. 83;
on Sir John Dalrymple's style, i. 131;
Goldsmith's epitaph, i. 202;
George Colman on, i. 213;
his publishers, i. 222;
Taxation no Tyranny, i. 271;
his friend Lord Eliot, i. 273;
"Single-Speech" Hamilton, i. 343;
and Abbé Raynal, ii. 75
Johnson, Sir William, i. 291
*Johnston, Governor George, i. 308, 332
Jolliffe, William, M.P. for Petersfield, i. 111, 153, 171, 247, 346, 366
Jones, Paul, i. 317, 347
Joseph II., Emperor, i. 158, 313; ii. 137
*Jourdan Coupe-Tête, ii. 293
*Journal, Gibbon's, quoted, i. 27, 35, 40, 50, 57, 84
Junius, Letters of, i. 108, 146; ii. 22, 92
K
Keene, Colonel, i. 302
*Kellerman, F. C. de, ii. 319
*Kelly, Hugh, School of Wives, i. 199
Keppel, Admiral Lord, and the French fleet, i. 339, 340, 343;
Palliser's charges against, i. 349, 356, 357;
M.P. for Surrey, i. 388;
First Lord of Admiralty, ii. 13, 18, 34
Keppel, General, i. 346
Kimber, Captain John, ii. 295
*Kingsbergen, Admiral, ii. 247
*Kingston, Duchess of, i. 265, 281
*Kingston, Duke of, i. 265
*Kippis, Dr., ii. 305
Knight, Gowin, i. 18
*Kolbel, Baron, i. 319
*Korff, Baroness de, ii. 254
L
*Laborde, M. de, ii. 329
La Brunette, Fort, i. 59
Laclos, François C. de, ii. 258
*Lacretelle, ii. 326
*Ladbroke, Sir R., i. 201
La Fayette, Marquis de, i. 305; ii. 311, 324, 329
Lake, Miss, Gibbon's landlady in St. James's Place, i. 82, 83
Lally, Comtesse, ii. 274, 284
Lally-Tollendal, M., ii. 19, 211;
Burke's opinion of, ii. 274;
Gibbon's opinion of, ii. 284, 337;
his Strafford, ii. 284;
at English Court, ii. 285;
his opinion of Lord North, ii. 287;
his escape to England, ii. 311;
at Sheffield Place, ii. 322, 324;
his Songe d'un Anglois and Plaidoyer pour Louis XVI., ii. 375;
Sheffield's guest in Downing Street, ii. 377
*Lamballe, Prince de, ii. 312
Lamballe, Princesse de, ii. 312, 352
La Motte, i. 34; ii. 283, 293, 328
La Motte Piquet, i. 334
*Langara, Admiral, i. 376
Langer, M., ii. 227
Langlois, Benjamin, M.P. for St. Germains, i. 391
Lansdowne, Lord, ii. 350
Lascelles, Mr., i. 140, 191, 216, 240
Lauderdale, Lord, ii. 297, 320
*Laudohn, Field-Marshal, i. 158
Laurens, Henry, ii. 72
Lausanne, Gibbon at, i. 1-14, 37-55; ii. 74-157, 176-217, 219-223, 227, 241, 246-252, 255, 277-282, 290, 296, 308-319, 322, 325, 331-340, 345-348, 354-361, 369, 377-381
*Lauzun, Duc de (Duc de Biron), ii. 290
Lauzun, Duchesse de (Duchesse de Biron), ii. 289, 324, 333
Lavington, Lady, i. 319, 336
Lavington, Lord, i. 319, 336; ii. 214
Law, Rev. William, author of the Serious Call, i. 7, 398; ii. 218
Lee, Arthur, i. 334
Lee, Captain, i. 89
Lee, General, i. 284, 302
Lee, Mrs., i. 126, 184, 199, 201, 208
Leeds, Duke of, ii. 247, 302, 327
Leigh, Mr., i. 27
*Le Marchant, Sir Denis, i. 91
Lenborough Manor, Gibbon's Bucks estate, i. 69, 186, 384; ii. 64, 81, 83, 93, 96, 112, 124.
See also Lovegrove, Mr.
Lennox, Lord George H., i. 225, 226, 232
Leopold II., Emperor of Austria, at Pilnitz, ii. 271;
his death, ii. 279, 292
*Lepel, General Nicholas, i. 21
Lepel, Molly (Lady Hervey), i. 21, 29
Le Rebours, Postmaster at Pontarlier, ii. 357, 361
Lescure's Correspondence Secrète sur Louis XVI., etc., i. 314;
Vie de la Princesse de Lamballe, ii. 352
Lessart, Antoine de, Minister of Interior and Foreign Affairs, ii. 292
Lessart, M. de, Paris banker, ii. 94, 99
Lethieullier, Benjamin, M.P. for Andover, i. 240, 247
*Lethieullier, Smart, i. 240
Levade, M., ii. 268, 275, 339
*Lévis, Duc de, ii. 266, 290
Lewisham, Lord, ii. 86
*Leycester, Sir Peter, i. 90
Liancourt, Duc de (Rochefoucault), ii. 324
*Library, Gibbon's, its fate, ii. 300, 301
Lichfield, Earl of, Jacobite leader, i. 34
Ligne, Prince de, ii. 83, 137
*Ligonier, Lord, i. 180
Lincoln, Lord, i. 388
Lisburn, Lord, i. 376
Liskeard, Gibbon M.P. for, i. 229, 234
Liverpool, Lord (Charles Jenkinson), i. 264;
Secretary at War, 349; ii. 2;
Gibbon's host, ii. 9
Llandaff, Bishop of, i. 240
Lockwood, Mr., i. 134
*Loftus, Rev. Smyth, i. 328
*London Evening Post, i. 130, 180
*Long, Dudley, i. 391
Lonsdale, Earl of (Sir James Lowther), i. 82
Loughborough, Lord. See Rosslyn, Earl of
*Louis XV., i. 218
Louis XVI., i. 218, 334; ii. 204, 226, 252;
his escape and recapture, ii. 254 et seq., 285, 286, 311, 324;
declares war against Francis Joseph, ii. 279;
defended by Manuel, ii. 341;
his murder, ii. 360, 365, 374;
England's mourning for, ii. 374;
Lally's Plaidoyer, ii. 375
Louis XVIII., ii. 265
*Louis Philippe, i. 326
*Louvois, Marquis de, ii. 211
*Lovat, Lord, i. 264
Lovegrove, Mr., tenant of Lenborough, i. 186, 201, 205, 207, 210, 235, 239, 261, 286; ii. 84
Lowther, Sir James (Lord Lonsdale), i. 82
Lucan, Earl of, ii. 135, 162, 392
Lucan, Lady, ii. 400
Lucca, the Opera at, i. 66
*Luckner, Baron de, ii. 269
Luff, Mr., i. 138, 167
Luna, Miguel de, i. 243
Luttrell, Colonel, i. 91, 146, 247, 249
*Luxembourg, Maréchale de, ii. 289
*Luynes, Madame de, i. 314
Lymington, Gibbon M.P. for, i. 387, 400; ii. 1
Lyons, Gibbon at, i. 77
Lyttelton, Lord, i. 65
Lyttleton, Hon. William, i. 273
M
Macartney, Lord, i. 220;
Governor of Caribbee Islands, i. 369
*Macaulay, Lord, on Sheridan's knowledge of stage-effect, ii. 172
*Mackay, member of Madras Council, i. 362
*Mackenzie, Hon. Stuart, i. 56
Macpherson, James, author of Fragments of Ancient Poetry collected in the Highlands, etc., i. 202;
History of Opposition, i. 369
Madras Council, arrest of Lord Pigot, i. 308, 362
Mahrattas insurrection, the, i. 349, 350;
peace with, ii. 26
Maine, Sir William, i. 240
*Malden, M. de, ii. 256
Mallet, Arabella. See Williams, Mrs.
Mallet (or Malloch), David, author of the ballad William and Margaret,$1, 283;
his tragedy Eurydice, i. 19
Mallet, Dorothea. See Celesia, Madame
*Mallet du Pan, ii. 318, 329
Mallet, Mrs., i. 31, 34, 315
Malmesbury, James. Earl of, ii. 184;
"the audacieux Harris," ii. 300;
on Fox, ii. 306;
his Diaries and Correspondence quoted, ii. 350, 363
*Malmesbury, Lady, on Duke of Portland, ii. 306;
on England's mourning for Louis XVI., ii. 374
Malouet, Victor, ii. 311, 324, 329, 377
Manchester, Duke of, i. 154; ii. 67, 82, 86
Mann, Sir Horace, i. 65
Mansfield, Lord, Royal Marriage Bill, i. 154;
Sayer's alleged plot, i. 272;
on war with France, i. 339;
trial of members of Madras Council, i. 362
Mansfield, 2nd Lord, President of Council under Pitt, i. 333, 383
Manuel, Louis Pierre, ii. 311, 341
Maret, Hugues B. (Duc de Bassano), ii. 367
Maria Theresa, Empress of Austria, i. 394
*Marie Antoinette, ii. 203, 285;
her letter to Comte de Fersen quoted, ii. 292;
her distrust of La Fayette, ii. 329
Marriage Bill, Royal, i. 146, 151, 154
Marseillais, march of the, ii. 293
Martin, Samuel, his duel with Wilkes, i. 50, 51
Marvell, Andrew, i. 284
*Mason's satire, An Heroic Epistle, etc., i. 190
Masquerade, the Soho (Carlisle House), i. 131
Massachusetts Charter Act, i. 329, 331
Massey, Miss, i. 118, 119
Massey, Mrs., i. 352
*Mathews, Henry, Diary of an Invalid, ii. 40;
on fate of Gibbon's library, ii. 301
Matthews, Mr., i. 200, 207, 235, 269
Maty, Dr., i. 18, 20;
quarrels with Gibbon, i. 21
Mauduit, Isaac, author of Considerations on the Present German War, i. 240, 243, 247
Maury, Abbé, ii. 252, 270
Mayence, siege of, ii. 382
Maynard, Mrs., ii. 271-273
Melmoth, William ("Pliny"), i. 326
Meluner, Captain, ii. 375
Melville, Lord. See Dundas, Hon. Henry
Mémoire Justificatif, Gibbon's, i. 371
*Mémoires Littérraires de la Grande Bretagne pour l'An 1767, by Gibbon and Deyverdun, i. 82
Mentrond, M., ii. 267
Mercier, Sebastien, author of Tableau de Paris, ii. 82, 115
*Meredith, Sir W., i. 147
Mesery, M. de, i. 40
Mesery, Madame de, ii. 83
*Michaud, ii. 326
*Michelet, ii. 75
*Middleton, Dr., i. 83
Midleton, Lord, i. 210, 232, 236
Milan, Gibbon at, i. 60
Milbank, Sir Ralph, i. 344
Militia Bill, New, i. 366
Militia, calling out of the, ii. 348
*Millar, Andrew, i. 222
Miller, Anna, Lady, Letters from Italy by an Englishwoman, ii. 2
Miller, Sir John, i. 159
Miller, Sir John Riggs, ii. 2, 8
Miller, Sir Thomas, M.P. for Lewes, i. 240, 247
Milner, Sir William, i. 19
Milton, Lord (afterwards Earl of Dorchester), i. 139; ii. 350
*Ministerial Club, the, i. 84
*Minto, Earl of, ii. 25
Mirabeau, Marquis de, i. 35;
his La Monarchie Prussienne, ii. 192;
a king's dowry, ii. 203;
his "corps," ii. 269;
and M. de Narbonne, ii. 292;
his description of Lord Malmesbury, ii. 300
*Miscellaneous Works, Gibbon's, referred to, i. 20, 84, 375; ii. 87, 400
Moira, Lord (afterwards Marquis of Hastings), ii. 396
Molesworth, Sir J., i. 273
Molyneux, Lord, ii. 262
Monciel, Terrier de, ii. 329
Monkeith, Mr., i. 168
Mont Cenis, i. 55
Montagny, M. de, i. 61; ii. 195, 203, 229
Montagu, Lady Mary Wortley, Gibbon's opinions of her Letters, i. 53
*Montagu, Wortley, i. 6
*Montague, Mrs., i. 294
*Montconseil, Marquis de, ii. 211
Montesquieu, his invasion of Savoy, ii. 314, 315-317, 322, 326;
escapes from arrest, ii. 345;
report of the Diplomatic Committee on, ii. 346
*Montgomery, General, i. 275
Montolieu, Madame de, ii. 43, 154
Montolieu, M. de, ii. 43
*Moore, Dr. John, Archbishop of Canterbury, ii. 397
*Moore's Memoirs of Sheridan, ii. 172
*Mordaunt, Hon. and Rev. George, i. 19
*More, Hannah, ii. 75
*Morning Chronicle cited, i. 212; ii. 91, 172, 351
Morning Post, i. 291
*Mortimer-Ternaux, his Histoire de la Terreur quoted, ii. 352
Moss, Mrs., ii. 167, 249, 295, 300, 321, 331, 343
*Mouchy, Maréchal de, ii. 329
*Moultou, Pastor, i. 41
Mounier, J. Joseph, ii. 211, 274
Mountstuart, Lord, i. 56
Mouschkin Pouschkin, i. 227
*Moustier, M. de, ii. 256
Mulgrave, Lord, i. 376
*Munro, Sir Hector, i. 349
*Murphy's Grecian Daughter, ii. 29
Murray, John, Resident at Venice, and Ambassador at Constantinople, i. 76
*Mutiny Bill, the, ii. 95, 101
*Mysore, third war in, ii. 276
N
Naijeiraud, ii. 367
Napier, Sir Gerard, i. 25
Naples, Gibbon at, i. 72
*Napoleon Bonaparte, Essai sur l'Histoire de la Corse, ii. 75
Narbonne-Lara, Comte de, ii. 292, 347, 375
Nassau, Madame de, ii. 43, 266
Nassau-Siegen, Prince of, ii. 265
National Assembly, the, ii. 279, 280;
and English Nonconformists, ii. 305
Necker, Jacques, i. 41, 81;
Directeur Général, i. 304; ii. 115;
Mrs. Mallet's resentment, i. 316;
"no sign of jealousy," i. 320;
his Administration des Finances, ii. 115, 128;
and the States-General, ii. 181;
ordered to quit France, ii. 204;
Gibbon's opinion of, ii. 237;
his treatise, ii. 251;
North's opinion of, ii. 287;
his defence of the king, ii. 334, 347, 370;
warmly attached to England, ii. 373
Necker, Louis (Germanie, M. de), i. 291
Necker, Madame (Suzanne Curchod), Gibbon engaged to, i. 40, 41;
her description of Gibbon's visit, i. 81;
Gibbon's friendship for, i. 281, 283, 306, 312;
Mrs. Gibbon's suspicions, i. 306;
at Lausanne, ii. 111, 115, 116, 122;
Gibbon at Geneva with, ii. 291;
Montesquieu's surprise visit to, ii. 345
Neville, Mr., i. 28, 30, 370
New Monthly Magazine, ii. 301
New River Share, the, i. 100, 167, 168, 335, 344; ii. 190
*Newcastle, Duke of, i. 50
Newhaven Estate (Meeching Farm), Gibbon's, ii. 218, 235, 240, 242, 244, 250
Newton, Mr., Gibbon's solicitor, i. 127, 132, 169, 205-207, 227, 261, 269; ii. 113, 127, 139, 146
Nicholls, Mr., ii. 169, 171
*Nichols' Literary Anecdotes of the Eighteenth Century quoted, i. 7, 263
Nichols, John, ii. 301, 313, 314, 328
Nicol, George, ii. 359, 374
Nivernois, Duc de, i. 31, 314; ii. 375
"No Popery" riots, the, i. 380-382
*Noailles, Comte Charles de, ii. 329
Noailles, Comtesse Charles de, ii. 329
Noailles, Marquis de, French Ambassador, i. 305, 333; ii. 259
Noblemen and Gentlemen's Catch Club, The, i. 200, 283
Nonconformists and the American war, i. 271;
relief from Sacramental test demanded, i. 373;
their sympathy with the French Revolution, ii. 305, 320;
and Pitt, ii. 305, 320
*North Briton, the, i. 50, 91
*North, Lady, ii. 4
*North, Lady Anne, ii. 198
North, Lord, Prime Minister, i. 112;
his opponent Barré, i. 145;
his support of Church, i. 148;
Royal Marriage Bill, i. 151;
his somnolence, i. 173;
proposed reconstitution of E. I. Co., i. 184;
Boston Port Bill, i. 206, 208;
conciliation for America, i. 250, 251, 271, 324, 329, 331;
Gibbon's opinion of, i. 255; ii. 82, 87;
his illness, i. 303;
on Irish trade, i. 338, 373;
on Sussex Militia, i. 341;
his windows broken by mob, i. 356;
Madras Council prosecution, i. 362;
the Militia Bill, i. 366;
on Burke's Establishment Bill speech, i. 376;
a seat for Gibbon, i. 387;
at Bushey, ii. 4;
Sheffield's guest in Downing Street, ii. 11;
resigns office, ii. 12;
"balance of the country in his hands," ii. 21;
Warden of Cinque Ports, ii. 23;
Gibbon's attachment to, ii. 28;
union with Fox and Rockingham, ii. 32;
Secretary of State, ii. 34;
eulogised in preface to Decline and Fall, ii. 170;
succeeds to Earldom of Guilford, ii. 238;
his kindness to Lally, ii. 285, 287;
his death, ii. 311
North, Major Frank, ii. 238, 244
Northington, Lord, i. 142; ii. 34, 60, 135, 136
*Northumberland, Duke of, i. 82
Northumberland Militia and the Gordon Riots, i. 381; ii. 28
Norton, Sir Fletcher (Speaker), i. 238
*Notes and Queries, ii. 301
Nott, Mr., ii. 262
Nottingham, Countess of, and Lord Essex's ring, i. 276
Nowell, Rev. Dr., i. 151
Nugent, Lieut.-Colonel, i. 132
Nuneham, Lord (Earl of Harcourt), i. 9
O
Ochs, M., ii. 262
*Oglander, Sir J., i. 90
*Oliver, Alderman Richard, i. 130
*Oliver, Lieut.-Governor Andrew (Massachusetts), i. 205, 240, 243
Oliver, Mr., i. 177
Onslow, Mr. and Mrs., i. 83
Orford, Lord. See Walpole, Horace
Oriel, Lord (John Foster), i. 200, 261, 269; ii. 136
Origines Guelficæ, ii. 227
Osborne, Sir George, i. 91
Ossory, Earl of, i. 27, 274, 296, 333, 373
Ostervald, Madame, ii. 79
Oude, Sujah Dowlah, Nawab of, i. 187, 209
P
Pache, Jean Nicolas (Mayor of Paris), ii. 368
Palliser, Sir Hugh, his charges against Admiral Keppel, i. 349, 356, 357
Palmer, Mr., arbitrator in Lenborough dispute, i. 205, 207
Palmerston, Lord (father of Prime Minister), i. 50;
member of the Catch Club, i. 283
*Panin, M., Russian Foreign Minister, i. 270
Pantheon, the, The Pantheon Rupture, etc., i. 146;
Boodle's masquerade at, i. 212, 215
Paris, Gibbon in, i. 28-36, 311-320;
Treaty of, i. 28;
Gibbon's opinion of, i. 317
*Parker, George Lane, i. 90
Parsons, Sir William, i. 204
Pascal, a parallel between his and Gibbon's writings, ii. 396
Patton, Miss Dorothea. See Gibbon, Mrs. (stepmother)
Patton, W., i. 30, 51, 169
Pavillard, M., Gibbon's tutor, etc., at Lausanne, i. 1 et seq., 40;
his description of Gibbon, i. 2
*Payba, Abraham, i. 6
Payne, Lady. See Lavington, Lady
Payne, Sir R. See Lavington, Lord
Peachy, Lady, i. 162
Peachy, Sir James, i. 162, 234
Pearson, General Sir Richard, i. 397
Pechell, Master in Chancery, i. 102
Pelham of Stanmer, Lord (Earl of Chichester), i. 200
Pelham, Thomas (2nd Earl of Chichester), ii. 60
*Pembroke, Earl of, ii. 375
Pembroke, Lady, ii. 106, 110
*Penthièvre, Duc de, i. 326
*Percy's Reliques quoted, i. 284
*Peterborough, Earl of, i. 19
Petier, M., ii. 258
*Petit Manin, ii. 351
Philadelphia, capture of, i. 323
Pigot, Admiral, i. 362; ii. 16
Pigot, Lord, Governor of Madras, i. 308, 362
Pigott, Charles, The Jockey Club; or, A Sketch of the Manners of the Age, ii. 297
Pilnitz, meeting of King of Prussia and Emperor of Austria at, ii. 271
Pitman, Mr., i. 197, 267
Pitt, General, i. 247
Pitt, George (Lord Rivers), i. 54, 56
*Pitt, Lady Harriet, ii. 22
Pitt, Mrs., i. 247
*Pitt, Thomas, M.P. for Old Sarum, ii. 32
Pitt, William, i. 45, 50;
and the Stamp Act, i. 84, 85;
Chancellor of Exchequer, ii. 19;
Gibbon's opinion of, ii. 28, 127;
resigns office, ii. 34;
Prime Minister, ii. 86, 97;
suggested union with Fox, ii. 92, 306, 307, 330;
his moderation, ii. 96;
his silence, ii. 97;
waning popularity, ii. 136;
scheme for Irish trade, ii. 137;
"the Hero of the day," ii. 162;
Fox's opinion of, ii. 180;
the Regency Bill, ii. 181;
Ellis' lines in Rolliad on, ii. 184;
a desperate plunge, ii. 226;
Corn Regulation Bill, ii. 239, 245;
on war with Russia, ii. 247, 249;
French view of, ii. 286;
Abolition of Slave Trade, ii. 294;
the representative system, ii. 297;
supported by Whigs, ii. 305;
his rumoured Plan of Reform, ii. 330;
meets Gibbon at Eden Farm, ii. 398
Poix, Prince de, ii. 329, 377
*Poix, Princesse de, i. 314; ii. 334
Poland, partition of, i. 158
*Poland, Stanislaus Poniatowski, King of, i. 29, 158
Polier, Colonel, ii. 43, 370
Polignac, Duchesse de, ii. 203
*Polignac, Prince de, ii. 204
*Pompadour, Madame de, i. 313
Ponsonby, William, Lord, i. 65
Porchester, Lord (afterwards Earl of Carnarvon), ii. 375
Porten, James, i. 2, 7, 101, 124
Porten, Lady (Mary Wibault), i. 220, 246, 250
Porten, Miss Catherine (Gibbon's aunt), i. 2, 17, 182, 220, 235, 241, 288, 304; ii. 1, 18, 21, 69, 82, 91, 121, 144;
Gibbon's letters to, i. 2, 5
Porten, Miss Charlotte, ii. 201, 221
Porten, Miss Judith. See Gibbon, Mrs. (mother)
Porten, Sir Stanier (Gibbon's uncle), i. 177, 204, 220, 246, 250, 266; ii. 10, 201
Porteous, Dr. Beilby (Bishop of London), i. 285
*Porter, General, M.P. for Stockbridge, i. 149
Portland, Duke of, i. 231; ii. 18, 34, 305;
Lady Malmesbury's opinion of, ii. 306;
Lord Sheffield's host at Bulstrode, ii. 329;
on Fox's conduct, ii. 351;
supports Alien Bill, ii. 363;
enthralled by Fox, ii. 367, 368
Pouschkin, Mouschkin, Russian Ambassador in London, i. 227
*Powell, Harcourt, M.P. for Newtown, i. 89
Powell, Mr., his offer to pay Fox's debts, i. 198
*Powney, Portlock, M.P. for Windsor, i. 388
*Powys, M.P. for Northamptonshire, i. 331; ii. 97
Poyntz, Mrs., i. 33
*Poyntz, Stephen, i. 33
*Pratt, Lord Chief Justice, i. 51
Prevôt, Lieut.-Colonel, i. 81
Prevôt, Madame, i. 81
Price, Dr. Richard, ii. 210;
Chairman of the Revolution Society, ii. 305
*Priestley, Dr., ii. 210, 305
Provence, Comte de (Louis XVIII.), ii. 265
Prowse, Mr., i. 33
Prussia, Prince Henry of, ii. 5, 111, 115-117
Prussia, King Frederick William of, his meeting with Emperor of Austria at Pilnitz, ii. 271
*Public Advertiser, Letters of Junius first published in, i. 108;
Woodfall assistant editor of, ii. 91
Pully, Mademoiselle de, ii. 324
Putney Writings, the, i. 93, 106
Q
Quebec Bill, i. 256
R
*Rae, Fraser, ii. 172
Ragobat or Ragonant Ráo, i. 349, 350
Ranelagh Gardens, i. 89
*Ranelagh, Lord, i. 89
Ravaud, Mrs., ii. 2, 8
*Ravensworth, Lord, i. 27
Raynal, Abbé, ii. 75, 82, 111, 115
*Réaux, Taboureau des, i. 304
*Redding, Cyrus, Recollections of the Author of Vathek, ii. 301
*Rees, Dr., ii. 305
*Reeves, Mr., ii. 349
*Regency Bill, ii. 181, 306
Remonstrance Debate, the, i. 113
Rennell, Major James, ii, 212, 226
Revenue Returns (1798), ii. 276, 288
Reynolds, Sir Joshua, Queen of Denmark's portrait, i. 143;
Colonel Barré's, i. 145;
Mrs. Bonfoy's, i. 189;
Gibbon's companion, i. 191; ii. 24, 162;
Goldsmith's epitaph, i. 202;
a friend of Eliot, i. 273;
Gibbon's portrait, i. 364; ii. 114;
Lord Sheffield's, ii. 212, 214, 216;
his death, ii. 311
Rhodes, Mr., ii. 224
Richardson, Mr., and S. Sayer's arrest, i. 272
Richmond, Duke of, his reception of Gibbon at Paris Embassy, i. 30, 32, 35;
his influence in Sussex, i. 225;
at Madame du Deffand's, i. 312;
his popularity in Paris, i. 316;
his slight skirmishes with Gibbon, i. 317;
in Sussex Militia, i. 336, 342;
Master-General of Ordnance, ii. 13, 18, 86, 374;
his house burnt, ii. 275;
on French affairs, ii. 286;
the Pitt-Fox union, ii. 307;
his kindness to Madame de Biron, ii. 334
Ridley, Major, i. 81
*Ridley, Sir Matthew, i. 81
*Ridotto al fresco, i. 114, 124
*Rivarol, ii. 330
Rivers, Lord (George Pitt), i. 54, 56
Roach, Miss, i. 16
Roberts, Mr., i. 201
Robertson, William, author of History of Scotland, etc., ii. 132, 190, 292
*Robespierre, ii. 256, 311
Roche, Captain David, his quarrel with Lieut. Ferguson, i. 209
Rochefoucault-Liancourt, Duc de, ii. 324
Rochford, Lord, i. 272
Rockingham, Lord. ii. 13, 17
Rodney, Admiral Sir George, i. 91;
defeats French at Cape St. Vincent, i. 376;
M.P. for Westminster, i. 388;
defeats French in West Indies, ii. 16
*Rogers, John, i. 69
*Rogers, Thomas, i. 393
*Roland, Madame, ii. 252
Roman Catholic Relief Bill (Ireland), ii. 115, 320
Romans Club, the, i. 89
Romanzov, Count Nicholas, ii. 266, 269
Romanzow, Peter A., 223, 227
Romberg, Messrs., of Ostend, ii. 191
Rome, Gibbon at, i. 66-72, 74
Ross, Sir John, i. 369
Rosset, M., ii. 283, 293, 328
Rosslyn, Earl of (Solicitor-General Wedderburn), i. 173;
his defense of E. I. Co., i. 185;
"artful and able," i. 240;
his speech on America, i. 249;
an agreeable companion, i. 302;
on war with France, i. 339;
Attorney-General, i. 347;
Madras Council prosecution, i. 362;
his kindness to Gibbon, i. 365; ii. 82, 91, 163;
on war with Spain, i. 377;
L. C. J. of Common Pleas, i. 387;
and Mrs. Abington, ii. 4;
"places are cheaper than mackerel," ii. 19;
his second marriage, ii. 24;
his Irish expedition, ii. 30;
Lally a favourite of, ii. 274, 285;
suggested Pitt-Fox coalition, ii. 306, 351;
Lord Chancellor, ii. 344, 351, 367, 368;
Gibbon's letter of congratulations, ii. 372;
Gibbon's last visit to, ii. 397
Rotombeau, ii. 351, 353
Rous, Lady, i. 171, 173-175
*Rous, Sir John, i. 171
Rousseau, J. J., i. 41; ii. 261, 289;
his Lettres de la Montague, ii. 318
*Rowe's Jane Shore, ii. 29
*Royal Foresters, the, i. 87
Royal Marriage Bill, the, i. 146, 151, 154
Royal Society, Gibbon a member of the, ii. 187
*Rumbold, Sir Thomas, President of Madras Council, ii. 85
Rumford, Count of (Sir Benjamin Thompson), ii. 72
Russell, Lady, i. 282
Russell, Sir John, i. 191, 196, 216, 218, 282; ii. 65
Russia, peace signed between Turkey and, i. 223;
probability of war with, ii. 247;
rupture with France, ii. 280
Russian mercenaries, proposed hire of, i. 270, 272
*Rutland, Duke of, ii. 86, 115
S
Sackville, Lord (Lord George Germain), i. 198, 226, 240, 249, 296;
Colonial Secretary, i. 278;
his hope, i. 290;
his wife's death, i. 328;
Fox's censure, i. 333;
his windows broken by mob, i. 356
Sainsbury, Mr., ii. 189, 199, 224, 233
St. Cierge, Madame de, ii. 43
St. Domingo, insurrection in Island of, ii. 280
*St. John, Sir H. Paulet, i. 142
*St. Omer, Bishop of, ii. 266
*St. Pierre, Bernardin de, ii. 75
St. Vincent, Earl, ii. 396
Sainte Croix, Bigot de, ii. 329
Salms, Princesse de, ii. 267
Sandwich, Lord, i. 356, 357;
Lord of the Admiralty, ii. 374
*Sardinia, Charles Emanuel III., King of, i. 58;
Victor Amadeus III., King of, ii. 265, 312, 315, 319
*Saville, Sir George, i. 375
Savoy, French invasion of, ii. 314
*Saxe-Teschen, Duke of, ii. 137
Sayer, Stephen, i. 272
*Scawen, Captain, i. 207
*Scholl, Dr., ii. 301
Schomberg, Count de, ii. 223
*Scindiah, i. 350
Scott, George, i. 130, 372, 393
Scott, James, Gibbon's intimacy with, i. 99-101;
his death, i. 177;
Gibbon's letters to, i. 82, 92, 115-117, 119, 126, 159, 161
*Scott, Sir Walter, his address to George Ellis in Marmion, ii. 184
Seeker, Archbishop, i. 285
*Selwyn, George, his Correspondence quoted, i. 29, 58, 82, 343, 347, 356, 388
Septchênes, Le Clerc de, translates part of Decline and Fall, i. 296
Serle's Coffee-House, i. 218
Servan, Joseph, ii. 315, 332, 368
Severy, Wilhelm de, ii. 162, 163, 165, 172, 176, 199, 206, 242, 287, 303, 316, 336, 358, 366, 369
Severy, Madame de, ii. 43, 178, 222, 335, 369
Sévigné, Madame de, i. 260
Shakespeare, Voltaire protests against French translation of, i. 294;
Boydell's edition of, ii. 276
Sharrock, Captain Robert, i. 26
Sheffield, Lady (Miss Abigail Way), i. 85, 139;
Gibbon's letters to, i. 241, 262, 301, 363, 386, 392; ii. 5, 11, 26, 65, 77, 115, 166, 168, 169, 335;
her death, ii. 377
Sheffield, Lord (J. B. Holroyd), subjects of Gibbon's letters to:—
Borromcan Islands, i. 57;
amusements at Turin, i. 58;
Gibbon's snuff-box, ibid.;
Milan, i. 60;
the Neckers, i. 81, 282, 305, 312; ii. 236, 251, 291, 345;
Sheffield's marriage, i. 85;
Gibbon's father's illness and death, i. 86, 115, 117;
"Farmer Gibbon," i. 138;
Denmark Revolution i. 144, 146, 149;
"Datch," i. 145;
the Pantheon, i. 146, 215;
Parliament and the Thirty-nine Articles, i. 147;
Royal Marriage Bill, i. 151;
Dr. Nowell's sermon, ibid.;
a sprained ankle, i. 161;
Beriton, i. 164, 167, 196, 247, 344; ii. 6, 182 et seq., 222, 227;
Lenborough, i. 165, 186, 205-207, 269, 296, 332, 335; ii. 64, 81, 83, 96, 112, 124;
the New River Share, i. 167, 168, 335, 344; ii. 190;
Lord North's somnolence, i. 173; ii. 24;
the E. I. Co., i. 184, 186; ii. 85;
Hume: W. Robertson, i. 190;
Deyverdun, i. 191, 255; ii. 74-157 passim, 176, 178, 191, 194;
Lord Holland and Fox's debts, i. 198;
British Coffee-House, i. 201;
Boston Port Bill, i. 206, 208;
Mrs. Horneck, i. 207;
Sujah Dowlah, i. 209;
war with Spain, i. 212, 344;
Boodle's masquerade at Pantheon, i. 215;
Godfrey Clarke's illness, i. 223, 227, 239;
Lord Sheffield and Sussex, i. 225, 232;
Romanzow and Pouschkin, i. 227;
offer of a seat, i. 229;
Sheffield's withdrawal, i. 233;
Gibbon M.P. for Liskeard, i. 234;
Clive's death, i. 238;
debate on Address, i. 240;
troubles with America (see America);
de Luna's book, i. 243;
Decline and Fall, i. 263, 264, 277, 285, 361; ii. 151, 187;
Spain and Barbary, i. 265;
proposed hire of Russian mercenaries, i. 270;
Sayer's arrest, i. 272;
Hon. John Damer, i. 287;
Howe's proclamation, i. 291;
La Fayette in Paris, i. 305;
Lord Pigot, i. 308, 362;
Madame du Deffand, i. 312;
Paris and the Parisians, i. 313, 317;
Duke of Richmond, i. 317;
Princesse de Beauvau, i. 319;
Gibbon's gout, i. 321, 322; ii. 163-165, 215, 221, 233;
Saratoga, i. 324;
France and America, i. 333;
the French fleet, i. 337, 338, 343, 347, 363;
Admiral Keppel, i. 339;
Tickell's Anticipation, i. 348;
troubles in India, i. 349, 350, 357;
Palliser and Keppel, i. 356;
Militia Bill, i. 366;
Macartney captured by French, i. 369;
rumours of Civil War, i. 375;
the Sussex protest, ibid.;
Burke's Establishment Bill, i. 376;
Rodney and the Spanish fleet, i. 376;
the Sussex Dragoons, i. 384; ii. 23;
Gibbon M.P. for Lymington, i. 387;
the Coventry sheriffs, i. 393;
Mrs. Abington, ii. 4;
ships to warn West Indian fleet, ii. 5;
list of new ministry (1782). ii. 19;
Hyder Ali, ii. 19, 26;
Lord Howe and Gibraltar, ii. 19, 20, 25;
Lord Loughborough's marriage, ii. 24;
Fox and American Independence, ii. 25;
Lord Sheffield's Coventry speech, ii. 32;
Gibbon's Lausanne scheme, ii. 56 et seq.;
the custody of Gibbon's books, ii. 60, 62, 63, 149;
an odd peace, ii. 67;
the Triumvirate from Dover to Boulogne, ii. 72;
Sheffield's Observations on the Commerce of the American States, ii. 73, 82, 148;
Gibbon at Lausanne, ii. 74-157, 176-252, 255, 277-380 passim;
Abbé Raynal, ii. 75, 82;
Lady E. Foster, ii. 81;
Fox and his India Bills, ii. 86;
Gibbon's opinion of North, ii. 87;
Miss Hester Gibbon, "the Northamptonshire Saint," ii. 91, 185, 187, 190, 193;
Loughborough's kindness, ii. 91;
Miss Frith's scissors, ii. 91, 97;
Coalition Cabinet, ii. 92;
"prudence and patriotism," ii. 93;
Gibbon's hopes of compensation, ii. 101;
"Fox's Martyrs," ii. 102;
a free-spoken counsellor, ii. 103;
ways and means, ii. 104, 110, 113, 127, 138, 146, 182-258 passim, 280, 281, 290, 300, 312, 360;
Mrs. Fraser, ii. 105;
society at Lausanne, ii. 111, 124, 135;
Pitt's popularity on Continent, ii. 127;
Sheffield's Observations, etc., on Ireland, ii. 128;
Gibbon's reported death, ii. 132;
Achilles Pitt and Hector Fox, ii. 136;
Joseph II. and Frederick II., ii. 137;
Aunt Kitty's death, ii. 144;
Lord Auckland, ii. 148;
Madame de Crousaz, ii. 154;
the conscious shame of the French, ii. 162;
Sheridan's speech, ii. 172;
twelve hours' talk with Fox, ii. 180;
George III.'s illness and recovery, ii. 181, 191;
Hugonin's death and dishonesty, ii. 183-185;
Gibbon's madeira, ii. 190, 211, 214, 223, 282, 327;
de Montagny and the Swiss transaction, ii. 195, 202;
the Severys, ii. 199, 206;
Sir S. Porten's death, ii. 201;
low spirits, ii. 202;
the French Revolution, ii. 204, 209;
French exiles at Lausanne, ii. 210, 222;
Gibbon's loneliness, ii. 215;
Reynolds' portrait of Sheffield, ii. 216;
happy though unmarried, ii. 220;
Aunt Hester's death, ii. 222;
the Newhaven property, ii. 235, 242;
Burke's French Revolution, ii. 237;
Gibbon's hospitality at Lausanne, ii. 242;
Louis XVI., ii. 255, 360;
the Sheffields' visit to Lausanne, ii. 277;
improvements in house and garden, ii. 278;
peace or war, ii. 279;
the St. Domingo insurrection, ii. 280;
Madame de Staël and her father, ii. 292;
march of the Marseillais, ii. 293;
the "Friends of the People," ii. 295;
Austrian Croats and Gallic cannibals, ii. 296;
fate of the Gibbonian collection, ii. 301;
Brunswick's march on Paris, ii. 311;
Madame de Lamballe's murder, ii. 312;
French invasion of Savoy, ii. 315;
Geneva threatened, ii. 317, 322;
preparations for flight, ii. 319;
fears of siege removed, ii. 326;
Mr. Nichols, ii. 328;
treaty with France delayed, ii. 331, 345;
the Gallic dogs, ii. 333;
Montesquieu and the Neckers, ii. 345;
Brunswick's retreat, ii. 346;
Barthélemy, ii. 355;
Geneva Revolution, ii. 355, 370;
Fox deeply tinged with democracy, ii. 356;
Gibbon's proposed return to England, ii. 357, 371, 379;
plan of work, ii. 359;
de Severy's death, ii. 369;
Lady Sheffield's death, ii. 377;
siege of Mayence, ii. 382;
Lord Hervey's Memorial, ii. 388;
the Althorpe library, ii. 392;
Gibbon's serious illness, ii. 393-395;
at Eden Farm, ii. 398.
His letters to Gibbon, ii. 217, 224, 232, 238, 239, 243, 245, 253, 254, 256-258, 268, 272, 274, 275, 283, 294, 295, 302, 304, 319, 328, 343, 348, 350, 361, 367, 368, 373, 376, 382, 395;
his pamphlets mentioned:
Observations on the Commerce of the American States, ii. 72, 82, 148;
— on the Manufactures, Trade, and Present State of Ireland, ii. 128;
— on the French Treaty and Commerce, ii. 148;
— on the Project for Abolishing the Slave Trade, ii. 217;
— on the Corn Bill now depending in Parliament, ii. 239
Shelburne, Earl, i. 26, 373;
Secretary of State, ii. 14, 17;
Prime Minister, ii. 19, 25;
resigns, ii. 33
Shelley, Sir John, i. 351
Shelley, Lady, ii. 31
Shelly, Mrs., ii. 386
Sheridan, i. 333;
his speech on Begums of Oude, ii. 172;
lines on Lord Glenbervie, ii. 180;
"Friends of the People," ii. 297
Siddons, Mrs., Gibbon's opinion of, ii. 29
Sidney, Mr., i. 40
*Simolin, M., ii. 254
*Simpson, Mrs. J. Bridgman, i. 153
Sivrac, Duchesse de, ii. 111
Skipwith, Mr. (Gibbon's co-executor of Clarke's will), i. 239, 244, 245, 254
Slave Trade, Abolition of, ii. 239, 294
*Sloane, Sir Hans, i. 29, 89
*Smith, General, ii. 85
*Smithson, Sir Hugh (Duke of Northumberland), i. 82
Smyrna Coffee House, i. 19
Soho masquerade, the (Carlisle House), i. 131
*Southerne's tragedy of The Fatal Marriage, ii. 29
Southouse, Mr., Gibbon's solicitor, i. 93, 95, 96, 98, 102, 103, 127
*Southwell, Lord, i. 6
Spain, troubles with, i. 212, 344;
Expedition v. Barbary, i. 265;
Rodney's defeat of Spanish fleet, i. 376;
war with France, i. 362;
convention between England and, ii. 226
Speed, Miss Harriet (Comtesse de Viry), i. 314, 316
Spencer, Lady, i. 33, 370; ii. 300, 310, 312, 400
Spencer, Lady Diana. See Bolingbroke, Lady, and Beauclerk, Lady Diana
Spencer Lady Elizabeth (Lady Pembroke), ii. 106, 110
Spencer, Lord, i. 33; ii. 135, 187, 305
Spencer, Lord Charles, i. 376
*Spencer, Lord R., i. 366
*Spring Gardens, Vauxhall, i. 114
Staël-Holstein, Baron de, ii. 292
Staël-Holstein, Madame de, i. 41, 115, 291, 292;
escapes from Paris, ii. 311;
birth of her sons, ii. 319, 347;
rescues Princesse d'Hénin, ii. 324;
Miss Burney on, at Dorking, ii. 375;
Lord Sheffield's guest, ii. 377
Stafford, Marquis of, ii. 306
Stamford, Lord, i. 254
*Stamp Act, the i. 84
*Standish, Sir Frank, i. 90
*Stanhope, Mrs. Eugenia, i. 195
Stanhope, Philip (Lord Chesterfield's son), i. 188, 191, 195
*Stanislaus Poniatowski, King of Poland, i. 29, 158
Stanley, Lord, his Fête Champêtre, i. 219
Stanley, Rt. Hon. Hans, i. 29, 44, 148
*States-General, meeting of the, ii. 279
Stawell, Lord, ii. 26, 175, 182, 189, 199
*Steward, Colonel, i. 398
Steward, Mr., i. 18
Storer, Anthony Morris, i. 207; ii. 67, 86, 87
Stormont, Lord (2nd Lord Mansfield), i. 314, 333, 371;
President of Council, ii. 34, 305
Strahan, William, printer to His Majesty, i. 222, 263, 279
Strange, Lord, i. 90
Strathmore, Lord, ii. 276
Stratton, member of Madras Council, i. 362
*Strode, William, i. 89, 90
*Struensee, Dr., i. 143
Stuart, Andrew, M.P. for Lanarkshire, i. 366
Stuart, Gilbert, View of Society in Europe, etc., ii. 22
Stuart, Mrs., ii. 11
Stuart, Sir Simeon, i. 84, 92, 105, 112
*Sturm's Religious Meditations, etc., i. 181
Suard, J. B. Antoine, translates Decline and Fall, i. 292
Suess, George, Gibbon's valet, ii. 49
Suffield, Lord, i. 250, 252
Sujah Dowlah, Nawab of Oude, i. 187, 209
Sulens, Mdlle., ii. 43
Sussex Militia, i. 336, 340, 361
Sutton, Sir Richard, i. 260
*Sweden, Gustavus III., King of, ii. 279
Swiss Guard massacred in Paris, ii. 312, 322, 355
Swiss Militia, i. 38
Sylva, Madame de, ii. 388, 400
Sydney, Lord (Tommy Townshend), i. 151, 210; ii. 19, 86
T
Taaffe, i. 6, 35
*Taboureau des Réaux, i. 304
*Talleyrand, ii. 292, 326
*Tandy, Napper, ii. 115
*Tanjore, Rajah of, i. 209, 308
*Tankerville, Earl of, i. 67
Tavistock, Marquis of, i. 27
Temple, Lord, i. 50, 185-187; ii. 19;
the "stormy petrel" of politics, ii. 86
Tessier, M., i. 278
Theodore, Charles, Elector of Bavaria, ii. 265
*Thiars, Comte de, ii. 324
*Thiers, M., ii. 326
Thomas, Dr., i. 223, 224, 241
Thompson, Sir Benjamin (Count of Rumford), ii. 72
Thompson, Sir Charles, i. 261
Thurlow, Lord, Attorney General, i. 173;
Lord Chancellor, i. 341; ii. 13, 86;
dismissed, ii. 306
Tickell, Richard, on Gibbon's snuff-box i. 58;
his pamphlet Anticipation, i. 341;
on Brooks's Club, i. 376
Tippoo (Hyder Ali's son), ii. 19;
defeated by Cornwallis, ii. 276
Tissot, Dr. Simon André, ii. 77, 105, 108, 115, 130, 179
Titchfield, Marquis of, ii. 363
Tollemache, Hon. W., i. 386
Tonyn, Governor of Florida, i. 300
*Toussaint d'Ouverture, ii. 75
*Towers, Dr., ii. 305
Townley, Colonel, i. 148
*Townshend, C., i. 347
Townshend, Hon. John, i. 58, 376; ii. 18, 19, 179
Townshend, Lord, duel with Lord Bellamont, i. 180;
Master of Ordnance, ii. 34;
on Coalition Ministry, ii. 34
Townshend, Thomas. See Sydney, Lord
Trade and Plantations. See Board of Trade
Trajan's Pillar, i. 67
Tremlet, Life of Almanzor, i. 238, 243
Trevor, Mrs., i. 361; ii. 148, 153, 279, 284
Trevor, Hon. John Hampden, ii. 135, 274, 279, 294
*Truguet, Admiral, ii. 314
Tryon, Governor, i. 284
*Turgot, M., i. 304
Turin, Gibbon at, i. 55
Turton, Dr. John, attends Goldsmith, i. 16;
Gibbon, i. 114, 150, 371, 378;
Godfrey Clarke, i. 224
*Tyers, Jonathan, i. 114
Tylney, Lord, i. 60
Tyrconnell, Countess of, ii. 275
*Tyrconnell, Earl of, ii. 275
Tyrone, Lord, ii. 112
U
*Unitarian Society, the, ii. 305
*Ushant, battle of, i. 349
V
*Vallant, Paul, ii. 60
*Valmy, Duc de (F. C. de Kellerman), ii. 319
*Valory, M. de, ii. 256
Van Berchem, ii. 370
*Vanbrugh's The Provoked Wife, i. 19;
The Provoked Husband, etc., i. 366; ii. 29
Vassall, Elizabeth (Lady Holland), ii. 257
Vaucluse, Mdlle. de, i. 20
Venice, Gibbon at, i. 75
*Vergennes, M. de, i. 334
Verney, Earl, i. 126, 167, 170, 332
Vernon, Mr., i. 149
Versailles, Peace of, ii. 67
*Victor Amadeus III. of Sardinia, ii. 265
Viry, Count de, Foreign Secretary to King of Sardinia, i. 56, 314
Viry, Countess de, i. 314, 316
Voltaire, at les Délices, near Geneva, i. 5;
at Ferney, i. 43;
Gibbon on his acting, i. 43;
his financial difficulties, i. 91;
protests against French translation of Shakespeare, i. 294;
quotation from his Mélanges de Poésies, ii. 154;
his death, ii. 258
*Volunteer movement, the, i. 373
W
Waldegrave, Lady, i. 131, 146, 154
*Waldegrave, Lord, i. 146
Wales, Prince of (George IV.), ii. 97, 150, 173, 181, 368
*Wales, Princess Dowager of, i. 143, 149
Walpole, Horace (Lord Orford), his writings quoted on "The Seven Years' War," i. 14;
Madame Geoffrin, i. 29;
Duke of Bedford's temper, i. 30;
Lord Lichfield and the Jacobites, i. 34;
correspondence with Sir H. Mann, i. 65; ii. 16;
Mrs. Cornelys, i. 131;
the Pantheon, i. 146;
Lord Chesterfield's Letters, i. 195;
Kelly's School of Wives, i. 199;
Colman's The Man of Business, i. 202;
Louis XV.'s daughters, i. 218;
N. America, i. 231;
America: Ireland—Journal of Reign of George III., i. 271; ii. 68;
the story of Essex's ring, i. 276;
Tessier's acting, i. 278;
Mrs. Damer, i. 287;
introduces Gibbon to Madame du Deffand, i. 312;
American privateers, i. 317;
Lord North and America, i. 329;
Admiral Keppel, i. 340, 343;
on Gibbon's Vindication, i. 355;
his quarrel with Gibbon, i. 396;
Lady Miller, ii. 2;
combined French and Spanish fleets, ii. 5;
Lady E. Foster, ii. 15;
on Rodney's defeat of Comte de Grasse, ii. 16;
Fox's library, ii. 68;
Sheridan, ii. 172;
peace with Spain, ii. 226;
Necker's fall, ii. 236;
Gibbon's admiration for Burke, ii. 237;
Essay on Modern Gardening, ii. 375
*Walpole, Sir Edward, i. 146
*Walsingham, Lord, i. 387
*Warburton, General, i. 65
Ward, Colonel, i. 258
Ward, Dr., i. 8
*Waring, Walter, i. 375
Warkworth, Lord, i. 82
*Warren, Admiral Sir Peter, i. 90
Warren, Miss (Countess of Abingdon), i. 90
Warren, Sir George, i. 301
Warton, his picture of Gibbon, i. 364
Warville, de. See Brissot, J. Pierre
*Washington, Fort, taken by British i. 298
Washington, George, i. 279, 286, 298, 300, 303, 323
Watson, Dr. Richard (Bishop of Llandaff), criticizes Decline and Fall, i. 289, 291, 295
Watteville, M. de, ii. 316
Way, Miss Abigail. See Sheffield, Lady
Way, Benjamin, i. 139, 157, 243
Way, Mrs. Benjamin, i. 259
*Way, Gregory Lewis, i. 139; ii. 64
Way, Lewis, i. 85, 139
Way, Richard, i. 173, 186, 187, 200, 201, 205, 207, 211, 213; ii. 104, 113
Webster, Lady (Elizabeth Vassall), ii. 257, 388
*Webster, Sir Godfrey, ii. 257
Wedderburn, Alexander. See Rosslyn, Earl
Wentzel, Baron de, the famous oculist, i. 105, 112
*Wesley, Dr., his Calm Address to our American Colonies, i. 271
*Westmorland, Lord, ii. 321
Weymouth, Lord, i. 333, 371; ii. 5
*Whately, Thomas, i. 243
*Whitbread, Mr., ii. 368
Whitehead, "the hirer of horses," ii. 104, 113
*White's Club, "The School of Vice," i. 84
Whitshed, James, M.P. for Cirencester, i. 239
Wibault, Miss Mary (Lady Porten), i. 220, 246, 250
Wilberforce, William, ii. 32;
Abolition of Slave Trade, ii. 239, 294;
"Massa King," ii. 289
Wilbraham, George, i. 144, 229
Wilkes, John, his duel with Martin, i. 50;
expelled from House of Commons and outlawed, i. 91;
chosen Alderman, i. 93;
the Middlesex election, i. 146, 251;
his illness, i. 223;
elected Lord Mayor, i. 233;
on Lord George Germain, i. 290;
the Royal debts, i. 308
*William III., ii. 321
*Williams, Captain, R.E., 118
Williams, Mrs. Arabella, i. 118-121, 123-125, 372, 374; ii. 4
Williamson, Mrs., i. 95, 97, 100
*Wilmot, John, ii. 216
Wilson, Sir Thomas S., i. 225, 232, 233, 237
Winchester Camp, Gibbon at, i. 25
Windham, William ("Weather-Cock"), M.P. for Norwich, ii. 60, 305;
Secretary at War, ii. 306, 363, 369
Windsor, Captain, i. 343
Winton, tenant of Beriton, i. 164, 167, 196, 199, 201, 213, 244, 246, 346; ii. 84
*Wolfe at Quebec, i. 145
Wood, Mr., i. 107
Wood, Mrs., ii. 267, 282
*Woodfall, Henry, ii. 92
Woodfall, William ("Memory Woodfall"), editor of Morning Chronicle, ii. 82, 91, 97, 246, 250, 368, 370
Woolfe, George, i. 35
*Worcester, Marquis of, ii. 216
Worsley, Sir James, i. 34, 88
Worsley, Sir Richard, i. 34, 82, 111, 153, 261; ii. 4, 10
Worsley, Sir Thomas, i. 34, 44, 50, 52, 76, 78, 87, 88, 90
*Wraxall's Historical Memoirs quoted, i. 381;
Posthumous Memoirs quoted, ii. 275
Wray, Mrs., i. 20
Wurtemberg (Wirtenbergh), Duke of, i. 91
*Wyatt, architect of Pantheon, i. 146
Wyndham, Lady F., i. 247
Wynn, Sir Watkin Williams, i. 148
Wyttenbach, M., ii. 260
X
Xaintes (Saintes), Bishop of, ii. 342
Y
*Yarborough, Earl of, i. 153
*Yates, Mrs., i. 252
*Yeo, Edward Roe, i. 393
York, Duchess of (Princess Frederica of Prussia), ii. 275
York, Edward Augustus, Duke of, i. 54, 65; ii. 275;
with troops in Flanders, ii. 376, 394
Young, Arthur, ii. 324
Young, Sir George, ii. 19
THE END.
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