INDEX
- Abercromby, James (Lord Dunfermline), i. [25]
- Aberdeen, 4th Earl of, government of, defeated, i. [217]
- Aberdeen, Countess of, ii. [457]
- Aborigines, protection of, ii. [78–80]
- Abu-Simbel, i. [85]
- Acland, Sir H. W., ii. [318], [357]
- Adams, General, i. [235]
- Adams, John Couch, i. [65]
- Administration versus politics, ii. [382], [392]
- Adshead, Joseph, i. [423], [424]
- Aeschylus, ii. [229], [390]
- African exploration, ii. [315]
- Aga Khan, ii. [405], [428]
- Agincourt, ii. [201]
- Agrippa, Henry Cornelius, i. [226]
- Air, curative effects of, i. [419], ii. [118]
- Airey, General Sir Richard (Lord Airey), i. [357], [437], ii. [65], [73]
- Aitchison, Sir Charles, Lord Lawrence, ii. [45]
- Aitken, Sir W., M.D., i. [390], [391]
- Albert, Prince Consort: playing billiards, i. [37]; designs jewel for F. N., i. [274]; business-like capacity, i. [322]; conversations with F. N. at Balmoral, i. [324], [326]; opinion of F. N., i. [324]; letter to F. N. (1858), i. [384]; and the Queen's Proclamation to India (1858), ii. [324]; correspondence with F. N., on a Lisbon Hospital, i. [421], [422]; on St. Thomas's Hospital, i. [425], [426]; death of, ii. [10], [26]; F. N.'s appreciation of, ii. [10], [91]
- Alcock, Sir Rutherford, ii. [355]
- Aldershot Camp: Divisional reading-room, i. [351]; exhibition of soldiers' trades, ii. [76]; School of Cookery, i. [389], [398]; Soldiers' Home, etc., ii. [5], [76]; training at, i. [331]
- Alexander, Dr. Thomas, i. [328], [330], [331], [356], [364], [365], [372], [379], [394], [494], ii. [14], [16], [19], [338], [442]; death of, i. [379]
- Alexandra, Queen (Princess of Wales), ii. [347], [348], [420]
- Alexandria, i. [87], [417]
- Alfred, Prince (Duke of Edinburgh), ii. [192]
- Algeria, sanitation in, ii. [110], [111], [158]
- Alice, Princess, of Hesse-Darmstadt, ii. [116], [187]
- Allen, C. H., Life of General Gordon, ii. [351]
- Allen, Fanny, i. [15], [96]
- Alma, battle of the, i. [145], [146], [205]
- Aloysius, Sister Mary, ii. [464]
- Ambler, Surgeon-Major Vincent, ii. [334]
- America, fame of F. N. in, ii. [419], [421], [451]
- American Civil War: and development of nursing, i. [441]; F. N. sends reports, etc., to Washington, ii. [8]; influence of her Crimean example, ii. [8], [9] n., [462]
- Ampère, J. J. Antoine, i. [19]
- Amrita Bazar Patrika, ii. [27] n.
- Anderson, Dr., i. [258]
- Anderson, Sir H., ii. [152], [153]
- Angels: “ministering,” so called, ii. [263]; the real, ii. [403], [413]; “without hands,” i. [246]
- Anglo-Russian relations in Asia, ii. [156]
- Anglo-Saxon character, i. [424]
- Apollo Belvedere, i. [70]
- Apothecaries' Warrant, ii. [70]
- Appointments Boards, ii. [259]
- Argyll, 8th Duke of, i. [269]
- Aristotle, ii. [317]
- Army, mortality at home (1857), i. [361], [376]; reduced by F. N.'s and S. Herbert's reforms, i. [397–8], ii. [174]
- Army Hospital Service, reorganized 1860, i. [396]; subsequent alterations, ii. [336], [338]; inquiries into (1880, 1882), ii. [328], [337]; reforms in (1883, 1884), ii. [338], [341]
- Army Medical Department, reorganized (1859), i. [394]; question of succession to Dr. A. Smith, i. [378], [379]; threatened with retrenchment, ii. [173]; For successive Directors-General, see [Smith (Andrew), Alexander (T.)], [Muir, Crawford]
- Army Medical School (now Royal Army Medical College): establishment of, urged by F. N., i. [327], [330]; promised but delayed, i. [378]; established (1859), opened (1860) at Chatham, i. [390]; F. N. drafts Regulations and nominates Professors, i. [390]; befriends the Professors, i. [391]; good done by, i. [391–2]; F. N. as its founder, i. [392]; Herbert prize medal at, ii. [8]; moved to Netley (1863), ii. [67], [73]; threatened (1869), ii. [173], (1876) ii. [318–19]; present buildings, etc., at Millbank, i. [393]
- Army Medical Service: F. N.'s zeal for, ii. [67], [68]; asked to mark a list of officers, ii. [74]; Medical Officers' Warrant (1858), i. [394]
- Army Medical Statistics, i. [389]
- Army Sanitary Committee. See [Barrack]
- Army Temperance Association, ii. [369]
- Arnold, Sir Edwin, The Song Celestial (from the Mahâbhârata), ii. [242], [401], [402]
- Arnold, Matthew, Literature and Dogma, F. N. on, ii. [219]
- Asceticism, i. [369], ii. [140]
- Ashburton, 1st Baron, and Lady Ashburton, i. [35], [37]
- Ashburton, 2nd Baron, i. [422]
- Ashburton, Lady (Louisa Stewart Mackenzie, second wife of 2nd Baron), i. [35], [422], [499], [502], ii. [300], [301], [306], [314], [324], [391]
- Ashley, Lord. See [Shaftesbury]
- Askrigg, ii. [101]
- Aspromonte, ii. [91]
- Association for the Improvement of the Infirmaries of London Workhouses, ii. [124], [134], [137]
- Astley's, ii. [110]
- Athens, F. N. at, i. [87] seq.
- Atherstone, Warwickshire, ii. [236], [237]
- Atonement, the, i. [486], ii. [234]
- Auckland, Lord (Bishop of Bath and Wells), i. [325]
- Auckland (N.Z.), F. N. manuscripts at, ii. [440]
- Augusta, Queen of Prussia, German Empress, ii. [187], [314] n.
- Aunt Hannah. See [Nicholson, Miss]
- Aunt Mai. See [Smith, Mrs. Samuel]
- Austen, Jane, ii. [317]
- Austria and the Austro-Prussian War (1866), ii. [104], [106], [119]
- Autobiography of a Balaclava Nurse, ii. [461]; referred to, i. [210] n., [249]
- Avignon, Mill's house at, ii. [221], [222]
- Aylesbury, Bucks County Infirmary, i. [422]
- Aztecs, ii. [315]
- Babbage, Charles, i. [26]
- Bacillus, ii. [400]
- Bacteriology, i. [441]
- Baden, Grand Duchess (Luise) of: founds Ladies' Society for Nursing in Baden, i. [447]; admiration of F. N. and letters to her, i. [447], [450], ii. [202], [314], [413]; on Notes on Nursing, i. [450]; nurses the Emperor William I., ii. [314] n.
- Baker, Mr., ii. [34], [35], [36] n.
- Baker, Sir Samuel, ii. [304], [429]
- Baker, General Sir W. E., ii. [152], [274]
- Balaclava: battle of, i. [171], [181], ii. [404]; an incident of, ii. [66]; arrival of wounded from, at Scutari, i. [184]; British hospitals at, i. [254], [285], [449]; memorial cross at, i. [294]
- Balfour, Arthur James, ii. [397]
- Balfour, Dr. T. Graham, Secretary of the Royal Commission (1857), i. [329], [330], [332], [377]; works with F. N., i. [372], [435]; director of Army Medical Statistics, i. [389] n., [432], ii. [74]
- Balliol College, Oxford, ii. [333], [398]; See also [Jowett]
- Ballot, the, i. [26]
- Balmoral, F. N. at, i. [324], [325], [326]
- Balzac, i. [486], [505], ii. [106]
- Barbauld, Mrs., quoted, ii. [235]
- Barlow, Sir Thomas, ii. [421]
- Barrack and Hospital Improvement Commissions and Committees—
- Barrack and Hospital Improvement Commission (a Sub-Commission to advise on, and carry out, reforms recommended by the Royal Commission of 1857), i. [363], [381], [383], [388]
- Barracks Works Committee (appointed June 1861), i. [388–389], [405]
- Barracks (Mediterranean Station) Improvement Committee (1862), i. [405], ii. [7]
- Barracks and Hospital Improvement Commission (made a permanent body, 1862), ii. [64–65]; reinforced by representatives of the India Office, to advise on Indian sanitary measures (1863), ii. [33], [42], [45], [46], [48], [51], [150]; its name changed to Army Sanitary Committee (1865), ii. [65]; various references, ii. [147], [149], [171], [172], [173], [178], [279]; threatened, reconstituted (1890), ii. [374–5]
- Barracks, improvements in, i. [381], [388], [405], ii. [374] n., [406–7]; F. N.'s proposed model, i. [374]
- Barratt, Jerry, picture of F. N. at Scutari, ii. [468]
- Barrie, Georgiana. See [Gonzaga, Sister]
- Bathurst, Caroline, i. [114]
- Batta, violoncellist, i. [25]
- Baudens, L., i. [204] n.
- Bayard, the Chevalier, ii. [160]
- Bayard, T. F. (American Ambassador), ii. [419]
- Bayuda Desert, ii. [350]
- Bazaars, i. [80]
- Beatitudes, the, ii. [120], [261]
- Beaumont, Elie de, i. [21]
- Bèche, Sir H. de la, i. [38]
- Bedchamber Plot, i. [25]
- Begging letters, i. [318], [319], [496], ii. [86] n., [106]
- Bence-Jones, Dr., i. [269], [456] n., [457]
- Bengal, plants of, ii. [310]
- Bengal Land Question, ii. [285], [297]
- Bengal Social Science Association, ii. [178], [446]
- Bentinck, General, i. [235]
- Benton, Samuel, ii. [272] n.
- Berlin, F. N.'s study of hospitals at, i. [92], [417]; Victoria Training School for Nurses, ii. [190]
- Bermondsey, R.C. Convent at, Nuns from, with F. N. during Crimean War, i. [159], [253], [304]; subsequent relations with, i. [487]
- Bermuda, yellow fever, ii. [70]
- Bernays, Dr., i. [460]
- Best, Mr., i. [266], [281]
- Bethune, Mr., i. [35]
- Bhownaggree, Mr., ii. [378]
- Bible, the, F. N. on selections from, ii. [228], [229]; Protestant view of, i. [77]
- Birds, F. N.'s fondness for, i. [9], [10], [28], ii. [309]
- Birdwood, Sir George, ii. [378]
- Birkenhead, loss of the, i. [316]
- Birkenhead Hospital, i. [423]
- Bismarck, Prince, ii. [105], [315]
- “Bison,” the, i. [325]; bullyable, i. [335]; bullying the, i. [335], [354], ii. [30]
- Blachford, Lord. See [Rogers]
- Blackwell, Dr. Elizabeth, i. [29], [61]
- Blackwood, Lady Alicia, i. [197], [198], [240]; her Experiences of the Crimean War, ii. [463]; quoted, i. [247], [260]
- Blackwood, Rev. Dr. J. S., i. [197]
- Blanchecotte, Madame, Impressions de Femme, ii. [315]
- Blue-books, i. [377], [386], [499], [500], ii. [307]
- Board of Survey, i. [202]
- Body and soul, ii. [224]
- Boer War, ii. [411]
- Bokhara, King of, ii. [156]
- Bologna, ii. [420]
- Bomba, King Ferdinand II. of Naples, ii. [90]
- Bombay: plague, ii. [409]; sanitation in, ii. [174], [183], [281]; Village Sanitation Bill, ii. [377], [378], [454]
- Bonham Carter, Charles, ii. [392]
- Bonham Carter, Miss Edith, ii. [389]
- Bonham Carter, Henry, i. [v], [30], [280], ii. [190], [191], [200], [254], [361] n., [362], [363], [392], [393], [403], [413]
- Bonham Carter, Miss Hilary, i. [11], [29], [99], [124], [130], [431], [492], [500], [502], ii. [25] n.; illness and death of, ii. [93], [395]; portraits of F. N. by, ii. [468], [469]
- Bonham Carter, John (M.P. for Portsmouth), i. [29]
- Bonham Carter, John (“Jack,” M.P. for Winchester), i. [423]
- Bonham Carter, Malcolm, ii. [389]
- Bonham Carter, Norman, ii. [389]
- Books, object of, ii. [233]; prefaces to, i. xxiii
- Booth, Charles, on F. N., i. [456]
- Bosanquet, Miss Elizabeth, ii. [416], [469]
- Bossuet, i. [481]
- Boswell's Johnson, ii. [99]
- Bouffé (French actor), i. [34]
- Bowman, Sir William, M.D., i. [137], [141], [456] n., [457], [462]; letter to F. N., i. [462]
- Boyd, Florence Nightingale, ii. [452]
- Bracebridge, Charles H.: with F. N. in Rome (1847–48), i. [69], [75], [79]; with F. N. in Egypt and Greece, etc. (1849–50), i. [84]; Sidney Herbert proposes that Mr. and Mrs. B. should accompany F. N. to Scutari, i. [153], [155]; his sojourn at Scutari and work there, i. [173], [197], [203], [235], [241], [250], ii. [236]; letters from, i. [181], [183], [186], [191], [235]; S. Herbert's tribute to, i. [269]; accompanies F. N. to the Crimea, i. [256]; returns to England, i. [295]; speech on his return, i. [213], [287], ii. [459]; joins Council of Nightingale Fund, i. [456] n.; various references, i. [67], [79], [114], [211], [284], [313], [348], ii. [260]; death of, ii. [236]; character of, ii. [236], [237]
- Bracebridge, Mrs. Charles (Selina Mills): F. N.'s affection for (1846), i. [35]; tributes to (1874, etc.), ii. [236], [237], [305]; with F. N. in Rome (1847–1848), i. [69], [70], [71], [73]; with F. N. in Egypt, etc. (1849–50), i. [84]; accompanies F. N. to Scutari and work there, i. [153], [155], [158], [163], [173], [215], [234], [236], [241], [255], [296]; goes to the Crimea, i. [260]; various references, i. [67], [79], [96], [112], [114], [124], [129], [141], [462], [502], ii. [89], [96], [260], [468]; death of, ii. [236]
- Bréchard, Mère de, ii. [81]
- Bridgeman, Mrs. (Mother Superior of the Kinsale nuns), i. [289], [292], [293]
- Bright, John, i. [195] n., ii. [293]; interview with F. N., ii. [289]
- Brinton, Dr. W., i. [460]
- British Army Scripture Readers, i. [495]
- British Association, meeting, 1847, i. [65]; 1861, ii. [4] n.
- British Medical Journal, on nursing, 1854–74, i. [444]
- British Nurses Association, ii. [356] seq.
- Broadhead, W., and rattening, ii. [149]
- Brougham, Lord, i. [26], [428], ii. [396]
- Brown, Lieut.-Col. Clifton, i. [280]
- Brown, General Sir George, i. [175], [319]
- Brown, Joseph, M.D., i. [330], [332]
- Browning, Elizabeth Barrett, sees F. N., i. [118]
- Browning, Robert, ii. [395]; quoted or referred to, Paracelsus, i. [43], [54], ii. [426]; Rabbi Ben Ezra, ii. [401], [402]; Ring and the Book, ii. [307]
- Bruce, Lady Augusta (Stanley), i. [124], [281], ii. [93]
- Bruce, H. A. (Lord Aberdare), ii. [212]
- Brussels, F. N.'s study of hospitals at, i. [417]
- Buckingham, Duke of, ii. [282]
- Buckingham Canal (Madras), ii. [288] n.
- Buckle, H. T., History of Civilization, i. [484]
- Buckley, R. B., Irrigation Works of India, ii. [297] n.
- Bucks, North, Technical Education Committee, ii. [383], [384]
- Budget, a Moral, ii. [218], [219]
- Buenos Ayres, ii. [412]
- Buffon, ii. [67]
- Bulgaria, ii. [284]
- Bunsen, Baron von, and family, i. [62], [63], [84], [114], ii. [441]
- Burdett, Sir Henry, ii. [356] n.
- Burdett-Coutts, Lady, i. [151], [499], ii. [418], [456]
- Bureaucracy, evils of, i. [405], [407], ii. [4], [62]
- Burglars, ii. [393]
- Burgoyne, General Sir John, i. [410]
- Burial Board Office, ii. [36]
- Burke, quoted, ii. [1], [18]
- Burlington Hotel, London, i. [328], [342], [380], [406], [431], [498]; associations with F. N., i. [507]; a domestic catastrophe at, i. [506]; maids at, i. [507]; F. N. leaves (Aug. 1861), i. [507]; never revisits, ii. [3]
- Burma, annexation of, ii. [372]
- Business-like: Roman Catholicism, i. [424], [487]; unbusiness-likeness, i. [424], [495]
- Butler, Mrs. Josephine, ii. [75]
- Butterfield, William, i. [423]
- Byron, Lady, i. [114], [262], [265], [266]
- Byron, Lord, i. [369], ii. [389]
- Byron of the East, the, ii. [178]
- “Cabal,” F. N.'s, i. [313], [365]
- “Cabinet,” F. N.'s, i. [313], [357], [367], [492], ii. [21]
- Cadmus, i. [32]
- Caird, Sir James, ii. [289], [292] n., [333]
- Caird, Mr., M.P., i. [437]
- Cairo, mosques, ii. [226]
- Calcutta, sanitary condition of, ii. [51], [52], [86], [174], [177], [181], [183], [281], [375]
- Cambridge, Duke of, i. [269], [273], [324], [340]; F. N.'s estimate of, i. [384–385]; letters to F. N., i. [384], ii. [407]; opposes General Hospital at Woolwich, ii. [6]; other references, ii. [5], [68]; retirement, ii. [407]
- Campbell, Sir George, ii. [177], [285], [295], [296], [298]; lectures at Oxford for F. N., ii. [334]; F. N. on, ii. [274]
- Campbell, Lewis, ii. [399]
- Canadian Expedition (1861), ii. [9], [10]
- Candolle, A. P. de, i. [17]
- Canning, Lady, i. [131], [134], [140], [160], [266], [371]
- Cap (dog), i. [13]
- Cardigan, Lord, i. [291]
- “Cardinal,” the, i. [249], [499]
- Cards and working-men's clubs, ii. [326]
- Cardwell, Edward, Viscount, ii. [29], [30], [162] n., [173], [212], [318]
- Carlyle, Mrs., i. [488]
- Carlyle, Thomas: on Happiness, i. [67]; Past and Present, i. [34]; on F. N.'s Papers in Fraser's Magazine, ii. [165], [220]
- Carpenter, Miss, ii. [177], [178]
- Carracci, ii. [294]
- Carter, Bonham. See [Bonham Carter]
- Cassandra, i. [119], [490]
- Catholics and Protestants compared, i. [77]. See also [Roman Catholicism]
- Cats, i. [499], [504], ii. [17], [392]
- Cautley, Sir Proby, member of the Royal Commission on India (1859), ii. [19], [21]; of the Army Sanitary Committee, ii. [33] n.
- Cavalry barracks, ii. [65]
- Cavour, death and last words of, i. [401], [404], [484]
- Cawnpore, ii. [141]
- Census: of 1861, F. N. and, i. [435–438]; of 1861 and 1901 compared, on nurses, i. [445]; Papers, how to fill in, ii. [206]
- Century of Family Letters, A, i. [15], [96], [446], ii. [464]
- Ceylon, barracks, ii. [70]
- Chadwick, Sir Edwin, i. [352], [451], [505], ii. [4], [133], [138], [222]; introduces F. N. to Mill, i. [470]; on F. N.'s illness, i. [492], [493]
- Chalon, A. E., ii. [467]
- Chamberlain, Joseph, ii. [407]
- Chamberlain, Sir Neville, ii. [369]
- Chambers, Robert, Vestiges of Creation, i. [37]
- Character, F. N. on, ii. [434]; seldom deserved, i. xxiii
- Charmouth, i. [80]
- Chartists, i. [80]
- Chateaubriand, i. [20], [21], ii. [16], [425]
- Chatel, Madame de, ii. [235]
- Chatham: Fort Pitt, Medical School at, i. [390]; F. N.'s inspection of hospitals at, i. [316], [349]
- Chaumont, Professor F. de, i. [383]
- Chelsea Board, i. [336], [337], [357] n.
- Chelsea Military Hospital, i. [349]
- Chelsea Pensioners, reminiscences of F. N., i. [235]
- Chewed food books, i. [486]
- Cheyne, T. K., ii. [229]
- Childers, Hugh C. E., ii. [328], [337]; Queen Victoria's letters to (1882), i. [215] n.
- Children, F. N.'s interest in, ii. [305]
- Children's Bible, ii. [228]
- China, Expeditionary Force (1857), i. [340], [398]
- Chisholm, Mrs., i. [123]
- Choate, Joseph H., ii. [421]
- Cholera, in India, ii. [70], [344], [455]; inquiry, 1869, ii. [171]; in London (1854), i. [140]; as a “visitation of God,” i. [479]
- Chorlton Union Infirmary, i. [423]
- Christ: the Cross and, i. [486]; His dogmas and those of the Church, ii. [392]; the first true Mystic, ii. [233], [243]; Italian pictures of, ii. [294]; not an ascetic, i. [369]; in what sense, ii. [140]; Prometheus and, ii. [390]; Renan's, i. [486]; as “Saviour,” i. [485]; the Son, i. [486], ii. [244]; various conceptions of, i. [369]
- Christian, Princess, ii. [357], [360], [362], [363], [365], [366], [408]
- Christianity, essence of, ii. [429]
- Christie, Miss, i. [11]
- Christison, Professor, i. [352], [368]
- Church-going, i. [134], [369], [476]
- Church of England, i. [57], [58], ii. [392]
- Church of Rome, i. [57], [58]
- Churchill, Lord Randolph, ii. [368], [374]
- Cid, the, i. [373]
- Clarendon, Lord, i. [278], [325], ii. [92]; pressed to join the Derby Government (1866), ii. [106]
- Clark, Sir George, ii. [278]
- Clark, Sir James, M.D.: F. N. visits, at Birk Hall (1852), i. [118], (1856) [321]; introduces F. N. to Queen Victoria, i. [324]; serves on the Royal Commission (1857), i. [328], [330], [331], [332]; joins Council of Nightingale Fund, i. [456] n., [457]; consults with F. N. on China Expedition, i. [340]; on status of Army doctors, ii. [67], [68]; on F. N. as founder of Army Medical School, i. [392]; on Notes on Nursing, i. [448]; letters to F. N., i. [329], [448]; various references, i. [384], [390], [422], ii. [118], [187], [246]
- Clark, Sir John (son of the foregoing), i. [327]
- Clark, Le Gros, i. [460]
- Clark, W., civil engineer, ii. [177], [214], [278], [280], [282]
- Clarke, Mary. See [Mohl]
- Clarke, Mrs. (matron), i. [130]
- Clarkson, Thomas, i. [5]
- Classical Literature, ii. [390]
- Claydon, F. N. at, ii. [309], [310], [324], [349], [382], [383], [398], [415]; portraits of her at, ii. [467], [468], [469]; Nightingale nurses at, ii. [268]
- Cleanthes, i. [490]
- Clinton, Lord, ii. [152]
- Clive, Mrs. Archer, i. [66], [67], ii. [89]; Paul Ferroll, i. [66], [495], [500]
- Clough, Arthur Hugh: at Oxford, Jowett's reminiscences, ii. [12]; marries F. N.'s cousin, Blanche Smith, i. [30], [128]; sees F. N. off to Scutari, i. [162]; friendship with F. N. and service to her, i. [348], [380], [469], [477] n., [491], [494], ii. [10], [11], [14]; his sympathy, ii. [12], [16]; Secretary of Nightingale Fund, i. [457], [494], ii. [11]; introduces F. N. to Jowett, i. [471]; letter to F. N., i. [494]; illness, ii. [10], [11]; death, ii. [10]; F. N.'s grief, ii. [15], [16]; character of, ii. [10], [12]; Jowett on, ii. [12], [399]; Sir J. McNeill on, ii. [13]; poems of, quoted or referred to, i. [468], [481], [484], ii. [355]; various references, ii. [63], [151], [194], [216], [223], [388]
- Clown and pantaloon at a theatre fire, ii. [261]
- Clyde, Lord, ii. [117]
- Cobden, Richard, i. [336]
- Cochrane, Miss Alice, ii. [416]
- Codrington, General, i. [406]
- Cohn, F., i. [441]
- Coleridge, S. T., ii. [213]
- Colonial Hospitals, ii. [78]; Prisons, ii. [60]; Schools, ii. [78]
- Colonization, ii. [165], [166]
- Coltman, Charlotte, i. [327] n.
- Coltman, William, i. [327] n., ii. [237]
- Coltman, Mrs. William, i. [327] n., ii. [467]
- Colvin, Sir Auckland, i. xxviii
- Combe, Andrew, Management of Infancy, i. [392] n.
- Combe, Dr., i. [360] n.
- Combe Hurst, i. [30], [342]
- Commissariat, i. [157], [331], ii. [64], [70]
- Commissions, Lord Salisbury on, ii. [287]
- Committees, art of managing, i. [135]
- Communion, Holy, F. N. and, i. [96], [259], [489], ii. [243], [400]
- Constantinople: dogs as scavengers, ii. [283]; F. N.'s study of hospitals at, i. [417]; views on approaching, i. [171]
- Contagious Diseases Acts, ii. [74], [75], [212], [408]
- Conviction of sin, i. [49]
- Co-operative movement, ii. [391]
- Corfield, Dr., ii. [379]
- Corfu, i. [90]
- Correggio, “Reading Magdalen,” i. [91], [92], [117]
- Cosmogony, the Indian, ii. [282], [332], [405]
- Cotton, Sir Arthur, ii. [284], [285], [295], [296], [299], [450]; his Life, ii. [297] n.
- Cousin, Victor, i. [21]
- Cousins, marriage of, i. [98]
- Coventry, Hospital, i. [423]; weavers, i. [424]
- Cowper, Mrs. William, ii. [93]
- Cox, Colonel and Mrs., ii. [202]
- “Coxcombs,” i. [376], [379]
- Cranborne, Lord. See [Salisbury, Marquis of]
- Cranbrook, Earl of (Mr. Gathorne Hardy): President of the Poor Law Board (1866), ii. [106]; F. N.'s communications with, on London workhouse reform, ii. [115], [134], [135], [137]; his Metropolitan Poor Act (1867), ii. [137]; F. N.'s communications with, as Secretary for War (1876), ii. [318], [319]; as Secretary for India (1878), ii. [289]; letters to F. N., ii. [115], [291]
- Cranworth, Lady, i. [134], [300]
- Cranworth, Lord Chancellor, i. [266]
- Craven, Mrs. Dacre. See [Lees]
- Crawford, Dr. T., ii. [338], [407]
- Creeds, and Works, i. [58], [488]
- Crewe, Marquis of, speech on Indian sanitation (1913), ii. [145]
- Crimea, the: flowers in, i. [285], [450]; Hospitals in, i. [254]; invasion of, i. [145]; F. N.'s three visits to, i. [255], [283]. See also [Nightingale, F. (2)]
- Crimean veterans, ii. [420], [457], [458]
- Crimean War: heroism of the soldiers, i. [184], [185], [257], [317]; popular resentment at hospital and nursing defects, i. [146]; nature and causes of these defects, i. [175], [178], [179], [202], [205], [207], [211], [221], [224] seq., ii. [10], [43]; preventable deaths in, i. [314], [316]; the true “relics” of, ii. [409]. See also [Balaclava], [Chelsea Board], [Nursing], [Nightingale], [Scutari], etc., etc.
- Crinolines, i. [454]
- Criticism, irresponsible, ii. [265]
- Crivelli (singing master), i. [24]
- Croft, A. W., ii. [275]
- Croft, J., ii. [247], [248], [386]
- Croker, T. Crofton, Fairy Legends of the South of Ireland, part iii., Cluricaune, i. [97]; Phooka, i. [132]
- Cromford Bridge, i. 125
- Cropper, J. W., ii. [127]
- Cross, the, i. [486], ii. [120]; the Way of the Cross, ii. [243]
- Cross, Lord, F. N.'s negotiations with, ii. [373], [374], [375], [377], [406]
- Crosse, Mr., ii. [206]
- Crossland, Miss, ii. [248] n.
- Crown Princess of Prussia. See [Victoria]
- Cruiksbanks, Dr., i. [273]
- Cubs and bears, i. [184], ii. [58]
- Cuffe, Father, i. [248]
- Cumberland Infirmary, ii. [256]
- Cunliffe, Mrs. Leonard, ii. [467]. See also [Galton, E.]
- Cunningham, Sir Henry, ii. [375]
- Cunningham, Dr. J. W., ii. [177], [375]
- Curates, High Church, ii. [309]
- Curzon, Lord, ii. [298] n.
- Cypress, ii. [120]
- Daily News: attack on F. N. (1854), i. [154] n., [245]; Harriet Martineau's articles in, i. [386], [494], ii. [30], [35]; quoted or referred to, i. [235], ii. [6], [75], [137]
- Daily Telegraph, ii. [117]
- Dalhousie, Earl of. See [Panmure]
- Daly, Timothy, inquest on, ii. [130]
- Dante, i. [317], ii. [245]
- Davis, Elizabeth, ii. [461]
- Dawes, Dr. R. (Dean of Hereford), i. [35], [281], [456] n.
- Dawson, Sir Douglas, ii. [418]
- De'Ath, George H., ii. [384], [455]
- Death-beds, i. [449], [455]
- Deccan, usury in the, ii. [290], [291], [451]
- Deeble, Mrs., ii. [194], [335]
- De Grey, Lord. See [Ripon, Marquis of]
- Delane, J. T., i. [157], ii. [38], [134]
- Delhi, insanitary condition of, ii. [281]
- Delphic Sibyl, the, i. [71], [72]
- Denison, Edward, ii. [219]
- Departmental jealousies and friction, ii. [33], [41], [42], [47], [48]
- Derby, 14th Earl of, his administration (1858–59), i. [378], [387]; (1866) presses Lord Clarendon to join him, ii. [106]; sympathetic to Poor Law Reform, ii. [134]; memorial to, ii. [200]
- Derby, 15th Earl of (Lord Stanley): enthusiasm for F. N. and her work, i. [339]; speaks on behalf of the Nightingale Fund (1855), in London, i. [269]; in Manchester, eulogium on F. N., i. [271–2], [305]; introduced to F. N. (1857), i. [339]; agrees to write on report of the Royal Commission (1857), i. [377]; Colonial Secretary (1858) promises to help F. N., i. [379]; transferred to India Office, ii. [21]; carries East India Bill, ii. [105] n.; agrees with F. N. to appoint Indian Sanitary Commission (1859), ii. [19], [21]; succeeds S. Herbert as Chairman of it, ii. [22], [23], [33], [34]; “urged and baited” by F. N., ii. [43]; takes various measures in concert with her for securing adoption of the Report, ii. [41], [43], [48], [56], [57], [86]; replies to Indian Government's criticism of it (1865), ii. [54]; urges appointment of Sir J. Lawrence as Viceroy (1863), ii. [43]; arranges interview between him and F. N., ii. [44], [45]; Foreign Secretary (1866), ii. [105], [113]; commends F. N. to Lord Cranborne, ii. [114]; on Lord Mayo, ii. [169]; “a splendid worker,” ii. [57]; temperament of, ii. [41], [57]; letters to F. N., ii. [25], [31], [41], [42], [44], [54], [55], [57], [114]; various references, ii. [47], [51], [85], [87]
- Derwent, the river, i. [8]
- Des Genettes, the Abbé, i. [124], [127]
- Devon, Earl of, on F. N., ii. [139] n.
- Devonshire, 7th Duke of, i. [318]
- Devonshire, 8th Duke of. See [Hartington]
- Devonshire Square, London, Nursing Institution, i. [158], [159]
- Devotion, the secret of, i. [78]
- Dicey, Edward, on Cavour, i. [484]
- Dicey, Mrs., ii. [458]
- Dickens, Charles, i. [443]; Mrs. Gamp, i. [443]; Mrs. Jellyby, i. [496]; Elijah Pogram, ii. [100]
- Digby, S., ii. [378]
- Disappointment, discipline of, i. [59]
- Disease, philosophy of, i. [451–2]
- Disraeli, Benjamin: educating his party, ii. [138]; “Sanitas Sanitatum,” i. [416]; Sybil, i. [64]; various references, ii. [146], [213], [289], [325]
- Dissenters, i. [34], ii. [392]
- District Nursing, Mr. Rathbone's experiment in Liverpool, ii. [124–125]; extension of, to London, etc., ii. [143], [252], [355]
- Dock, Lavinia L. See [Nutting]
- Dogs, i. [10], ii. [17]
- Dohler (musician), i. [24]
- “Doors versus Windows,” ii. [149]
- Dorchester House, London, ii. [300], [309]
- Drake, Mrs. Elizabeth, i. [185], [261]
- Drawing-rooms, i. [498], [499]
- Dresden, pictures at, i. [91], [92], [369]
- Dress, i. [454], ii. [267]
- Drift, Lord Salisbury on, ii. [298]
- Drunkenness: among nurses, i. [117], [442], [444]; in the army, i. [276] seq.; in the army in India, ii. [28], [280]
- Dublin, hospitals at, i. [118], [416], ii. [393]
- Dufferin, Marchioness of, ii. [370]
- Dufferin, Marquis of: calls on F. N. before going to India, ii. [343]; passes Lord Ripon's Land Bills, ii. [297], [343] n.; sanitary reforms, ii. [370], [373], [376]; letters to F. N., ii. [372], [373], [376]
- Dunant, Henri, ii. [205], [464]
- Duncannon, Lord, i. [26]
- Dunsany, Lady, i. [265]
- Dunsany, Lord, i. [265]
- Dürer, Albert, i. [369]
- Dutton, Miss, i. [35]
- Early rising, ii. [312]
- Eastern Hospitals and English Nurses, ii. [460]; quoted, i. [174] n., [182], [200], [210] n., [236]
- Eastern Question (1876 seq.), ii. [292], [293], [319], [449]
- East India House, ii. [23]
- Eastlake, Lady, Memorials of, i. [260]
- Ebrington, Lord, i. [375]
- Economist, ii. [35]
- Edinburgh, F. N.'s study of hospitals at, i. [416]; Royal Infirmary, ii. [256], [448], [449], [458]
- Edinburgh Review, i. [377–8]
- Education: agricultural, for Indian Civil Servants, ii. [333–4], [394]; elementary, and nature studies, ii. [310]; Indian, ii. [331]; native races and, ii. [78], [79], [80]
- Edward VII., ii. [378], [418], [471]
- Egg, Augustus L., R.A., reputed portrait of F. N., ii. [467]
- Egypt, F. N.'s visit to, i. [85] seq., ii. [390]; condition of people (1850), i. [87]; mythology, etc., i. [38], [85]; scenery, i. [87] n.; tomb paintings, ii. [294]
- Egyptian campaign, 1882, ii. [335], [336]
- Elections, 1880, ii. [325]; 1895, ii. [392]
- Elgin, 8th Earl of, ii. [35], [43], [44]
- Elgin, 9th Earl of, ii. [405], [406]
- Eliot, George, on F. N., i. [118], [491]; Middlemarch, i. [97]; Romola, i. [97]
- Ellenborough, Lord, on Census Bill, 1860, i. [438]
- Ellesmere, Lady, i. [134]
- Ellesmere, Lord, tribute to F. N. in House of Lords, i. [237], [302–3]; joins Council of Nightingale Fund, i. [456] n.
- Elliot, Captain, i. [33]
- Ellis, Sir Barrow, ii. [287]
- Ellis, R. J., ii. [50], [55], [108], ii. [147]
- Elwin, Whitwell, i. [377]
- Ely, Lady, ii. [116]
- Embley, i. [9], [16], [27], [29], [64], [422], ii. [119], [237], [258], [309], [415]
- Emerson, R. W., i. [141]
- Endowments, ii. [271]
- England, unbusiness-like, i. [432]
- English Society, i. [505], [506]
- Enthusiasm, and facts, ii. [408]
- Epitaph, an, i. [490]
- Eternal punishment, ii. [219]
- Eugenics, i. [4], ii. [397]
- Eumenides, grotto of the, i. [91]
- Evangelicalism, ii. [209]
- Evans, Aunt, i. [118], [125]
- Evatt, Surgeon-Major G. J. H., ii. [338], [453]
- Evil, theory of, i. [53], [481], [486–7], ii. [316]
- Ewald, H. G. A. von, ii. [229]
- Examiner, i. [164]
- Excuses, i. [506]
- “Extra Diet,” in Crimean War, i. [285], [286]
- Ezekiel, ii. [15], [323]
- Fabiola, i. [440]
- Faraday, Michael, on friendship, ii. [222]
- Farnall, H. B., ii. [123], [124] n., [131], [134], [135]
- Farquhar, Dr., ii. [158]
- Farr, Dr. William: friendship and collaboration with F. N. in Army and other statistics, etc., i. [325], [328], [329], [332], [352], [365], [372], [376], [382], [383], [389] n., [428], [430], [431], [436]; on Indian Sanitary Commission (1859–1863), ii. [19], [22], [23], [24], [31], [36], [42], [46], [54]; address on S. Herbert (1861), ii. [4]; retired (1879), ii. [289] n.; death of, ii. [352]; letters, to F. N., i. [435]; to Dr. Sutherland, ii. [26]; various references, ii. [14], [119], [397], [400], [443]
- Farrar, F. W., ii. [249]
- F.A.S., the, i. [129]
- Fauriel, Claude, i. [21], [31]
- Fawcett, Henry, ii. [289]
- Fenzi, Signor Camillo, ii. [391]
- Fever tinctures, ii. [70]
- Fife, Colonel J. G., ii. [275]
- Filder, Commissary-General, i. [157], [437]
- Finlay, Sir Robert, ii. [362]
- Fisher, Miss Alice, i. [465]
- Fitz-Gerald, David, i. [288], [289], [292], [293]
- Fitz-Gerald, Edward, ii. [94]
- Fliedner, Pastor Theodor, i. [62], [109], [111], [255], [440], ii. [249], [445]
- Florence, F. N.'s birthplace, i. [4]; F. N.'s visit to, i. [18]; congratulations from, ii. [420]; memorial to her at, ii. [422] n.
- Florence Nightingale Hospital for Gentlewomen, ii. [458]. See [Harley Street]
- Florences, named after F. N., i. [3], ii. [321], [420]
- Flowers, and the sick, i. [449–50], [499]; of the field, as models of dress, ii. [264]
- Footner, Miss F. Alicia de Biden, ii. [469]
- Forester, Lady Maria, i. [148], [151], [152], [245]
- Forster, John, Life of Dickens, i. [443]
- Fort Pitt, Chatham (q.v.), i. [390]
- Founders, ii. [246], [271]
- Fowler, H. H. (Lord Wolverhampton), ii. [379], [380], [406]
- Fowler, Dr. Richard, i. [35]; Mrs., i. [44]
- Fox, F. W., ii. [290] n.
- France and the Roman Republic, 1848, i. [76]
- Franco-German War (1870), ii. [198], [200–201]
- Fraser's Magazine, Papers by F. N. in, ii. [164], [218], [446], [447]
- Frederick, Crown Prince (Emperor), ii. [118], [204], [277]
- Frederick, J. J., i. [405], ii. [65], [374] n., [375], [386], [416]
- “Free Gifts,” the, i. [208]
- Freeman, Miss L., ii. [141]
- Free Will, and Necessity, i. [70], [71], [469], [481], [482], [484]
- French military hospitals, i. [228]; and nurses, i. [147], [149]
- Frere, Sir Bartle: returns from Bombay to India Council, makes F. N.'s acquaintance (1867), ii. [147]; value of his co-operation with her, ii. [146]; friendship with her and her parents, ii. [148]; delivers letter from her to Sir S. Northcote, ii. [151]; appointed Chairman of Sanitary Committee at India Office, ii. [153]; arranges for Lord Mayo to see F. N., ii. [167]; introduces Lord Napier of Magdala to her, ii. [175]; various communications, etc., ii. [158], [171], [176], [178], [179], [180], [274], [276], [285], [296], [334]; death of, ii. [352]; letters to F. N., ii. [144], [167], [168], [175], [176–7], [181], [281]; F. N.'s opinion of, ii. [152], [169], [175]; on Lord Mayo, ii. [167]; on Lord Napier of Magdala, ii. [175]; on F. N.'s services to India, ii. [45], [158]; on her method, ii. [385]
- Friendly Societies, i. [437]
- Friendship, Jowett on, ii. [84]; F. N. on, ii. [222–3], [425]
- Froude, J. A., ii. [164], [219], [220]
- Fry, Mrs. Elizabeth, i. [62] n., [109], [123], [440]
- Fuhrmann, Fräulein, ii. [190]
- Further Shore, voices from the, ii. [39]
- Future life, i. [373], [483], ii. [94], [319], [402]
- Gale, Mrs., F. N.'s nurse, i. [31]
- Galileo, i. [35]
- Galton, Captain Sir Douglas, i. vi; marries F. N.'s cousin (1851), i. [29]; serves on various War Office Commissions, i. [381], [389], [396], [405]; his position at the War Office (1860, 1861), i. [404], [420], ii. [6]; appointed, at F. N.'s instance, assistant Under-Secretary, ii. [62]; memorandum by, on War Office organization, ii. [63] n.; retires from War Office (1869), continued on Army Sanitary Committee, ii. [162]; suggests to F. N. to see Sir B. Frere, ii. [147]; assumes responsibility for sending official papers to F. N., ii. [149]; serves on the Aid Society (1870–71), ii. [199], [200]; death of, ii. [414]; on Army Hospital Service, ii. [338] n., [340]; on sanitary progress in India, 1876, ii. [182] and n.; on Dr. Sutherland's services, ii. [173] n.; helps F. N., i. [494], ii. [332], [338], [371], [377], [406]; letters to F. N., ii. [6], [65], [74], [76], [147]; F. N.'s tribute to, ii. [414]; various references, i. [406], ii. [10], [51], [109], [375], [378], [407]
- Galton, Evelina (Mrs. L. Cunliffe), ii. [391]
- Galton, Francis, ii. [397], [400]
- Garcia, Pauline, i. [24]
- Gardiner, Rev. Thory Gage, ii. [399–400]
- Garibaldi: F. N.'s sympathy with, i. [501]; sees F. N., ii. [90]; her impressions, ii. [90–91]; his Volunteers, ii. [8]; Jowett on, ii. [90]; Sir J. Lawrence on, ii. [50]
- Gaskell, Mrs. (the authoress), visit to Lea Hurst, i. [139]; description of the place, i. [8]; on F. N., i. [39], [41], [139], [140], [373]; helps F. N. about soldiers' reading-rooms, i. [397]; letter to F. N., i. [347]; books of: North and South, i. [140], [500]; Ruth, i. [500]
- Gaskell, Mrs. (née Brandreth), i. [55]
- Gaster, Miss, ii. [293]
- Gavazzi, Father, i. [74]
- Gavin, Dr. Hector, i. [219], [221]
- Geneva, F. N. at, i. [17]
- Geneva Convention (1864), ii. [71]
- Genoa, F. N. at, i. [18]
- George IV., i. [479]
- Gerry, John, ii. [450]
- Ghose, Lalmohun, ii. [332]
- Gibraltar, soldiers' reading-room, i. [397], ii. [76]
- Giffard, Rev. J. T., i. [14]
- Gigliucci, Contessa. See [Novello, Clara]
- Girton College, ii. [390]
- Gladstone, W. E. [(1) Relations with F. N.; (2) other references.]
- (1) Relations with F. N.:—
friendship with Sidney Herbert, i. [387]; at his funeral, i. [409]; appeals to F. N. to write a memoir of him, i. [408]; speaks at his memorial meeting, i. [410]; F. N. appeals to, to continue Herbert's work, i. [409], ii. [4]; later communications with F. N.— on appointment of Secretary for War (1863), ii. [30]; on army morals, ii. [75]; on small ownership (1865), ii. [92], [93]; on India (1879), ii. [292], [293]; on General Gordon, 1881, ii. [329]; on India (1884), ii. [345]; on appointment of Indian Secretary (1886), ii. [368]; invites F. N. to a review (1882), ii. [336]; letters to F. N., i. [409], [410], ii. [292] - (2) Other references:—
a riddle about, i. [388]; as “the Beast,” i. [65]; as Chancellor of the Exchequer, i. [387], [404]; Eastern Question and, ii. [284], [320]; Homer, ii. [61]; on the Franchise Bill (1866), ii. [105]; resignation, (1894), ii. [403]; various mentions, ii. [16], [68], [69], [92], [102], [104], [173], [212], [213], [304], [307], [308]
- (1) Relations with F. N.:—
- Gladstone, Mrs. W. E., ii. [336], [347]
- Glasgow Infirmary, i. [421]
- Gleichen, Countess Feodora, ii. [422] n., [469]
- Glover, Rev. R., i. [279]
- God: character and purposes of, i. [117], [469], [479], [480], [486], ii. [222], [223]; communion with, i. [489]; the “glory” of, ii. [390]; a personal, ii. [219]; plan of, i. [479], ii. [1]; mankind to create mankind, i. [117], [120], ii. [51]; “not my Private Secretary,” ii. [414]; providence of, i. [486]. See also [Law]
- God's Revenge upon Murder, i. [377]
- “Going to Miss Nightingale,” i. [348], [350]
- Goldschmidt, Madame. See [Lind]
- Gonfalonieri (Italian journalist), i. [26], [479]
- Gonzaga, Sister (Georgiana Barrie, the “Cardinal”), i. [249], [499], ii. [82]
- Goodman, Margaret, ii. [462]
- Gordon, General, introduces himself to F. N. (1880), ii. [327]; subsequent movements, and communications with her (1881 seq.), ii. [328], [329]; sends “books of comfort” to her, ii. [328], [330]; messages to her from Brussels and Khartoum, ii. [330]; at Khartoum, ii. [267]; “The Last Watch,” ii. [350]; F. N. on his character, ii. [323], [351]; distributes Lives of him among the soldiers, ii. [351] n.
- Gordon Boys' Home, ii. [330]
- Gordon Relief Expedition, ii. [346], [350]
- Gordon, Miss, ii. [355]
- Gordon, Mr. (engineer at Scutari), i. [206], [234]
- Goschen, G. J. (Viscount): on statistics, i. [428]; sees F. N., her estimate of him, ii. [166]
- Gospel of St. John, ii. [366]
- Graham, Sir James, i. [34]
- Grant, Bishop, Life of, ii. [463]; quoted, i. [173], [249]
- Grant, Sir Hope, ii. [65]
- Grant Duff, Sir Mountstuart, ii. [333], [344]
- Granville, Earl, ii. [92]; Life of, quoted, i. [273], [278]
- Grates, varnish for, i. [347]
- Gray, Mr. and Mrs. Hamilton, i. [65]
- Greathed, Colonel E. H., ii. [22]
- Great Ormond Street, hospital of the Bermondsey Nuns, i. [487] n.
- Greece: architecture, i. [88]; scenery, i. [89]
- Greek chorus, ii. [26]; Greek literature, ii. [229]
- Green, Mrs. T. H., ii. [398]
- Greg, W. R., ii. [35]
- Greville's Journal, quoted, i. [145], [176]
- Grey, third Earl, i. [354], [436], [438]
- Grey, Sir George (Governor of New Zealand), i. [11], ii. [78], [440]
- Grey, Sir George (Queen Victoria's Private Secretary), i. [324]
- Grillage, Peter, i. [304], ii. [302]
- Grisi, Carlotta, i. [19], [24]
- Grosvenor Hotel (Park Street), ii. [91]
- Grote, G., on J. S. Mill, ii. [221]; History of Greece, ii. [97]
- Guildford, Surrey County Hospital, i. [423]
- Guizot, i. [21], [26], [82], [451]
- Guy's Hospital, i. [433]
- Haig, Colonel F. T., ii. [275], [295]
- Halifax (Nova Scotia) soldiers' institute, ii. [76]
- Hall, H. Byng, ii. [460]
- Hall, Sir John, M.D.: Inspector-General of hospitals in Crimea, i. [288]; his mistakes, i. [357]; resents requisitions as slurs on his preparations, i. [288]; opposition to F. N., i. [213], [288], [291], [297], [386]; rebuked by Secretary of State, i. [292], [293]; evidence to the Royal Commission (1857), i. [357], [358]; S. Herbert and F. N. prevent his appointment as Director-General, i. [331], [378], ii. [146] n.; various references to, i. [356], [382], [437]; Life of, by Mitra, interest of, i. [169]; quoted or referred to, i. [204] n., [213], [291], [292], [293]
- Hall, S. C., i. [269], ii. [450]; Mrs., i. [462] n.
- Hallam, H., i. [65]
- Hannen, Lord, ii. [362]
- Happiness, i. [106], ii. [322]
- Harcourt, E. V., Archbishop of York, i. [55]
- Hardy, Gathorne. See [Cranbrook]
- Hare, A. J. C., Story of Two Noble Lives, quoted, i. [371]
- Harley Street Hospital, London, ii. [458]; F. N.'s work at, i. [129], [131], [134], [135] seq., [140], [141]
- Harrowby, Lord, ii. [69]
- Hart, Ernest, ii. [124], [137]
- Hartington, Lord, ii. [70], [71]
- Hastings, Lady Flora, i. [25]
- Hastings, Warren, ii. [43]
- Hatcher, Miss Temperance (Mrs. Grillage), ii. [302]
- Hathaway, Dr., ii. [49], [51]
- Hawes, Sir Benjamin, permanent Under Secretary for War (1857–62), i. [403], [405], ii. [61]; death of, ii. [62]
- Hawthorn, Mrs., ii. [327], [337], [342]
- Hawthorne, N., Transformation, i. [97]
- Hayward, Abraham, i. [344] n., [408]
- Health Missioners, ii. [383–4]
- Heathcote, Sir William, i. [37], [422]
- Heaven, ii. [209], [233], [234], [403], [428], [429–30]
- Hell, i. 51
- Hemans, Mrs., i. 10
- Henley, W. E., In Hospital, i. [186], ii. [264]
- Henniker, Sir Brydges, ii. [289] n.
- Herbert, Sidney (Lord Herbert of Lea).
[(1) chronological; (2) character; (3) letters; (4) miscellaneous references.] - (1) Chronological:—
Secretary-at-war under Peel (1845–1846), i. [79]; interest in welfare of the soldiers, i. [149]; interest in hospitals, nursing, emigration, i. [80], [137], [149]; marriage (1846), i. [79]; relations with his wife, i. [80], [411]; meets F. N. at Rome (1847–48), friendship, i. [79]; visits her at Kaiserswerth (1851), i. [114]; secretary-at-war under Aberdeen, relieves Duke of Newcastle of hospital matters, i. [149], [217]; asks F. N. to go out to the East (Oct. 15, 1854), i. [151–4]; settles expedition at interview (Oct. 16), i. [155]; issues her instructions, i. [155]; helps her to select nurses, i. [159]; favours a larger number, i. [158]; addresses nurses before departure, i. [159]; writes to papers saying further nurses will not be sent except on F. N.'s requisition, i. [189]; sends out second party of nurses under Miss Stanley, i. [188]; instructs F. N. to communicate freely with him, i. [217]; acts on her reports, i. [211]; retires from office (1855), transmits F. N.'s subsequent reports to his successor, i. [217]; acts as honorary secretary of Nightingale Fund, i. [269]; on the Council, i. [456]. n., [457]; speech at public meeting to promote Fund, i. [113], [180], [199], [237], [264], [269], [270], [306]; begs F. N. to return after her illness in Crimea, i. [260]; sees F. N. on her return (1856), i. [313]; discusses plans of reform with her, i. [321], [325]; accepts chairmanship of Royal Commission on Health of the Army, i. [334]; negotiations with Lord Panmure in concert with F. N., i. [335]; work as chairman of Royal Commission, assisted by F. N., i. [312], [355] seq., [360]; holds back report, pending guarantees for reform, i. [363], [364]; accepts chairmanship of executive Sub-Commissions, hard work on them, i. [363], [366], [381], [382]; carries motion in support of McNeill and Tulloch (1857), i. [338]; holiday in Ireland (Aug. 1857), sees F. N. on his return, i. [364]; overstrain (1858), i. [381]; accepts chairmanship of Indian Sanitary Commission (1859), i. [398], ii. [19], [21]; resigns chairmanship, ii. [22], [23]; on becoming Secretary for War (1859), i. [387], [400]; summary of his sanitary and other reforms, i. [388–99], ii. [174]; fortification scheme, i. [398]; volunteer (q.v.) movement, ii. [7]; health fails, i. [401]; works on indomitably, i. [405], ii. [403]; wanted Sir J. Lawrence as Viceroy (1861), ii. [44]; interview with F. N. (Dec. 1860), i. [401]; resigns House of Commons, created Lord Herbert of Lea (1860), i. [402]; first speech in House of Lords, i. [402] n.; increasing illness, i. [404], [503]; resigns office, i. [406]; last interview with F. N., i. [406]; ordered abroad, i. [406], [503]; return home and death, i. [406], [507], ii. [7]; dying words about F. N., i. [406]; funeral, i. [409]; Memorial meeting, i. [409–10]; Memorial to, ii. [6], [8]; last official schemes and wishes: desired De Grey as his successor, ii. [30]; General Military Hospital at Woolwich, ii. [6]; his schemes frustrated after his death, ii. [4], [6], [94]; had inserted no “mainspring,” ii. [5], [144] - (2) Character, ii. [175]:—
Angelic temper, i. [407]; as an Administrator (Mr. Gladstone's estimate), i. [409]; as army reformer, i. [399]; charm, i. [411]; chivalry, i. [373]; contrasted with F. N., i. [412]; conversational powers, i. [411], ii. [223]; eclecticism, i. [366]; Jowett on what he might have been, ii. [98]; management of Royal Commissions, i. [358]; not a party man, ii. [176]; openness, ii. [169]; popularity, i. [149], [409]; position in the House of Commons, etc., i. [149]; quick perception, i. [358], [366], ii. [152]; a saviour, i. [412], [485]; sympathetic manner, i. [358]; unselfish devotion, i. [407], ii. [293]. For his relations with F. N., see [Nightingale, Florence (3)] - (3) Letters:—
To F. N.: (1854, Oct. 15) i. [151–154]; (1856) i. [290], [313], [321], [325], [327], [329], [331], [332]; (1857) i. [312], [348], [356], [357], [358], [360]; (1858) i. [378], [379], [380], [381], [382]; (1859) i. [387]; (1861) i. [404]; to commandant at Scutari, i. [178]; to Lord Raglan, i. [288]; to Samuel Smith, i. [313]; to Dr. Sutherland, i. [379] - (4) Various references:—
i. [245], [332], [359], [370], [371], [374], [376], [377], [378], [382], [394], [468], ii. [11], [13], [26], [38], [63], [81], [152], [171], [173], [213], [214], [260], [373], [385], [396], [404], [409]
- (1) Chronological:—
- Herbert, Mrs. Sidney (Lady Herbert of Lea), marriage, i. [79]; meets F. N. at Rome, i. [79]; friendship with F. N., i. [79], [80], [134], [374], [381], [388], [411]; helps F. N. at Harley Street, i. [134]; defends F. N. against sectarian attacks, i. [245]; intercedes with Manning (1867) about Bermondsey nuns, i. [487] n.; her help to her husband, ii. [15]; grief at his death, ii. [17]; joins Church of Rome, ii. [89]; letters: to F. N., i. [332], [366], [400], [402], ii. [60]; to Mrs. Bracebridge, i. [189], [192], [221]; various references, i. [136], [137], [215], [266], [268], [377], ii. [4], [5], [6], [187]
- Hereford, Dean of. See [Dawes]
- “Heroic Dead, The,” verses on, i. [263]
- Heroism, i. [317], [484]
- Hewlett, Dr., ii. [174], [183], [381]
- Hicks, Miss Philippa (Mrs. Large), ii. [252], [348]
- Hicks-Beach, Sir Michael, ii. [361]
- High Church Party, ii. [392]
- Highgate Infirmary, ii. [192], [272]
- Hill, Mr. and Mrs., American missionaries, i. [89], [91]
- Hill, Miss Annie, ii. [272]
- Hill, Miss Octavia, i. [97], [98], ii. [304], [450]
- Hill Stations, India, ii. [28–9]
- History, philosophy of, i. [484]
- Hobhouse, Lord, ii. [362]
- Holland, Queen of, ii. [89], [187]
- Holloway (near Lea Hurst), ii. [326], [392]
- Holyoake, G. J., i. [119], [120]
- Holy Writ, ii. [229]
- Homer, i. [13], [47], ii. [43], [229]
- Hong Kong, barracks, ii. [407]
- Hook, Dr. (Vicar of Leeds), i. [55]
- Hookham, Mr. (bookseller), i. [265]
- Hopkins, Miss Ellice, ii. [450]
- Hornby, Lady, Constantinople during the Crimean War, ii. [462]; quoted, i. [285], [297]
- Horner, Miss Joanna, i. [33]
- Horse Guards, the (office), i. [179], [200], [403], ii. [4], [6], [9], [58]; a “Horse Guards letter,” i. [437]
- Horses, army, in the Crimea, ii. [65]; in Hansom cabs, ii. [66]
- Hospital hymn, ii. [258]
- Hospitals: anxieties in, i. [137]; condition of, in F. N.'s early time, i. [415], [417] seq.; F. N.'s work in reforming, i. [415–16], see further, [Nightingale, F. (5)]; greenery for, i. 499; “pavilion” (q.v.) system, i. [340]; scheme for supply in military, i. [227]; statistics, i. [430] seq.
- Hospitals Association, ii. [356]
- Hospital, The, ii. [363]
- Houghton, Lord. See [Milnes]
- Hougomont, a moral from, ii. [72]
- House of Lords, i. [437]
- Household Hygiene, i. [448], [451]
- Housekeeping, i. [42], ii. [302–3]
- Housing of the People, i. [436], [437]
- Howe, Dr. and Julia Ward, i. [37], [43], ii. [315]
- Howitt, William and Mary, i. [382]
- Hume, A. O., ii. [332]
- Hume, Rev. Mr., i. [152]
- Hunter, Sir W. Guyer, ii. [379]
- Hunter, Sir W. Wilson, ii. [25] n., [380], [455]
- Huntingdon County Hospital, ii. [256]
- Hurd, Dr. H. M., i. [345] n., ii. [466]
- Husson, Monsieur, ii. [136] n.
- Huxley, Professor, ii. [223], [224]
- Hyde Park, the treadmill, ii. [300]
- Hygiene in the army, i. [395]
- Hymns: Hospital hymn, ii. [258]; “I ask no Heaven,” ii. [209]; “O Lord, how happy should we be,” ii. [421]; “The Son of God goes forth to war,” ii. [142], [423]
- Ignatius Loyola, i. [96], ii. [272]
- Ilbert, Sir C. P., ii. [333]; the “Ilbert Bill,” ii. [331], [339], [343]
- India: F. N.'s knowledge of, how derived, ii. [25], [27], [273–5]; education, ii. [331], [381]; land question, ii. [331]; Local Government, ii. [381]; Lord Ripon's reforms, ii. [330] seq.; proclamation of 1858, ii. [381]; Towns Municipal Improvement Bill (1865), ii. [56]. See also [Nightingale, F. (6)]
- India Office: jealousy of War Office, ii. [47], [153]; opposition to Royal Commission's Report (1863), ii. [42]; loses a dispatch from Sir J. Lawrence, ii. [108]
- Indian Civil Service, ii. [333], [392]
- Indian Famines, ii. [275] n., [277], [284], [289–90], [292], [450]
- Indian Irrigation: F. N.'s interest in, and pleas for, ii. [184], [274], [284], [286], [297]; Lord Salisbury's doubts on, ii. [286]; conflicting experts on, ii. [289]; data required for, ii. [286–288]; some irrigation works, ii. [288], [297], [298]
- Indian Medical Service, ii. [70]
- Indian Mutiny, F. N.'s offer to go out, i. [371]; the moral drawn by her from, i. [365], ii. [19], [20]
- Indian National Congress, ii. [332], [382]
- Indian Plague, ii. [412]
- Indian Sanitation: India to be “conquered,” “civilized,” by sanitation, ii. [1], [20], [51], [52], [152], [154], [174]; preventable mortality of soldiers in, ii. [18], [19], [32]; climate not responsible, ii. [20]; Presidency Sanitary Commissions set up (1864), ii. [42], [45], [46], [49]; threatened, ii. [372]; proposed transference of functions of Sanitary Commissioners to Prison Inspectors, ii. [114], [144], [145]; appointment of public health officers, ii. [154]; Sanitary Department established at the India Office, ii. [150–153]; Sanitary Annuals issued, ii. [57], [145], [174] n., [176] n., [180], [326]; F. N.'s scheme for allocating cesses to, rejected (1894), ii. [378–9]; summary of reforms effected (1863–73), ii. [53–6], [181–3]; reduced army death-rate, ii. [19], [55], [156], [174], [182], [277], [279]; native awakening to advantage of sanitation, ii. [174]; answer to objections, ii. [174], [181]; village sanitation, ii. [332]; costliness of sanitary reforms, ii. [277], [278], [279]; other difficulties in the way of, ii. [377], [381]; provincial Sanitary Boards (1888), ii. [376]; Village Inspection Books (1895), ii. [406]; sanitation the Indian “Cinderella,” i. xxviii; Budget provision for (1913), i. xxviii. See also [Nightingale, Florence (6)]
- Indian Village Communities, ii. [391]
- Infant majesty, i. [497–8]
- Inglis, Lady, i. [134], [141]
- Inkerman, battle, i. [181], [317]
- Inkerman Café, Scutari, i. [279]
- Inoculation, i. [393] n.
- International Congress, Geneva (1864), ii. [71]. See also [Red Cross]
- International Hygiene Congress, 1891, ii. [377]
- International Statistical Congress, London, 1860, i. [431]; Berlin, 1863, i. [434]
- Ionian Islands, British occupation, i. [90]
- Irby, Miss Paulina, ii. [235], [320], [388], [417]
- Irish Census, i. [436], [437]
- Italian pictures, i. [47], ii. [310]
- Italy: F. N.'s love of, ii. [393]; her fame in, i. [501], ii. [117;] politics of, her interest in Italian freedom and unity, i. [17], [74–6], ii. [117], [118], [479]; scheme for “educating the South,” i. [501–2]
- Ithuriel, i. [35]
- Jackson, Captain Pilkington, ii. [76]
- Jacob Omnium, ii. [70] n.
- Jameson, Mrs., i. [63]
- Jam-making, i. [42]
- Japan and F. N., ii. [419]
- Jebb, Sir Joshua, i. [36], [352], [374], [456] n., [457]
- Jebb, Lady Amelia, i. [266]
- Jenner, Sir William, ii. [192], [318]
- Jesuits, ii. [271–2]
- Jeune, Lady, ii. [408]
- Jewitt, LL., A Stroll to Lea Hurst, i. [265]
- Joan of Arc, i. [265], [286]
- Jocelyn, Lady, i. [36]
- John Bull and his Church, i. [476]
- Johnson, Samuel, definition of religion, ii. [233]
- Johnson, Dr. Walter, i. [116], [117], [367], ii. [162]
- Jones, Miss Agnes, ii. [52]; nursing apprenticeship and introduction to F. N., ii. [126]; a Probationer at the Nightingale Training School, ii. [52], [126]; selected by F. N. for Liverpool Infirmary, ii. [52], [126]; her experiment, ii. [127]; trials and ultimate success, ii. [128], [129], [140]; death, ii. [140], [162], [249]; character of, ii. [140–41]; her feeling for F. N., ii. [126], [127], [128], [185]; inscription to, at Liverpool, ii. [206]
- Jones, Miss Mary, superintendent of St. John's House (q.v.) which undertook the nursing at King's College Hospital (q.v.), i. [444], [464]; friendship with, and admiration for, F. N., i. [159], [447–8], [502]; sends nurses to the Crimea, i. [159]; gives advice on Nightingale Training School, i. [462]
- Jones, William, i. [256] n., [304]
- Joubert, i. [490]
- Journal of the Royal Army Military Corps, quoted, i. [187], [188] n.; Statistical Society, i. [433]
- Jowett, Benjamin. [(1) relations with F. N.; (2) letters to F. N.; (3) various references.]
- (1) Relations with F. N.:—
Refers to F. N. in Essays and Reviews, i. [471]; introduced by Clough, F. N. submits her Suggestions for Thought, his correspondence and annotations thereon, i. [471], [472], [475–7], [483], [487], ii. [95]; forms friendship with F. N. and her parents (1862), ii. [96]; administers Sacrament to her, ii. [96]; visits her in London, ii. [96], [302], [394]; and in the country, ii. [162], [163], [311], [394]; admonitions to her, ii. [97], [100], [102]; familiar correspondence, ii. [96], [99], [101]; promises F. N. not to overwork, ii. [99]; F. N. helps him with sermons, ii. [100], [227]; persuades F. N. to visit the country, ii. [162], [163]; advises her to do literary work, ii. [163], [211], [215], [222], [230], [231]; she helps in revising his Plato, ii. [225], [232]; with The Children's Bible, ii. [228]; a passing coolness, ii. [240]; closer sympathy, ii. [394]; introduces Lord Lansdowne to F. N., ii. [376]; illness at South Street (1887), ii. [395]; proposed “Nightingale Professorship” at Oxford, ii. [397], [398], [400]; illness (1891), ii. [398]; death (1893), ii. [398], [399]; F. N.'s tribute, ii. [400]; Lord Lansdowne's, ii. [400–1]; F. N.'s feeling for him, and value of his friendship to her, ii. [101], [103], [401]; his feeling for her, and appreciation of her friendship, ii. [100], [321], [398], [399]; tributes to her work and character, ii. [102], [238], [273], [296], [314], [321], [352], [425], [433]
- (1) Relations with F. N.:—
- (2) Letters to F. N., ii. [61], [101], [249]:—
(1861) i. [471–2], [475], [476], [477], [478], [500], ii. [12]; (1862) ii. [96]; (1863) ii. [97]; (1864) ii. [101]; (1865) i. [477] n., ii. [97], [98], [100], [102]; (1866) ii. [100], [110] n.; (1867) ii. [121], [151], [155], [177], [426]; (1868) i. [450] n., ii. [169]; (1870) ii. [211]; (1871) ii. [211], [215], [218], [223], [225]; (1872) ii. [211], [212], [213], [218], [228] n., [230], [231]; (1873) ii. [227], [232]; (1874) ii. [296]; (1876) ii. [317]; (1879) ii. [321]; (1885) ii. [352]; (1886) ii. [401], [433]; (1887) ii. [394], [395], [402]; (1890) ii. [397]; (1891) ii. [398]; (1892) ii. [359], [398]; (1893) ii. [399]; various dates, ii. [99], [100], [374] n.
- (2) Letters to F. N., ii. [61], [101], [249]:—
- (3) Various references:—
His God, ii. [309]; his Life, i. [471]; his Letters, i. [483]; Madame Mohl on, ii. [307]; on Future Life, i. [483]; on mysticism, ii. [231], [232]; on Sir S. Northcote, ii. [155]; on the preferment he would like, ii. [98]; on style, ii. [296]; miscellaneous, i. [xxiii], [484], ii. [94] n., [117], [138], [147], [205], [285], [315]
- (3) Various references:—
- Jupiter of the Capitol, i. [71]
- Kaiserswerth: F. N.'s interest in, and inquiries about, i. [62], [63], [64], [67]; projected visit to (1848), i. [82], [83]; first sojourn at (1850), i. [92]; entry in album, i. [92] n.; pamphlet on, i. [93]; second sojourn at (1851), i. [108]; institutions at, i. [110]; life at, i. [112]; nursing at, i. [111], [113]; origin of, i. [109]; spread of, i. [109]; various references to, i. [79], [105], [107], [466], ii. [107], [466], ii. [117], [126], [320], [442], [445]
- K.C.B., i. [288] n.
- Keith, Mrs., i. [35]
- Kempis, Thomas à, ii. [232], [244]
- Kent, Duchess of, i. [281]
- Khartoum, fall of, ii. [350]
- Kimberley, Earl of, ii. [329], [345], [406]
- Kinglake, A. W.: acquaintance with F. N., her estimate of his book, i. [319]; his view of the Chelsea Board (q.v.), i. [336]; his satire on the males, i. [133], [212]; otherwise quoted or referred to, i. [171], [178], [195] n., [201] n., [220], [232], [238], [241], [242], [319], [431]
- King's College Hospital, F. N. invited to superintend nursing at, i. [141]; Nightingale Fund lying-in wards at, i. [464], ii. [196]; various references, i. [433], [444], ii. [16]. See also [Jones, Mary]
- King's Hospital Fund, i. [433]
- Kipling, Rudyard, referred to, ii. [18], [27]
- Kirkland, Sir John, i. [156], [391]
- Kitchener, Lord, ii. [416]
- Knight, Miss, ii. [395], [398]
- Knights of St. John of Jerusalem, ii. [117]
- Koch, Dr., ii. [344]
- Kontaxaki, Elizabeth, i. [91]
- Köstritz, Princess Reuss, i. [18]
- Koulali Hospitals, i. [174], [193]
- Kroff, Monsieur, i. [34]
- Kumassi Expedition (1895), ii. [406]
- Kynsham Court, Presteigne, i. [9]
- Lablache, Louis, i. [19]
- Labour, organization of, ii. [165]
- Lacordaire, i. [43]
- Ladies' Association for the Relief of Sick and Wounded (1866), ii. [117]
- Ladies' Sanitary Association, ii. [407]
- “Lady with the Lamp,” The, i. [237]; the actual lamp, i. [237] n.
- Laisser faire, ii. [164]
- Lancers, the 12th, i. [279]
- Lancet, ii. [124], [443], [447]
- Land Question in England, ii. [93]
- Land Transport Corps, i. [283], [294]
- Lansdowne, 4th Marquis of, i. [269]
- Lansdowne, 5th Marquis of, Viceroy, communications with F. N., etc., ii. [376–7], [394], [406]; Secretary for War, ii. [406]; letters to F. N., on Jowett, ii. [400], [401]
- Large, Mrs. See [Hicks]
- Law, as the thought, the voice, the will of God, i. [xxvii], [480], [489], [490], ii. [218], [396]
- Lawfield, Mrs., i. [183], [186]
- Lawrence, Sir Henry, ii. [28]
- Lawrence, Sir John, Lord: [(1) relations with F. N., chronological; (2) general.]
- (1) Chronological:—
Sees F. N. (1861), i. [492], ii. [24]; corresponds with her on her Indian Observations (1862), ii. [26]; appointment as Viceroy urged by F. N., ii. [43]; appointed (Nov. 30, 1863), ii. [44]; interview with F. N. (Dec. 4), ii. [45], [50]; asks F. N. to draft sanitary Suggestions, ii. [45], [46]; sets up Sanitary Commissions (Jan. 1864), ii. [46]; reports to and consults F. N. on sanitary measures, ii. [49], [50], [56]; asks her to draft scheme for female nursing, ii. [55]; rejects it, ii. [157]; sends dispatch on sanitary organization, which is lost (Jan. 1866), ii. [106], [107], [108], [109]; proposes reconstruction of sanitary commissions, ii. [108]; communications with F. N., ii. [146], [149], [150], [153]; declines to institute a sanitary executive, ii. [159]; faltering, ii. [156]; returns to England, calls on F. N. (1869), ii. [159]; work on the London School Board, ii. [293–294]; communications with F. N., ii. [287], [294], [297]; last days, ii. [294]; death, ii. [293]; letters to F. N., ii. [46], [50], [106], [156], [158], [159] - (2) General:—Character, ii. [293–5]; F. N.'s admiration of, ii. [43], [44], [50], [56], [147], [152], [159–60], [175], [452]; importance of his co-operation with her, ii. [45], [58]; his influence on India, ii. [28]; his opinion of Garibaldi, ii. [50]; “puppies” and, ii. [58]; various references, ii. [22], [34], [89], [168], [260], [291], [370], [404]
- (1) Chronological:—
- Lawrence, Lady, ii. [52], [294]
- Lawson, Dr., i. [273]
- Lea Hurst, i. [7], [8], [53], [304], [504], ii. [237], [303], [309], [310], [311], [392], [415]; F. N.'s interest in the poor near, ii. [312], [326]; school near, i. [14], [504]
- Leeds, consecration of Church (1841), i. [55]; Infirmary, i. [423], ii. [256]
- Lees, Miss Florence (Mrs. Dacre Craven), ii. [203], [253], [314] n.
- Lefevre, Charles Shaw (Lord Eversley), i. [25], [36]
- Lefroy, Colonel Sir John Henry, scientific adviser to Secretary for War, i. [297]; mission to the Crimea (1855), i. [297]; high opinion of F. N.'s work, i. [297]; character and abilities, i. [322], [351], [491], ii. [427]; supports her at the War Office (1856), i. [297]; co-operates with F. N. for soldiers' reading-rooms, etc., i. [330], [331], [350], [396]; letters to F. N., i. [322], [351], [491]
- Lehzen, Baroness, i. [25]
- Leith, Dr., ii. [54], [55] n.
- Lentils, ii. [390]
- Leonardo da Vinci, ii. [294]
- Leslie, C. R., Autobiographical Recollections, i. [454] n.
- Levée, thoughts on a, ii. [83]
- Leverrier, Urbain J. J., i. [65]
- Lewis, Sir George Cornewall, Home Secretary (1860), declines extend scope of Census, i. [436], [437]; Secretary for War (1861–63), i. [406], [409], ii. [5], [6], [61], [63]; death (1863), question of his successor, ii. [29]; character of, i. [406], ii. [5]; his jeux d'esprit, ii. [61]; F. N.'s opinion of, i. [436], ii. [61]
- Liberty, Florentine, and English, ii. [391]
- Liddell, Sir John, i. [348]
- Life, an art, ii. [430]; a splendid gift, ii. [404], [434]
- Light, and disease, i. [419]
- Lilac, i. [429]
- Lincoln, Abraham, ii. [91]
- Lincoln County Hospital, ii. [256]
- Lind, Jenny, i. [65], [273]
- Lindsay, General, ii. [76]
- Linton, Dr., i. [273]
- Lisbon, Children's Hospital, i. [421]
- Lister, Lord, i. [439], [441]
- Litany, the, i. [476], [479]
- Liverpool, Library, F. N. MS. at, i. [383], ii. [439]; Royal Infirmary, Nurses Training School, ii. [125], [256] (see also [Rathbone]); Southern Hospital, ii. [256], [454]; Workhouse Infirmary, ii. [125] seq., [256]. See also [Jones (Agnes)]
- Livingstone, Dr., ii. [267], [315]
- Loch, Miss C. G., ii. [370]
- Lock Hospitals, i. [421]
- Locke, John, ii. [331]
- London Hospital, the, i. [433], ii. [360], [361]
- London School Board, ii. [293]
- London skies, ii. [310]
- Longfellow, H. W., poem on F. N., i. [xxiv], [xxxvi], [3], [237], ii. [142], [240], [313], [351]
- Longmore, Dr. T., i. [392], ii. [71], [118]
- Louis, Prince, of Hesse-Darmstadt, ii. [116]
- Love, i. [99], [489], ii. [225–6]
- Lovelace, Ada, Lady, friendship with F. N., i. [38], [65]; poem on her, i. [65], ii. [461]; prophecy, i. [142]
- Lowe, Robert (Lord Sherbrooke), i. [349], [436], ii. [104], [113], [212], [218]; on F. N., ii. [149]
- Lowell, J. R., quoted, i. [59]
- Loyd Lindsay, Colonel. See [Wantage]
- Lückes, Miss Eva, ii. [360], [361] n.
- Lugard, Sir E., ii. [62], [72]
- Luise. See [Baden, Grand Duchess of]
- Lumsden, Sir Peter, ii. [369]
- Luther, Martin, ii. [346]
- Lying-in Hospitals, ii. [189]. See also [King's College Hospital]
- Lyons, F. N.'s study of hospitals at, i. [417]
- Lytton, E. Bulwer, novels, ii. [95]
- Lytton, Earl of, Viceroy, ii. [289], [291], [325]
- Macaulay, Lord, i. [25], [26], ii. [223]; Lays of Ancient Rome, ii. [95], [105]
- Macdonald, Mr. (Times almoner in Crimea), i. [157], [195], [199], [204], [236], [241]
- McGrigor, Dr., i. [206], [228]
- Machin, Miss, ii. [256]
- Mackenzie, Miss Louisa Stewart. See [Ashburton, Lady]
- Mackintosh, Sir James, i. [63]
- McLachlan, Dr., i. [330], [332], [349]
- Macmillan's Magazine, ii. [35], [269] n.
- McMurdo, General Sir William, i. [284]
- McNeill, Sir John, mission to the Crimea, with Colonel Tulloch (1855), i. [257]; F. N. visits at Edinburgh (1856), i. [321], [328] (1857), [342]; one of her constant counsellors, i. [326], [357], [358], [456] n., [457], [459]; his high opinion of her ability, i. [339] n.; his tributes to her services, i. [362], [367], ii. [13]; made a Privy Councillor, i. [338]; collaborates with F. N. in scheme for Indian nursing (1865), ii. [55], [157]; last communications with her, death, ii. [352]; various references, i. [374], [395], [405], ii. [14], [461]; letters to F. N.:— (1856) i. [325], [335]; (1857) i. [360], [366]; (1858) i. [344], [346], [375], [387], [474]; (1859) i. [399]; (1860) i. [334]; (1861) i. [405], ii. [13]; (1862) ii. [26]; (1867) ii. [157]
- McNeill-Tulloch Report, and subsequent events, i. [316], [319], [321], [336], [337], [339] n.
- Madras, sanitation in, ii. [169], [170], [171], [183], [281], [282], [283]
- Madre Sta. Colomba, i. [78]
- “Magazining,” ii. [220], [221]
- Magnificat, the, i. [94], [306], ii. [120]
- Mahâbhârata. See [Arnold, Edwin]
- Mahomet's mother, i. [496]
- Mahommedans and art, ii. [226]
- Maistre, Xavier de, i. [369]
- Maitland, Edward, ii. [220]
- Majorities, ii. [392]
- Majuba, ii. [335]
- Malabari, Behramji M., ii. [406], [455]
- Malibran, M. F. G., i. [24]
- Mallet, Sir Louis, ii. [274], [288], [292] n.
- Malta, Hospital for Incurables, i. [423]; Military Hospital, ii. [65]; Sir H. Storks and, ii. [77]
- Malvern, F. N. at, i. [82], [118], [380], [381], ii. [162]
- Manchester, Mr. Adshead and, i. [424]; Art Treasures Exhibition (1857), i. [372]; Royal Infirmary, i. [425]
- Manin, Daniele, ii. [118]
- Manning, Cardinal, meets F. N. at Rome (1847–48), i. [80]; gives her introductions in Paris, i. [124], [127]; friendship with, i. [266], [491], [502]; dispute with, i. [487] n.; letter to F. N., i. [161]; and the Nightingale Fund, i. [250] n.
- Manochjee Cursetjee, ii. [178]
- Marriage, F. N.'s view of, i. [66], [380–381], [505]; nurses and, ii. [193]; Plato and, ii. [224]
- Marshall, Professor Alfred, ii. [397]
- Marston, Dr. J., ii. [375]
- Martin, James, i. [469]
- Martin, Sir James Ranald, i. [328], [332], [360], [365], ii. [14], [19], [33] n., [296]
- Martin, Sir Theodore, Life of the Prince Consort, i. [257], [324], [338] n.
- Martineau, Harriet, friendship with F. N., i. [386]; correspondence and co-operation with, i. [385], [448], [494], ii. [6], [30], [35], [75]; England and her Soldiers, i. [386]. See also [Daily News]
- Marylebone Infirmary, ii. [256], [326]
- Masses, the, ii. [219]
- Massey, W. N., ii. [56]
- Maurice, Rev. F. D., i. [266]
- Mayo, Earl of, Viceroy, sees F. N. and corresponds with her (1868), ii. [168]; Indian administration, ii. [169]; assassinated, ii. [213]; his Statistical Survey, ii. [25]; F. N. on, ii. [168]; Sir B. Frere on, ii. [167]; Lord Stanley on, ii. [169]
- Mayo, Lady, ii. [168]
- Medical Profession, opposition to F. N.'s nurse training school, i. [462], [466], [467]; prejudice against female war nurses (1854), i. [168–9]
- Medical Staff Corps Scheme (1855), i. [229]
- Mehemet Ali, i. [87]
- Melbourne, Lord, i. [25], [26], [336], [454]
- Memphis, i. [369]
- Menzies, Dr., i. [156], [202], [247]
- Mesmerism, i. [37]
- Metropolitan Asylum District, ii. [139]
- Metropolitan Common Poor Law Fund, ii. [139]
- Metropolitan Local Government Select Committee, ii. [106], [133]
- Metropolitan Nursing Association, ii. [253], [256], [355]
- Metropolitan Poor Act (1867), ii. [124], [139]
- Meyer, Dr., i. [192]
- Mhow Court-Martial, ii. [70]
- Michael Angelo, i. [71], [72], [73], [76], ii. [294], [306], [313]
- Microbes, ii. [452]
- Middlesex Hospital, i. [140], [433]
- Midleton, Lord, i. xxviii n.
- Midwives, training of, i. [464]; career for women, ii. [197]
- Mignet, F. A. M., i. [21], [26]
- Mill, John Stuart: admiration for F. N., i. [470]; reads and annotates her Suggestions for Thought, i. [470], [471], [472], [473], [475], [477] n.; asks her to join Woman's Suffrage Society (1867), ii. [215]; appeals to her to come out into the open, ii. [215], [217–18]; her desire to please him, ii. [221]; death of, ii. [221], [222]; her appreciation of, ii. [221]; letters to F. N., i. [471], [472], [473], [478], [481], ii. [26], [215], [217]; works of:— Autobiography, ii. [316]; Logic, i. [469]; Subjection of Women, i. [471] n., ii. [221]; Indian sanitation and, ii. [22], [217], [316]; Metropolitan Local Government and, ii. [106]; Poor Law reform and, ii. [133], [138]
- Millbank, i. [392]
- Milman, Dean, i. [385]
- Milnes, R. Monckton (Lord Houghton): friend of the Nightingale family, i. [34], [141]; speech at meeting of Nightingale Fund (1855), i. [269], [270]; on F. N. at Scutari, i. [181], [238]; introduces her to Lord Stanley (1857), i. [339]; letters to F. N., i. [121], [339], [454] n., ii. [5]; various references, i. [58], [62], [65], [338], [484], ii. [69], [76], [166], [235], [289]; Life of, by T. W. Reid, quoted, i. [58], [62], [141], [238]
- Milnes, Mrs. R. M., i. [280]
- Milton, John, i. [351], [479], [481], ii. [426]; quoted, ii. [294], [300], [319]
- Milton, Mr. (War Office), i. [330]
- “Minding Baby,” i. [456]
- Ministers, and their permanent officials, i. [354]
- Miracles, i. [407]
- Mitchelson, Miss, ii. [260]
- Mitra, S. M., Life and Letters of Sir John Hall, i. [169]. See also [Hall]
- Moffat, Dr., ii. [304]
- Mohl, Julius, friendship and marriage (1847) with Mary Clarke, i. [21]; friendship with F. N., i. [132], [133], ii. [317], [319]; letter to F. N., ii. [236–237]; death, F. N.'s appreciation of, ii. [317], [319]; on Mr. and Mrs. Bracebridge, ii. [236]; on Mr. Nightingale, ii. [235]; on Omar Khayyám, ii. [95]; various references, i. [433], [478], [489], [506], ii. [89], [96], [296], [390]
- Mohl, Madame (Mary Clarke), character of, i. [19–20]; meets F. N. (1838–39), i. [20]; friendship with her and the Nightingale family, i. [20]; marriage of, i. [21], [66]; death, ii. [352]; letters: to F. N., ii. [312]; to her husband, ii. [307]; her Madame Récamier, ii. [13], [14], [15], [16]; various references, i. [81], [124], [128], [486], [499], [505], ii. [301]
- Mohl, Robert, i. [66]
- Molière, ii. [317]
- Monson, Lord, ii. [362]
- Montagu, Hon. E. S., i. xxviii
- Monteagle, Thomas Spring Rice, 1st Lord, i. [25]
- Monteagle, Lady, i. [134], [140]
- Monteagle, 2nd Lord, and Lady, ii. [412]
- Montreal, soldiers' institute, i. [397], ii. [76]; General Hospital, ii. [256]
- Moonrise upon the spiritual world, i. [49]
- Moore, Mrs. Georgiana (Mother Superior of the Bermondsey Nuns), her service in the Crimean War, i. [248], [253], [294], [299]; F. N.'s affection and admiration for, i. [299]; lends F. N. religious books, ii. [81], [231]
- Moore, Sir William, ii. [378]
- Moore, Mrs. Willoughby, i. [174]
- Moral Law, i. [56]
- Morant, Sir Robert, ii. [386]
- Morley, Earl of, ii. [337]
- Morley, John, Viscount, Popular Culture, ii. [317]
- Morpeth, Lord, ii. [317]
- “Muddling through,” i. [311], [431], [432]
- “Muff,” the, i. [436]; the Muffs, ii. [4]
- Muir, Sir William, ii. [253], [279]
- Münster, Friederike (Frau Fliedner), i. [109]
- Murray, Lady Caroline, i. [134]
- “Mysterious,” F. N. on the word, i. [484]
- Mysticism, Mystics, F. N. on, ii. [231], [232–5], [366]; Jowett on, ii. [231], [232]
- Naoroji, Dadabhai, ii. [332]
- Napier and Ettrick, Lord, Secretary, British Embassy, Constantinople, sees F. N. at Scutari, ii. [112], [169], [170]; Governor of Madras (1866), ii. [112]; sees F. N. before going out, ii. [112]; interest in sanitary reforms, ii. [169]; communications on, with F. N., ii. [274], [299]; F. N. inscribes a book to, ii. [171] n.; on F. N.'s house, ii. [300]; letters to F. N., ii. [112], [169], [170]
- Napier and Ettrick, Lady, ii. [170]
- Napier of Magdala, Lord, sees F. N. before going out to India as Commander-in-Chief, ii. [175], [176]; communications from India with her, ii. [276]; his sanitary reforms, ii. [277], [279], [280]; F. N. on, ii. [175]; Sir B. Frere on, ii. [175]
- Napoleon I., i. [374]
- Napoleon III., i. [18], ii. [92]
- Nash, Mrs. Vaughan, i. viii
- Natal, hospitals in, ii. [337], [342]
- National Aid Society, ii. [347]
- National Review (1863), ii. [35]
- National Training School for Cookery, ii. [326]
- Naughtiness, pleasures of, i. [11]
- Nazione, ii. [116]
- Neander, ii. [12]
- Necessity, i. [482]. See also [Free Will]
- Needle Gun, ii. [105]
- Netley Hospital, plans of, submitted to F. N. (1856, 1857), i. [327], [331]; her fight for the “pavilion” system, i. [340]; appeal to Lord Palmerston, i. [341]; partial alterations, i. [342]; second fight for the pavilion (1858), i. [383]; female nurses at, ii. [66], [186], [256]; staff appointments, ii. [70]; Army Medical School (q.v.) at, i. [392]
- Neurasthenia, i. [493]
- Newcastle, Duke of (Secretary for War, 1854–55), i. [149], [155], [217]; issues Commission to visit war hospitals, i. [176], [201], [202]; Secretary for Colonies (1860), issues circulars for F. N., ii. [78]
- Newcastle-on-Tyne, address to F. N. from (1856), i. [320]; barracks, ii. [406–7]
- Newport, Lady, i. [372]
- New Zealand, contribution to F. N.'s Crimean fund, i. [270]; depopulation, ii. [440]; sanitary instructions for, ii. [70]
- Nicholson, G. T., i. [29]
- Nicholson, Hannah, i. [29], [46], [47], [53]
- Nicholson, General Sir Lothian, i. [261], [371]
- Nicholson, Marianne (Lady Galton), i. [24], [25], [29]
- Nightingale, Florence. [(1) Chronological, movements, incidents, etc.; (2) work during the Crimean War; (3) relations with Sidney Herbert; (4) work for the Army; (5) work for Hospitals and Nursing; (6) work for India; (7) character; (8) personalia; (9) religious views; (10) miscellaneous; (11) letters; (12) printed writings.]
- (1) Chronological, movements, incidents, etc.:—
- Ancestry, parentage, name, i. [3], [4–7]; relations, the family circle, i. [10], [29]
- 1820: birth at Florence, christening, i. [4]
- 1820–37: childhood and education:—early homes: Kynsham Court (Hereford), i. [9]; Lea Hurst (Derby), i. [9]; Embley (Hants), i. [9]; nursing dolls, childish prescription, i. [14]; country life, i. [10]; early letters, visit to London (1830), i. [10]; a morbid child, i. [11]; given to dreaming, i. [14], [16]; her first governess, i. [11]; shyness, i. [12]; education by her father, history, classics, etc., i. [12], [13]; first aid to a wounded dog (1836), i. [14]; sense of a call (1826), i. [15]; a call from God (1837), i. [15]
- 1837–39: sojourn abroad, i. [16–22]; itinerary, i. [16]; gaieties in Italy, i. [19]; visit to Florence, i. [18]; interests at Geneva, i. [17–18]; winter in Paris, Miss Clarke's salon, i. [19–22]
- 1839: the London season, i. [24]; the charm of Embley, i. [27]
- 1839–47: home life, i. [23–45], [59] seq.; social pleasures, i. [23]; “emergency man,” i. [31]; desire to shine in society, i. [39]; social attractiveness, i. [37], [39]; intellectual interests, i. [43]; discontent with restricted home life, i. [40–45], [63]–4
- 1841: private theatricals at Waverley Abbey, i. [32]; consecration of Leeds Church, i. [55]
- 1843: occupations in London, i. [34]; company at Embley, i. [36]; dinner parties, i. [38]; illness and spiritual crisis, friendship with Miss H. Nicholson, i. [46] seq.
- 1844: visit from Dr. and Mrs. Howe at Embley, i. [37]; nursing schemes, i. [29], [43]
- 1845: nursing her father's mother, i. [31], [49]; death of her nurse, i. [31]; country-house visits, i. [36]; housekeeping, i. [42]; nursing plan disallowed, i. [44]; bitter disappointment, i. [59]; increasing sense of a vocation, i. [60], [68]
- 1846: friends, i. [35]; happy time at Lea Hurst, i. [53], [64]; inquiries about nursing sisterhoods, i. [63]; hears of Kaiserswerth, i. [63]
- 1847: London amusements, i. [65]; visit to Oxford, i. [65]; country-house visits, i. [65]
- 1847–48: winter in Rome, i. [69], [70], [105]; Michael Angelo in the Sistine, i. [71]; interest in Italian politics, i. [74–6]; studies in the Convent of the Trinità de' Monti, i. [77–9]; friendship with Sidney Herbert and his wife, i. [79]; acquaintance with Manning, i. [80]
- 1848: the London season, i. [80]; distaste for society, i. [81]; plan to visit Kaiserswerth disappointed, i. [82]; the cure at Malvern, i. [82], [118]
- 1849: Ragged School work, i. [82]; parental restrictions, i. [83]
- 1849–50: winter in Egypt, i. [84–6]; with the French Sisters at Alexandria, i. [87]; spring at Athens, i. [87–9]; interest in Greek politics, i. [89–90]; with American missionaries, i. [91]; visit to Corfu, i. [90]; Dresden and Berlin, study of hospitals, i. [91–2]; first visit to Kaiserswerth, i. [92–3], [105]; literary temptation resisted, i. [93–4]; self-devotion to the sick, i. [93], [95]; opportunities of marriage, devotion to the single life, i. [96–103]
- 1851: increasing dissatisfaction with home life, i. [104–7]; sense of vocation, i. [106]; resolve to declare her independence, i. [107]; second visit to Kaiserswerth, i. [108–15]
- 1852: the water-cure at Umberslade, i. [116–17]; meets George Eliot and Mrs. Browning, i. [118]; visit to Ireland, study of hospitals, i. [118]; to Sir James Clark, i. [118]; nurses her “Aunt Evans,” i. [118]; occupied in writing Suggestions for Thought, i. [119–22]; “call to be a saviour” (May 7), i. [43]; recasts her beliefs, i. [469], [488]; plan for hospital-study in Paris, delayed by her parents, i. [122–126]
- 1853: visit to Paris (Feb.), study in hospitals, i. [127]; return to England to nurse her grandmother, i. [128]; negotiations with Committee of the Harley Street Hospital for gentlewomen, i. [129–130]; return to Paris (May), enters a Maison de la Providence, i. [131]; attack of measles, i. [132]; return to London, enters Harley Street Hospital as superintendent, i. [133]
- 1853 (Aug. 12)–1854 (Oct.): work in Harley Street, i. [133–139]; a holiday at Lea Hurst (Aug. 1854), meets Mrs. Gaskell, i. [139]; return to nurse cholera cases at Middlesex Hospital, i. [140]; resumes work in Harley Street, i. [140]; negotiations with King's College Hospital, i. [141]
- 1854: Battle of the Alma (Sept. 20), i. [145]; attention called to nursing deficiencies (Oct. 9), i. [146]; F. N. informs Sidney Herbert of her scheme for going out with a party of nurses (Oct. 14), i. [150]; letter from him, crossing, asking her to go for the Government (Oct. 15), i. [151]; expedition arranged (Oct. 16), i. [155]; official appointment and instructions (Oct. 19), i. [155]; preparations, i. [158–60]; expedition leaves London (Oct. 21), i. [162]; journey through France, i. [162–3]; F. N. lays in stores at Marseilles, i. [162], [205]; sails for Constantinople (Oct. 27), i. [164], [166] seq.
- 1854 (Nov.)–1855 (May): Scutari:—arrival at Constantinople (Nov. 4), i. [171]; arrival at Scutari (Nov. 4), i. [181]; work in receiving and tending the sick and wounded, i. [181–8]; arrival of second party of nurses under Miss Stanley (Dec.), i. [188]
- 1855: first visit to the Crimea:—leaves Scutari (May 2), i. [254], [255]; arrival at Balaclava (May 5), i. [251]; visit to the front, i. [257]; work in the hospitals, i. [258]; attack of fever, i. [258], [371]; out of danger (May 24), i. [259]; public anxiety and sympathy, i. [264]; visit from Lord Raglan, i. [259]; returns to Scutari, convalescence at Therapia, i. [260]; at Scutari, evening walks, i. [262]
- 1855 (Aug.–Oct.): resumes work at Scutari (Aug.), i. [261], [262]
- 1855 (Oct.–Nov.): second visit to the Crimea:—leaves Scutari for Balaclava (Oct. 9), i. [283]
- 1855 (Nov.)–1856 (March): resumes work at Scutari, cholera patients, i. [283]; Christmas at the Embassy, i. [296]
- 1856 (March–July): third visit to the Crimea:—leaves Scutari for Balaclava (March 21), i. [283]
- 1856: return to Scutari (July), i. [283]; leaves Scutari for England (July 28), i. [283]; declines offer of man-of-war, i. [302]; travels incognito, i. [303]; her spoils of war, i. [304]; night in Paris (Aug. 4), i. [303]; arrival in London (Aug. 5), i. [303]; visit to the Bermondsey Convent, i. [304]; arrives unobserved at Lea Hurst (Aug. 7), i. [304]; sojourn there, i. [307], [318–20]; meets S. Herbert at Atherstone (Sept.), i. [313]; resolve to devote herself to reforms for the health of the army, i. [313–18]; invited to Balmoral (Aug. 23), i. [321]; plans for interview with the Queen and Prince, resolve to obtain a Royal Commission, i. [321–3]; confers with Sir J. McNeill at Edinburgh (Sept. 15), inspects hospitals, i. [321]; reaches Sir J. Clark's house, Birk Hall (Sept. 19), i. [324]; introduced to Queen Victoria at Balmoral (Sept. 21), i. [324]; visited by the Queen at Birk Hall (Sept. 23), i. [324]; conversations with the Queen and Prince, i. [324–325]; requested by the Queen to stay to meet Lord Panmure, i. [325]; command visit to Balmoral (Oct.), i. [326]; conversations and negotiations with Lord Panmure, i. [327]; confers again with Sir J. McNeill at Edinburgh, i. [328]; return to Lea Hurst (Oct. 15), i. [328]; settles at Burlington Hotel, London (Nov. 2), i. [328]; scheme for the Royal Commission, i. [328]; interview with Lord Panmure (Nov. 16), i. [329]; delays, further interview with Lord Panmure (Dec.), i. [335]
- 1857: living at the Burlington, i. [372]; inspects Haslar Hospital (Jan.), i. [348]; inspects hospitals at Chatham (April), i. [349]; inspects London hospitals, i. [350]; working at Notes on the Army, i. [342]; visits Sir J. McNeill at Edinburgh (April), i. [342]; Lord Panmure calls to settle Royal Commission (April 27), i. [354]; work for the Royal Commission, i. [355] seq.; gives evidence to Royal Commission, i. [359]; work for the Sub-Commissions, i. [365], [366]; over-work, refuses rest, i. [364]; offers to go to India, i. [371]; ill at Malvern (Aug., Sept., Dec.), i. [366], [367], [369], [371]; courted in counterfeit at Manchester, i. [372]
- 1858: health, movements, i. [380], [381]; elected to the Statistical Society, i. [387]; asks to be relieved of Nightingale Fund (March), i. [457]; issues Notes on the Army, i. [384]; and A Contribution, etc., i. [386]; work on London barracks, i. [381]
- 1859: continued illness, expectation of early death, i. [491]; devises scheme for Nightingale School, i. [457]; publishes Notes on Hospitals, i. [417]; Notes on Nursing, i. [448]; work on Hospital Statistics, i. [430]; revises Suggestions for Thought, i. [469], [470]; secures Royal Commission for India and works for it, ii. [21], [22], [23]
- 1860: correspondence on Census Bill, i. [435–8]; interest in International Statistical Congress, i. [431], [432]; work for Nightingale School, i. [462] seq.; visit from Clara Novello, i. [500]
- 1861: work on Surgical Statistics, i. [434]; correspondence with Jowett, i. [477]; correspondence with Mr. Rathbone on district nursing, ii. [124]; death of Sidney Herbert (Aug. 2), grief and seclusion, i. [406], ii. [3], [4]; retires to Hampstead (Aug.–Oct.), ii. [3]; writes Memoir of him, i. [408]; secures some of his intended reforms, ii. [5], [6], [7]; returns to London (Nov.), ii. [8]; work in connection with American Civil War, ii. [8], [9], [10]; grief at death of A. H. Clough, ii. [11]; serious illness (1861–62), ii. [16], [17]
- 1862: residences, ii. [24]; friendship with Jowett, ii. [96]; work for the Indian Commission, ii. [24], [25], [31]; work for the War Office, ii. [76]; writes on C.D.A., ii. [74]
- 1863: ill-health, ii. [81]; writes on Native Races, ii. [79]; work for the War Office, ii. [65], [66], [67], [73], [76]; work on Report of Indian Commission, ii. [32], [41], [81]; replies to criticisms of its Report, ii. [54]; sends Indian paper to Social Science Congress, ii. [53]; sees Sir John Lawrence, Dec. 4, ii. [44], [45]; drafts Indian sanitary code, i. [42], [46]
- 1864: writes instructions for her death, ii. [103]; sees Garibaldi, ii. [90]; writes on Native Races, ii. [79]; work for War Office, ii. [68], [70], [71]; interposes to secure advance in Indian sanitary reform, ii. [48]; work for Mr. Rathbone and Liverpool nursing, ii. [125–6]; approaches Mr. Villiers on Poor Law Reform, ii. [130]
- 1865: ill-health, ii. [89]; organizes defence of Herbert against Panmure, ii. [68]; writes scheme for small ownership, ii. [92]; writes scheme for nursing in India, ii. [55]; writes memorandum on Indian municipalities, ii. [56]; distributes pamphlet on water-tests for India, ii. [56]; various Indian sanitary work, ii. [55–6]; work for Poor Law Reform, ii. [131], [132]
- 1866: ill-health, ii. [106], [112]; work for the War Office, ii. [71]; a double disappointment, ii. [106]; Indian sanitary business: story of a lost dispatch, ii. [108], [109]; sees Lord Napier, ii. [112]; approaches Lord Cranborne on India and Mr. Hardy on Poor Law Reform, ii. [114], [115]; negotiation on the latter with Mr. Villiers, ii. [135]; consulted in Austro-Prussian War, ii. [106], [116–19]; Aug.–Nov. Embley, holiday tasks at, ii. [119]
- 1867: sees Princess Alice and Queen Augusta, ii. [187]; determines to advance sanitary organization in India, ii. [147]; makes acquaintance of Sir Bartle Frere, ii. [147]; opens communications with Sir Stafford Northcote, ii. [150]; interviews and negotiations with him, ii. [151] seq.; goes (Dec.) to Malvern, ii. [162]
- 1868: sees Queen of Holland, ii. [187]; anxiety to find a successor to Agnes Jones, ii. [141]; Highgate Infirmary nursing, ii. [192]; work for the India Office, ii. [162]; interview with Lord Mayo, ii. [167], [168]; visit to Lea Hurst, ii. [162]; resolves to give an hour a day to writing, ii. [163]
- 1869: writes on Poor Law in Fraser, ii. [164]; sees Mr. Goschen, ii. [166]; intervenes to save Army Sanitary Committee, etc., ii. [173]; writes memorandum for Lord De Grey, ii. [174]; work for the India Office, ii. [181]; suggests Indian cholera inquiry, ii. [172]; interviews and negotiations with Lord Napier of Magdala, ii. [174], [176]; sees Netley nurses, ii. [194]
- 1870: work in connexion with Franco-German war, ii. [198] seq.; sees the Crown Princess of Prussia, ii. [203]; sees the Queen of Holland, ii. [187]; letters to Bengal Social Science Association, ii. [178]; visits Embley and Lea Hurst, ii. [163]
- 1871: draws up Code for Infirmary nursing, ii. [186]; issues Notes on Lying-in Institutions, ii. [196]; visits Embley and Lea Hurst, ii. [163]
- 1872: out of office, ii. [212], [221], [241]; proposes to enter St. Thomas's Hospital, ii. [211]; literary work for Jowett, ii. [225] seq.; visits Embley, ii. [163]; sees W. Clark on Indian sanitation, ii. [177]; interviewing nurses, etc., ii. [249] seq.
- 1873: work on the Mystics, ii. [232]; interviewing nurses, ii. [257]; writes Papers in Fraser, ii. [219]; sends Paper on “Life or Death in India” to Social Science Congress, ii. [181]; with Madame Mohl and Jowett at Lea Hurst, ii. [307]
- 1874: work on the Mystics, ii. [232]; interrupted by death of her father, ii. [235], [237–8], [260]; Indian work, ii. [276] seq., [295]; at Claydon and Lea Hurst with her mother, ii. [310]
- 1875: work on Indian irrigation, ii. [286], [287]; at Norwood with her mother, ii. [310–11]; at Lea Hurst, ii. [311]
- 1876: writes on District Nursing, ii. [253]; intervenes to save the Army Medical School, ii. [318], [319]
- 1877: letters on Indian famine, ii. [284], [449]; at Lea Hurst, ii. [450]
- 1878: consulted on possible war with Russia, ii. [253]; sees Mr. Stanhope, ii. [289]; writes Paper on Social Work, ii. [450]; various writings on India, ii. [290], [451]; correspondence with Lord Cranbrook, ii. [291]
- 1879: communications on India with Mr. Gladstone, ii. [292], [293]; various writings on India, ii. [451–2]
- 1880: death of her mother, ii. [323]; at Ramsgate and Seaton, ii. [324]; interest in the elections, ii. [325]; writes to the Queen on India, ii. [324–325]; makes General Gordon's acquaintance, ii. [327]; appeals to Mr. Childers about military nursing, ii. [328]; at Claydon, ii. [324]
- 1881: at Seaford, ii. [324] n.; seeing nurses, ii. [326]; communications with General Gordon, ii. [328], [329]; Indian work, ii. [330]; sees Lord Roberts and Sir M. Grant-Duff, ii. [333]
- 1882: visits St. Thomas's Hospital, ii. [326]; sees nurses on war-service, ii. [335]; obtains Committee on Army Hospital Service, ii. [337]; Indian work, ii. [330]; correspondence with Arnold Toynbee, ii. [333–334]; sees return of the Guards, ii. [335]; attends a review and opening of the Law Courts, ii. [336]
- 1883: Army Hospital Service work, ii. [338]; Royal Red Cross conferred, correspondence with Queen Victoria, ii. [339]; Indian work, ii. [342]
- 1884: sees Lord Dufferin, ii. [343]; communicates with Mr. Gladstone on India, ii. [345]
- 1885: sees Soudan nurses, ii. [347] seq.; sees Lord Reay, Lord Roberts, and others, ii. [369]; work for “Lady Dufferin's Fund,” ii. [370]
- 1886: sees Lord Cross and Mr. W. H. Smith, ii. [368], [373]; appeals to Lord Dufferin on Indian Sanitary Commissions, ii. [372]; sees Lord Ripon, ii. [369]
- 1887: her “Jubilee” year, ii. [353]; consulted on “Jubilee Nursing Institute,” ii. [355]; on nurses for India, ii. [370]; selection of new matron at St. Thomas's, ii. [353], [354]; eyesight troubling her, ii. [415]; Jowett ill at South Street, ii. [394–5]; Indian work, ii. [375], [377]
- 1888: Indian work, ii. [377]; sees Lord Lansdowne, ii. [376–7]
- 1889: a New Year's Greeting, ii. [393]; the Nurses' Battle, ii. [360]; writes retrospect of her Indian work, ii. [380]
- 1890: death of her sister, ii. [382]; proposed Statistical professorship, ii. [395]
- 1891: the Nurses' Battle, ii. [361]; organizes Indian representation at International Health Congress, ii. [378]; interest in Siamese affairs, i. [386]
- 1892: the Nurses' Battle, ii. [361–362]; letter to Lord Cross on a scheme of Indian sanitation, ii. [379]; organizes Health Lectures, etc., in Bucks, ii. [384]
- 1893: the Nurses' Battle, ii. [364]; sees the Empress Frederick, ii. [357]
- 1894: sees Lord Elgin's private secretary, ii. [405]; death of Sir H. Verney and Mr. Shore Smith, ii. [399]
- 1895: full of work, ii. [404]; memory begins to fail, ii. [415]; nurses' registration question, ii. [411]–12; interest in army matters, ii. [406]; writes to Duke of Cambridge on his retirement, ii. [407]
- 1896: makes her Will, i. v; thoughts on All Souls Day, ii. [414]; nursing correspondence, ii. [412]; appeals to Mr. Chamberlain about Hong Kong barracks, ii. [407]
- 1897: “soaked in work,” ii. [404]; nursing correspondence, ii. [412]; C.D.A. appeal, ii. [408]; writes to Crimean veterans, ii. [404]; makes a Codicil, records her Indian negotiations, i. v
- Old age: vigorous, ii. [404–5]; gradual failure of powers, ii. [416]; greater acquiescence, ii. [405], [414]; interest in the army, i. [282]; bent on improvements, ii. [272], [418]
- 1898: nursing work, ii. [412]; thoughts on Waterloo Day, ii. [410]; sees Aga Khan, ii. [405]
- 1899: thoughts on the Boer War, ii. [411]
- 1900: congratulatory addresses, etc., ii. [419]
- 1902: has a companion, ii. [416]
- 1907: receives Order of Merit, ii. [418]
- 1908: receives Freedom of the City, ii. [418]
- 1910: death and burial, ii. [422]; memorials, ii. [422] n.
- (2) Work during the Crimean War:—
- Generally: amount and power of work, i. [234], [240], [295]; attendance on sick and wounded, i. [183], [235], [236], [237], [238], ii. [334], [408]; barrack-mistress and nurse, i. [184]; care for nurses' families, i. [198]; demeanour, i. [230], [295]; “going to Miss Nightingale,” i. [231], [232]; idolized by the men, i. [237], [238]; letters to and from their relatives, i. [238–40]; medical obstruction, i. [182]; midnight rounds, i. [236], [237]; on good conduct of the men, i. [242]; quarters, i. [200], [234]; religious bickerings, i. [245]; respect for rules, i. [210]; strict disciplinarian, i. [210]; tributes to her, i. [186]; visit from the Duke of Cambridge, i. [385]; woman's insight, i. [198]
- As Administrator: assumes initiative and responsibility, i. [171], [211], [212], [232]; establishes extra-diet kitchens, i. [196]; gives supplies to the Allies, i. [204]; improves laundry arrangements, i. [195]; orders building operations, i. [206–207]; purveys for the hospitals, i. [199]; on medical requisition only, i. [209]; supplies clothing, i. [205]; supplies extra diets, i. [201]; unties red tape, i. [203], ii. [276]
- As Reformer: begs for stores, i. [219]; suggests additional clothing, i. [222]; Medical School, i. [229]; reform in stoppages, i. [222–3]; scheme of reorganization, i. [224], [226–9]; sending out carpenters, i. [219]; store depôts, etc., i. [221], [222]; urges sanitary reforms, i. [219]
- As the Soldiers' Friend: accused of “spoiling the brutes,” i. [277]; arranges reading-rooms, i. [280–282]; care of women camp-followers, i. [197]; establishes system of money-orders, i. [278]; influence over the men, i. [277], [279]; letter-writing for the soldiers, i. [242]; organizes a Café, i. [279]
- In the Crimea: ambiguity in her instructions, i. [255], [286]; appeals to the War Office for support, i. [290]; authority confirmed in General Orders, i. [293]; carriage, i. [284], ii. [409], [410]; deprived of provisions, i. [291]; hardness of the life, i. [284], [291]; medical and military obstruction, i. [255], [286], [291], ii. [195]
- Results: an episode, not the end, of her career, i. [xxiv], [305]; F. N. as Popular Heroine, i. [264] seq., [373], [446], [447], ii. [420], [460]; step in the emancipation of women, i. [xxv], [305], [306]; female nursing in military hospitals, i. [305], ii. [410]; and see [Red Cross]
- (3) Relations with Sidney Herbert:—
- First meeting with, i. [79]; his sending her to the Crimea, i. [373]; close co-operation and almost daily companionship, 1856–61, i. [312], [332], [355], [356], [357], [366], [372], [380], [382], [391], [399], [400], [502], ii. [14], [16]; “last letter” to him, i. [373]; grief at his death, i. [406], ii. [7], [15], [16]; and remorse, i. [407]; keeps his death-day (Aug. 2), ii. [89], [94], [199] n., [319], [378], [392] n.; thoughts on reunion, ii. [94]; his “official legatee,” ii. [30], [60], [68], [72]; finishing his work, ii. [39], [98]; using his name as a lever, ii. [41]; left in charge by her captain, ii. [59]; “my dear Master,” i. [407], ii. [4], [9]; a fellowship in work, ii. [223], [426]; general remarks on, i. [411–412]; by F. N., ii. [12]; Jowett on, ii. [426]
- (4) Work for the Army and in connection with the War Office:—
- Reasons of her influence and employment in this way, i. [312–18], ii. [59–62]; the Royal Commission on the Health of the Army (1857), i. [323–61]; the Sub-Commissions for carrying out its recommendations, i. [362–74], [387] seq.; “Advisory Council to the War Office” (1862–65), ii. [64–78]; F. N. and War Office patronage, ii. [73], [74], [408]; tributes to her services, i. [375], ii. [77]. See also [Army Medical School], [Army Medical Service]
- (5) Work for Hospitals (q.v.) and Nursing (q.v.):—
- Her Hospital experience, i. [416–17], ii. [267–8]; call to Hospital work, Army work a diversion, i. [416], ii. [82], [103]; consulted on hospital construction, etc., i. [420–7], ii. [185–6], [326]; suggestions for Hospital statistics, i. [429–34]; position as a sanitarian, i. [416], [419–20], [448]; force of her nursing example, i. [446], ii. [126]; consulted on Nursing, the Founder of Modern Nursing, i. [439] seq., ii. [186] seq.; work in connection with the Nightingale Training School (q.v.), i. [456–67], ii. [190–197], [246–72]; extent of her correspondence, ii. [262], [326], [335], [350] n., [370], [412]; personal relations with the nurses, ii. [192–5], [249–52], [254], [257–62]
- (6) Work in connection with India:—
- Origin of her interest in India, ii. [19–20], [381]; sources of information and study, ii. [27], [273–5]; reputed visit to India, ii. [27] n.; the Royal Commission on the Health of the Army in India (1859–63), ii. [21] seq.; measures for carrying out its recommendations, ii. [40] seq.; organization of Health Service suggested, and, to a large extent, carried by her, her three points, ii. [108], [145], [150]: (1) distinct sanitary authority in India, ii. [145], [152], [154], [158], [159], [161]; (2) sanitary department at India Office, ii. [145], [150], [152], [153], [161]; (3) publication of annual reports, ii. [145], [150], [155]; her subsequent work as Health Missioner for India: (1) communications with officials, ii. [50], [56], [158], [159], [167–78], [276–83], [333], [369]; (2) with Indians, ii. [178–9], [405–6], [382]; (3) work for the India Office Sanitary Committee, ii. [179] seq.; extension of her interest from sanitation to other reforms, ii. [284] seq.; special interest in Lord Ripon's Viceroyalty, ii. [330] seq.; effort to obtain increased financial provision for sanitation (1891), ii. [378] seq.; her retrospect (1889), ii. [381]; her record of dealings with Viceroys, etc., i. v; estimates of her services, ii. [18], [57], [58], [107], [160], [61], [184], [380]
- (7) Characteristics, personal traits, etc.:—
- General remarks on, ii. [424–34]; administrative genius, i. [180], [412], ii. [382]; adored by women, ii. [14], [314]; application, intense power of, i. [347]; army, soldiers, attachment to, i. [282], [295], [373], [374], ii. [336]; business-like (q.v.), methodical, i. [473], ii. [385]; calmness of demeanour, i. [160], [320]; combination of gifts, i. [372], [453], [478]; conversation, i. [38], ii. [305], [307], [308]; considerateness, ii. [388]; craving for sympathy, i. [113], ii. [13], [16]; craving for work, ii. [209], [214], [404]; critical, ii. [120]; compared with her sister, i. [28]; dreaming, i. [40], [91], [92]; exacting, a “vampyre,” ii. [11], [208], [427]; exaggeration, over-emphasis, ii. [238]; forgiveness, not prone to, i. [192]; gush, dislike of, i. [496]; humour, i. [140], [230], [237], [421], [495], [496], [506], ii. [251], [309]; impatience of opposition, i. [192]; influence upon men, ii. [14], [148], [385–6]; intellectual power, i. [xxxi], [339] n., [372], ii. [130], [308], [327]; kindness, tenderness, i. [137], [236], ii. [257] seq., [308], [348], [417]; “like a man,” ii. [15]; literary art, impatient of, i. [93–4], [474], ii. [167]; literary style, i. [408], ii. [25], [27]; many-sided, i. [xxx], ii. [239]; morbid, i. [50], [81], ii. [11], [241], [243]; music, love of, i. [19], [24], [64], [65], [500]; pungency of expression, i. [192], [453]; pursuing the path to perfection, i. [467], ii. [184], [244], [272], [433]; riding, fond of, in youth, i. [64], [257]; sarcasm, i. [288], [346]; secretive, influence behind the scenes, i. [372], [408]; self-abasement, self-accusation, self-examination, i. [49], [81], ii. [120], [240]; self-expression and realization, instinct for, i. [43], [64], [82], [100], [468], [485]; shrinking from publicity, i. [52], [303]; speculative inquiry, taste for, i. [500]; statistics (q.v.), love of, i. [129], [428], [435]; sympathy, i. [453], ii. [15], [385], [387]; “things,” independent of, i. [498]; tower of strength to her friends, ii. [314]
- (8) Personalia:—
- Allowance from her father, etc., i. [165], [504]; books, reading, ii. [82], [94], [95], [417], [426]; cats, i. [499], ii. [17], [240], [305]; charities, i. [497], [504], ii. [312]; communication with friends by notes, ii. [87]; dress, i. [39], [296], ii. [305]; flowers, i. [499], ii. [306], [388]; handwriting, facsimile of, ii. [216]; remarks on, ii. [415–16], [457]; health, i. [371], [491] seq., ii. [38], [39]; honours, decorations, etc., i. [274], [302], ii. [119], [202], [339], [418], [420]; late rising, i. [106]; personal appearance:—Mrs. Howe on, i. [37]; Lady Lovelace's poem on, i. [38]; Mrs. Gaskell's description of, i. [39]; at Scutari, described, i. [230], [234], [296]; in old age, ii. [304–5], [307], [349]; pictures, ii. [43], [306]; places of residence:—i. [342], [382], [493–4], [497], ii. [24], [84]; her room at Lea Hurst, ii. [309]; her house in South Street (1865–1910), ii. [300] seq. (see also [Claydon], [Embley], [Lea Hurst]); portraits, list of, ii. [467–469]; secluded rule of life, i. [492], [502], [503], ii. [88], [89], [187], [241], [243]; seldom out of doors, ii. [309]; servants and housekeeping, ii. [302–303]; Commissionaire, ii. [258], [302]; voice, i. [38], [186], [335], [493], ii. [417]; Will and earlier testamentary dispositions: (1856) i. [294], (1857) i. [374], (1862) i. [477] n., (1864) ii. [103], (1896) i. [v], [xxviii], [237], [297], [306], [400]
- (9) Religious views:—
- Development of her views, i. [47] seq., [478] seq.; conformed to Church of England, i. [54], [57]; desire to found a religion, i. [119], [469], ii. [366]; her God, i. [246]; Kingdom of Heaven (q.v.) within us, i. [307]; meditations, ii. [239], [243], [244–5], [352], [415], [429]; mysticism (q.v.), ii. [239], [241], [366]; relation to Positivism, ii. [218–19]; religion and practice, i. [488]; spiritual fervour, i. [489], ii. [239]; statements of her creed, i. [307], ii. [243–244]; how adjusted to current ideas, i. [485] seq.
- (10) Miscellaneous:—
- A myth in her life-time, ii. [198], [321]; the Legendary F. N., i. xxiv; reputed to be living in St. Thomas's Hospital, ii. [404]; an obituary sermon on, i. xxx; August, her fateful month, ii. [353]; her helpers, i. [353], ii. [14], [85] seq.; her pupils, i. [424]; her use of the plural “we,” i. [373], ii. [85]; her “widows' caps” for three great friends, ii. [15], [223]
- (11) Letters from Florence Nightingale to:—
- Sir Henry Acland, ii. [318]
- Dr. T. Graham Balfour, i. [354], [377], [432]
- A Bereaved Mother (Crimea), i. [239]
- Henry Bonham Carter, ii. [247], [356], [403], [404]
- Mrs. Henry Bonham Carter, ii. [66]
- Miss Hilary Bonham Carter, i. [28], [31], [36], [42], [44], [46], [63], [69], [75], [99], [121], [506]
- Norman Bonham Carter, ii. [391], [392]
- Sir William Bowman, i. [183]
- C. H. Bracebridge, i. [287], [307]
- Mrs. Bracebridge, i. [300], ii. [103]
- Lady Canning, i. [251], [257]
- Edwin Chadwick, i. [319], ii. [284]
- Sir James Clark, ii. [67], [68]
- Mrs. Clough, i. [497], ii. [11], [389], [399]
- Lord Cranbrook, ii. [291]
- Lady Cranworth, i. [300]
- Crimean Veterans, ii. [404]
- Dr. William Farr, i. [433], [435], ii. [4], [8], [23], [45], [92], [94], [111], [112], [238]
- Florence Committee for Wounded (1866), ii. [106], [116]
- Sir Bartle Frere, ii. [151], [213], [299]
- Captain (Sir Douglas) Galton:—(1858) i. [382]; (1861) i. [421], [423], ii. [10]; (1862) i. [231], ii. [64], [72]; (1863) ii. [66], [67], [72], [73]; (1864) ii. [47], [48], [49], [53], [58]; (1865) ii. [86]; (1866) ii. [110], [113], [136]; (1867) ii. [147], [149], [150], [152], [153], [155]; (1870) ii. [200]; (1880) ii. [328]; (1883) ii. [338]; (1886) ii. [374]; (1887) ii. [371]; (1889) ii. [371]; (1891) ii. [378]; (1895) ii. [406]; (1897) ii. [404]
- Rev. R. Glover, i. [314]
- W. E. Gladstone, ii. [293]
- Mrs. Hawthorn, ii. [335]
- Sidney Herbert:—(1854) i. [150] (to Mrs. Herbert, but intended for him), [188], [190], [191], [203], [207], [208], [215], [217–18], [247], [248]; (1855) i. [196], [224], [226], [234], [246], [249], [250], [253]; (1856) i. [271], [290], [291]; (1857) i. [336]; (1859) i. [403]; a last letter, i. [373]
- Mrs. Herbert, i. [150], [286], [287]
- Benjamin Jowett, ii. [222], [224], [245], [359], [365], [366], [396]
- Sir John (Lord) Lawrence, ii. [44], [50], [157]
- Colonel Lefroy, i. [219]
- Robert Lowe, i. [437]
- Sir John McNeill:—(1856) i. [324]; (1857) i. [316], [338], [357], [360], [365], [377]; (1859) ii. [22]; (1860) i. [119], [120]; (1861) i. [404], [405], ii. [12]; (1868) ii. [188]
- Lady McNeill, i. [380]
- Cardinal Manning, i. [491]
- Harriet Martineau, i. [385], [407], [412], ii. [7], [19], [30] (telegram), [33], [43], [90], [105], [198], [203]
- Master of St. John's House, i. [261]
- Matrons, Sisters, Nurses, ii. [195], [250], [259], [261], [262], [342]
- John Stuart Mill, ii. [216]
- R. Monckton Milnes, i. [121], ii. [284]
- Julius Mohl, ii. [13], [26], [59], [94], [105], [161], [174], [178], [187], [194], [221], [236], [257], [274], [315]
- Madame Mohl (Mary Clarke), (1839) i. [24], [26]; (1841) i. [55]; (1843) i. [36], [38]; (1844) i. [31], [93]; (1846) i. [47]; (1847) i. [42], [66], [75]; (1848) i. [82]; (1851) i. [56]; (1853) i. [129], [131], [134], [138]; (1859) i. [505]; (1861) i. [450], ii. [9]; (1864) ii. [89]; (1865) ii. [56], [84], [89], [93], [95]; (1866) ii. [119]; (1868) ii. [126], [141], [162], [425], [426], [430]; (1869) ii. [160], [166], [281]; (1871) i. xxiii; (1873) ii. [316]; (1874) ii. [236]; (1875) ii. [311], [316]; (1876) ii. [319]; (1878) ii. [319]; (1881) ii. [326]; various dates, i. [412], [473]
- Mrs. Moore, i. [299], ii. [76], [81], [126], [139]
- Mrs. Vaughan Nash, ii. [391]
- Miss Hannah Nicholson, i. [40], [44], [47], [49], [50], [51], [52], [53], [64], [137]
- “Nieces,” ii. [390]
- W. E. Nightingale, i. [61] n., [117], [135], [136], [307], [406], [481], [482], [484], [486], [503], ii. [62], [209], [300]
- Mrs. Nightingale, i. [112], [113], [114], ii. [16], [82]
- Mr. and Mrs. Nightingale, i. [255], [268], [269], [276]
- Louis Shore Nightingale, ii. [392], [393], [410]
- Sir Stafford Northcote, ii. [151]
- Lord Panmure, i. [347]
- Miss Pringle, ii. [323], [324], [346], [347]
- William Rathbone, ii. [359], [364]
- On Miss Sarah Robinson's work, ii. [77]
- Mrs. Roundell, i. [111]
- Lord Salisbury (Lord Cranborne), ii. [114], [277]
- Miss Julia Smith, i. [34]
- Samuel Smith, i. [324], [401], [424], [495–497], ii. [11], [22]
- Mrs. Samuel Smith, ii. [353]
- Mrs. Shore Smith, ii. [388]
- Dean Stanley, i. [57]
- Sir Henry Storks, i. [294]
- Lord Stratford de Redcliffe, i. [194]
- Dr. John Sutherland (notes and letters), i. [368], ii. [87], [88], [152], [153], [159], [164], [165], [168], [171], [172], [188], [200], [205], [206], [207], [343], [369]
- Arnold Toynbee, ii. [333]
- Lady Tulloch, i. [338], [338] n.
- Sir Harry Verney, ii. [45], [362]
- Lady Verney, i. [85], [125], [277], [374], ii. [430]
- Queen Victoria, ii. [339], [340]
- Crown Princess Victoria, ii. [117], [188], [201]
- War Office, i. [290]
- Sir William Wedderburn, ii. [404], [453]
- Miss Rachel Williams, ii. [254], [255], [350]
- Various, ii. [242], [399]
- (12) Printed Writings:—chronological list of, ii. [437–58]; particular pieces:—
- Addresses to Probationers (1872 seq.), ii. [447]; general account of, ii. [263–8]; quoted or referred to, i. [5] n., ii. [202], [247] n., [248], [257], [263], [264], [265], [266], [267]
- Army Reform … under the late Lord Herbert (1862), ii. [441], [442]; how written, i. [408]; Mr. Gladstone on, i. [409], [410]; quoted or referred to, i. [312], [388] seq., [402], [408], [412], ii. [26]
- British Medical Journal (1892), account of Mrs. Wardroper, ii. [455]; quoted, i. [459], [460]
- Birds (1895), ii. [309], [456]
- Can we educate Education in India? (1879), ii. [331], [452]
- Contribution to Sanitary History of the British Army (1859), i. [386], [429], ii. [439]
- District Nursing (1890), by W. Rathbone, Introduction by F. N., ii. [356], [454]
- Franco-German War, Letter on the (1870), ii. [199], [447]
- Health at Home, Health and Local Government, etc. (1892, 1894), ii. [384], [455], [456]
- Health Missioners for Rural India (1896), ii. [405], [457]
- Hospital Statistics and Hospital Plans (1862), ii. [441]; quoted and referred to, i. [412], [433]
- How People may Live and not Die in India (1863), ii. [444]; quoted or referred to, ii. [1], [53], [444]
- In Memoriam: John Gerry (1877), ii. [311], [450]
- Institution of Kaiserswerth on the Rhine (1851), i. [92–3], ii. [437]; quoted or referred to, i. [109], [441], [442]
- Introductory Notes on Lying-in Institutions (1871), ii. [447]; general account of, ii. [196]; dedication in, ii. [197], [221]; quoted or referred to, ii. [167] n., [171]
- Irrigation and Water Transit in India (1879), ii. [288] n., [452]
- Life or Death in India (1874), ii. [448]; quoted or referred to, ii. [181–4], [277]
- Letters from Egypt (1854), i. [95], ii. [437]; quoted or referred to, i. [85], [86], [369] n.
- Mortality of the British Army (1858), i. [376], ii. [439]
- Note of Interrogation, etc. (1873), ii. [447]; quoted or referred to, i. [97], [477], ii. [218–21]
- Memorandum on … Sanitary Improvements in India up to the end of 1867 (1868), ii. [34] n., [110], [155], [446]
- Note on the Aboriginal Races of Australia (1865), ii. [79], [445]
- Notes on … the British Army (1858), bibliography, ii. [438]; origin of, why never published, i. [343]; written 1857, i. [342]; issued 1858, i. [384]; appreciations of, by:—Duke of Cambridge, i. [384]; Dr. Farr, i. [352]; Lord Grey, i. [354]; Dr. Hurd, i. [345] n.; Kinglake, i. [343]; Sir J. McNeill, i. [344], [346], [474]; Harriet Martineau, i. [386]; Dean Milman, i. [385]; leading principles of, i. [345]; scope of, i. [346]; analysis of official documents in, i. [346]; style of, i. [344], [474]; a tour de force, i. [347]; a landmark in army reform, i. [344]; expert advice embodied in, i. [348], [353]; quoted or referred to, i. [173], [176], [177], [183], [243], [288], [294], [315], [317], [357] n., ii. [20]
- Notes on Hospitals (1859), ii. [439], [443]; scope and influence of, i. [417] seq.; quoted or referred to, i. [383], [413], [419]
- Notes on Nursing (1859–60), ii. [439–440], [441]; general account of, i. [448] seq.; appreciations of, i. [448]; characteristic of F. N., i. [451] seq.; influence of, i. [448], [451], [452]; J. S. Mill and, i. [470]; popularity of, i. [449], [450], [451]; profits of, i. [504]; recollections of Crimea in, i. [449], [450]; quoted or referred to, i. [10], [499], [500], ii. [416], [417]
- Notes on Nursing for the Labouring Classes (1861), i. [450], ii. [441]
- Note on Pauperism (1869), ii. [164], [446]
- Note on the Supposed Protection against Venereal Diseases … (1863), ii. [74], [75], [443]
- Observations on the … Stational Reports … in India (1863), ii. [442–3]; history of, ii. [25], [26], [27], [34], [35], [36]; influence of, ii. [158]; scope, ii. [27]; style, ii. [25], [27], [443]; wide circulation, ii. [38]
- People of India, The (1878), ii. [290], [291], [451]
- Proposal for Improved Statistics of Surgical Operations (1863), i. [434], ii. [443]
- Report of the Royal Commission on the Army (1857), F. N.'s evidence, ii. [438]; quoted or referred to, i. [220], [240], [359], [360]
- Sanitary Statistics of Native Colonial Schools and Hospitals (1813), ii. [79], [444]
- Sanitation in India, various articles on, ii. [377], [379], [380], [406], [453] seq.
- Sick Nursing and Health Nursing (1893), ii. [365], [456]
- Statements exhibiting the Voluntary Contributions, etc. (1857), i. [348], ii. [438]; quoted or referred to, i. [165], [167], [182], [201], [208], [210], [222], [279]
- Subsidiary Notes as to the Introduction of Female Nursing (1858), ii. [438]; scope of, i. [347]; quoted or referred to, i. [293], ii. [204] n., [269] n.
- Suggestions for improving the Nursing System … (1874), ii. [253], [449]
- Suggestions for Thought (1860), ii. [440]; addressed to “artisans,” i. [478]; general account and argument of, i. [478] seq.; help of Mrs. S. Smith in, i. [120]; literary defects in, i. [472], [473], [474]; opinions on, of:—Jowett, i. [471] seq.; Mill, i. [471], [473]; Julius Mohl, i. [478], [489]; W. E. Nightingale, i. [503]; origin of, i. [117], [119], [477]; printed (1860), i. [470]; submitted to Mill and Jowett, i. [471]; publication abandoned, i. [477]; posthumous publication desired, i. [477] n.; spiritual fervour of, i. [489]; tone of, i. [475], [476]; quoted or referred to, i. [42], [96], [100], [471] n., [476], [478], [480], [485], [486], [489], [490], [504], ii. [84], [428]
- Suggestions in regard to … Indian Stations (1864), ii. [444]; origin of, ii. [42]; issue of, ii. [46], [48], [49]; Sir Stafford Northcote on, ii. [155]
- Suggestions on … Nursing for Hospitals in India (1865), ii. [55], [157], [444]
- Suggestions on providing … Nurses for the Sick Poor … (1867), ii. [445]; account of, ii. [135], [136], [186]
- The Dumb shall Speak … (1883), ii. [334], [453]
- Trained Nursing for the Sick Poor (1876), ii. [253], [449]
- Una and the Lion (1868), ii. [445]; colported by the Crown Princess, ii. [190]; influence of, ii. [142], [194]; Lord Napier on, ii. [170]; quoted, ii. [126], [128], [140–1], [142]
- Volunteer Movement, Letter on the (1861), ii. [441]; quoted or referred to, i. [284] n., [496], ii. [7], [8]
- Water Arrival in India, A (1878), ii. [289], [451]
- Zemindar, the Sun and the Watering-Pot (1874), ii. [449]; general account of, ii. [295]; maps for, ii. [289], [296], [297]
- Nightingale, Frances Parthenope. See [Verney, Lady]
- Nightingale, Louis Shore, ii. [392]
- Nightingale, Peter, of Lea, i. [3]
- Nightingale, William Edward (father of F. N.): changes his name from Shore to Nightingale (1815), i. [3]; education, i. [12]; marries Frances Smith (1818), i. [3]; circumstances, i. [7]; character, temperament, and views, i. [5], [6], [40], [41], ii. [235], [236]; educates his daughters, i. [12], [13]; makes inquiries about nursing, i. [60]; gives F. N. a separate allowance (1853), i. [130]; inclines to give her freedom, i. [123]; but is overborne, i. [125]; accompanies F. N. to Scotland (1856), i. [324]; visits her in London, i. [503]; with F. N. at Malvern, i. [380]; provides her with a London house, ii. [16]; affection and admiration for F. N., i. [123], [138], [503]; interest in F. N.'s religious speculations, i. [480], [481], [482], [483], ii. [235–236]; friendship with Jowett, ii. [96]; death of, ii. [235], [452]; letters:—to F. N., i. [138], [260], [380], [483], [503]; to others, i. [36], [270], [492–3]; various references, i. [20], [499], [506], ii. [88], [116], [303], [391]
- Nightingale, Mrs. W. E. (Frances Smith), her father, i. [4]; brothers and sisters, i. [4], [29]; opposes F. N.'s schemes for hospital life, i. [44], [114], [115], [125], [130], [141]; “has hatched a wild swan,” i. [139]; F. N. sees little of (1857 seq.), i. [380], [503]; F. N. spends some months with (1866), ii. [119]; (1868) ii. [163]; (1874–80) ii. [311], [313]; death, ii. [323], [452]; character, i. [41], [105], ii. [119]; letters: to F. N., i. [161], [269]; to a friend, i. [198]
- Nightingale Fund, the, origin of, i. [268]; meeting at Willis's Rooms in aid of (1855), i. [269] seq.; subscriptions invited in General Orders, i. [273]; controversy on, i. [443]; the Fund invested, i. [456]; scheme for utilizing it adopted (1859), i. [457], [459]; purposes to which it was applied:—(1) School at St. Thomas's Hospital, i. [458] seq. (see further [Nightingale Training School]); (2) Midwifery training, King's College Hospital (q.v.), i. [464]; (3) support of District Nursing in London, ii. [355]; Reports of, bibliography, ii. [461], [462], quoted or referred to, i. [271], [463], [465], ii. [248] n., [256]
- “Nightingale in the East,” the, i. [266], ii. [460]
- “Nightingale Power,” the, i. [214], [332]
- Nightingale Training School, St. Thomas's Hospital, opened (1860), i. [456], [459]; impressions of (1860), i. [462]; first year's results, i. [463]; novelty of the scheme and medical opposition, i. [466], [467]; principles of, i. [460] seq.:—(1) to give technical training: examination and reports, i. [460], [463], ii. [248]; probationers' diaries, i. [463], ii. [251]; cookery lessons, ii. [326]; (2) to give moral influence: to be a “home,” i. [461], ii. [247]; esprit de corps, ii. [259]; (3) to train nurses who would introduce improved methods elsewhere and train others, i. [461], [463], [466]; wide influence of the School in this respect, i. [465], [466], ii. [125], [190], [192], [194], [254], [256], [326], [335]; Home Sister appointed (1874), ii. [248]; 50th anniversary, i. [456] n., celebrated in America, ii. [421]; F. N.'s personal concern in the School, interviews with nurses, etc., i. [463], ii. [246] seq., [326], [412]. For successive Matrons, see [Wardroper], [Pringle], [Gordon]
- Nineteenth Century, ii. [269] n., [290]
- Nobiling, attempt on Emperor William I., ii. [314] n.
- Noel, Gerard, i. [38]
- Noise, i. [453]
- “No Popery” agitation, i. [56], [244]
- North London District Nursing Association, ii. [256]
- North Staffordshire Infirmary, i. [423]
- Northbrook, Lord, Viceroy of India 1872, does not call on F. N., ii. [213]; letter to her, ii. [214]; report on sanitary progress to F. N. through Lord Salisbury, ii. [279]; communications with her, ii. [290]
- Northcote, Sir Stafford (Lord Iddesleigh), succeeds Lord Cranborne as Indian Secretary (1867), ii. [146]; calls on F. N., ii. [151–2], [153]; commissions her to draft various sanitary papers, ii. [154]; letters to F. N., ii. [151], [184]; F. N. on, ii. [152], [153]; Jowett on, ii. [155]; recommends Dr. Farr for “C.B.,” ii. [289] n.
- Norwood, a villa at, ii. [311]
- Novello, Clara (Contessa Gigliucci), i. [447], [500], [501]; Sabilla, ii. [441]
- Novels, ii. [425]
- “Nuisances Removal Act,” F. N. as, ii. [169]
- Nunc Dimittis, i. [492]
- Nuremberg, A. Dürer at, i. [369]
- Nurses, Nursing: a calling, not a profession, ii. [365], [366]; a Fine Art, i. [455]; a progressive art, ii. [264], [367]; as occupation for gentlewomen, i. [117]; development of trained, ii. [186]; drinking among, i. [117], [442], [444]; hints to, i. [453]; history of, i. [439–40]; F. N.'s place in, i. [440] seq.; progress of, since her reforms, i. [456]; ideal of, in Shakespeare, i. [455]; Jubilee Institute, ii. [355]; moral influence of, ii. [264]; National Pension Scheme, ii. [356]; “nursing the well,” i. [452]; old style of, i. [454]; popular qualifications for, i. [454]; Registration controversy (“The Nurses' Battle”), ii. [269], [356] seq.; scope and motives in, ii. [263], [269], [271]; state of (1850), i. [61], [442] seq.
- Nurses, Nursing, Female, in the Crimean War: affection for F. N. among the first party, i. [163], [261]; “angels without hands” among, i. [246]; composition of the first party, i. [158]; deaths among, i. [239], [261]; difficulty of obtaining suitable women, i. [158], [252]; difficulty of maintaining discipline, i. [185], [187]; hostility among some of the second party, i. [289]; “mainstays” among, i. [299–301]; marriage of some, i. [247]; no disciple of F. N. among, ii. [14]; proselytizing among, i. [249–50]; Rules and Regulations for, i. [187], [188]; uniform of, i. [183], [186], [187]
- Nurses, Nursing, Female, in Military Hospitals: introduction of, after Crimean War, i. [194], [347], [373], [392–393;] in Egypt, ii. [335], [337], [341–2], [346–52]; in India, ii. [55], [369], [407]; military prejudice against, i. [149], [167–8]; Lord Wolseley in favour of, ii. [341–2]; Regulations for, ii. [66], [194]; War Nursing Reserve, ii. [365]
- Nursing Record, ii. [363]
- Nutting and Dock, History of Nursing, i. [416], [466], ii. [465]
- O'Connell, Daniel, ii. [167]
- Official dilatoriness, ii. [34], [48–9], [147]
- Old age, last years of life the best, ii. [398], [399], [402], [403], [404]
- Omar Khayyám, ii. [94], [95]
- Omar Pacha, i. [231] n.
- Ommanney, Lieut. W. F., ii. [185]
- Once a Week, ii. [35]
- Opera, F. N.'s love of the, i. [19], [24]
- Opium, injections of, ii. [106]
- Order of Merit, conferred on F. N., ii. [418], [420], [469]
- Orderlies, in hospitals, i. [219], [225], [226], ii. [328], [337], [342], [350], [370], [393]
- Orders, religious Sisterhoods, etc., i. [57], [62], [424], [425], [432]
- Osborne, Rev. and Hon. (afterwards Lord) Sydney Godolphin, assists F. N. at Scutari, i. [241]; his Scutari and its Hospitals, ii. [459]; quoted, on F. N., i. [183], [201], [230], [231], [235], [245]
- Osburn, Miss, ii. [192]
- Osiris, i. [85], ii. [390]
- Ossory, the Lord of, ii. [319]
- Overcrowding, “convenient,” ii. [28]
- Owl, F. N.'s pet, i. [89], [160], [369]
- Oxford, agricultural education at, ii. [333–4], [394]; College meetings, ii. [99]; Hebdomadal Council, ii. [99]; Greats School subjects, ii. [316]; Jowett (q.v.) and, ii. [322]; F. N.'s visit to, i. [65]
- Pacifico crisis, 1850, i. [89–90]
- Paddington District Nursing Association, ii. [256]
- “Padgett, M.P.,” ii. [27]
- Paget, Sir James, on Notes on Hospitals, i. [417]; on Notes on Nursing, i. [448]; on Nursing Reform, i. [444]; co-operates with F. N. on Hospital Statistics, i. [430], [434]; letters to F. N., i. [417], [434], [448], [464]; otherwise referred to, i. [499], ii. [355], [363]
- Pains of Hell, i. [50]
- Pakington, Sir J., i. [269]
- Pall Mall Gazette, ii. [137], [346] n.
- Palmer, Sir Roundell, ii. [93]
- Palmerston, Lady, i. [272], [443]
- Palmerston, Lord, friend and neighbour of the Nightingales at Embley, i. [35], [36], [37]; Don Pacifico crisis (1850), i. [90]; supports F. N.'s offer to go to the East (1854), i. [151]; becomes Prime Minister (1855), i. [217]; supports her appeal about drinking in the army (1855), i. [278]; asks her to report on her experiences (1856), i. [327]; F. N. visits, at Broadlands (1856), i. [341]; urges adoption of her views about Netley on Lord Panmure, i. [340], [341]; speech on air and sanitation (1858), i. [419]; refers to F. N. in speech at Herbert Memorial meeting (1861), i. [410]; receives letter from F. N. about Lord de Grey and reads it to the Queen (1863), ii. [30], [31]; appoints Captain Galton to War Office at F. N.'s instance (1862), ii. [62], [73]; death of, F. N.'s appreciation, ii. [92]; “a powerful protector to me,” ii. [92]; various references, i. [6], [338], [378], ii. [29], [43]
- Panmure, Lord (afterwards, 1860, Earl of Dalhousie), becomes Secretary for War (1855), i. [217]; F. N.'s correspondence with, during Crimean War, i. [222]; sends dispatch on religious difficulties, i. [251]; discusses her views on drinking in army, i. [278], [279]; supports her authority in Crimea, i. [292], [297]; thanks her for her services, i. [301]; F. N. commanded to meet, at Balmoral (1856), i. [325]; negotiations with him there, i. [326], [327]; interview with F. N. to settle Royal Commission, etc. (Nov. 1856), i. [329–31]; delays appointment of R. C. for six months, i. [331], [334], [335]; delays official instructions for her Report for three months, i. [335], [343]; issues instructions for Subsidiary Notes, i. [346–7]; action towards Sir J. McNeill and Colonel Tulloch (1857), i. [337]; controversy with F. N. about Netley (1856–57), i. [340–2]; calls on F. N. to announce appointment of Royal Commission (1857), i. [354]; negotiations with Sidney Herbert for enforcing R. C.'s Report, i. [363]; delays appointment of executive Sub-Commissions, i. [364]; mentioned as possible successor to Sir G. Lewis (1863), ii. [29]; objects to F. N. giving all credit for reform to Herbert, ii. [69]; attacks Herbert Hospital (1865), ii. [68], [69]; character of, slow to move, etc., i. [322], [330], [378], [386]; called “the Bison,” i. [325], [365]; calls F. N. “a turbulent fellow,” i. [378]; various references, i. [323], [328], [335], [365]
- Panmure Papers, ii. [465]; quoted or referred to, i. [259], [279], [302], [325], [341], [347]
- Papal Infallibility, ii. [315]
- Paris, F. N.'s sojourns at, (1838–39), i. [19]; (1853) Feb., i. [127–8], June, i. [131]; (1854) Oct., i. [162]; Assistance Publique, ii. [136]; hospital relief at police stations, ii. [51]; Maternité hospital, i. [61]. See also [Sisters]
- Parkes, Dr. E. A., i. [174], [390], [441], ii. [56]; last letter to F. N., ii. [317]; death, her appreciation of him, ii. [318]
- Parkes, Sir Henry, ii. [191], [192]
- Parnell, C. S., ii. [304]
- Parthe. See [Verney, Lady]
- Pascal, Provinciales, ii. [316]
- Passages from the Life of a Daughter at Home, i. [63], [94]
- Passivity in action, ii. [102], [241]
- Paulet, Lord William, i. [279], ii. [73]
- Pavilion system of hospital construction, i. [340], [342], [419], [427], ii. [69]
- Payne, Surgeon-General Arthur, ii. [370], [378]
- “Pearl,” The, ii. [254], [255]
- Pedro V., King of Portugal, i. [421], [422]
- Peel, General, Secretary for War (1858–1859), i. [378], [379], [381], [383], [394], ii. [21], [47], [113]
- Peel, Hon. George, The Future of England, i. xxviii
- Peel, Sir Robert, i. [25], [148], ii. [97], [213]; the School of, ii. [392], [403]
- Percy, Jocelyne, i. [192], [193], [241]
- Perfectibility, F. N.'s theory of, i. [467], [481], [483], [503], ii. [244], [332], [429]
- Perry, Sir E., ii. [152]
- Persiani, Fanny, i. [24], [25]
- Perugino, devil of, i. [130]
- Peshawur, ii. [278]
- Peter of Alcantara, ii. [235]
- Peter. See [Grillage]
- Philadelphia, Blockley Hospital, i. [465]
- Philippa, Sister. See [Hicks]
- Phillips, Sir T., i. [332]
- Phipps, Colonel Sir Charles, i. [421], [498]
- Physiology, ii. [390]
- Pictures, old Italian, i. [47], ii. [310]
- Pilgrim Fathers, the, ii. [9] n.
- Pills for wooden legs, i. [495]
- Pincoffs, Dr. Peter, Eastern Military Hospitals, ii. [461]; quoted or referred to, i. [182], [204], [211], [230], [236]
- Pio Nono as Patriot Hero, i. [75]
- Pioneers, honour of, ii. [273]
- Plants, law of the flowering of, i. [429]
- Plato, ii. [91], [317], [390]; F. N.'s early study of, i. [13]; Gorgias, ii. [226]; Phaedrus, ii. [227], [232]; Republic, ii. [223], [224]; Theaetetus, ii. [197]
- Plowden, C. C., ii. [180]
- Plunkett, Mr. and Mrs., i. [65], [114]
- Poems on F. N., i. [263], [266], [267], [496], ii. [460]. See also [Longfellow], [Lovelace]
- Police, the London, ii. [393]
- Political economy, i. [42], [81], ii. [164], [166]
- Pollock, Major C. E., ii. [466]
- Ponsonby, Sir Henry, ii. [340]
- Poor Law Reform, F. N.'s advocacy of (1864–67), ii. [92], [105], [123] seq.; her article on (1869), ii. [164]; her ABC of, ii. [133], [136]; parliamentary tributes to her, ii. [132], [239]
- Poore, Dr., ii. [379]
- Port Royalists, i. [487], ii. [231]
- Portsmouth, Soldiers' Institute, ii. [77]
- Positivism, ii. [218]
- Pragmatism, i. [488]
- Prayer, i. [469], [478], [479], [482], ii. [234]; the best, ii. [232]
- Predestination, ii. [234]
- Press, the, i. [377], [383], ii. [34], [137]
- Prince, wreck of the, i. [221]
- Pringle, Miss, i. [vi], ii. [254], [255], [256], [268], [354], [421]
- Prinsep, Edward, ii. [288]
- Prometheus, ii. [390]
- Prospectuses, i. [110]
- Protestantism and Catholicism compared, i. [77]
- “Providence of the English Army,” i. [431], ii. [19]
- Providence of God, i. [486]
- Prussia, war hospitals (1866), ii. [116], [117], [118]; (1870) ii. [204]; politics of (1872), ii. [315]
- Public opinion, ii. [105]
- Punch, quoted or referred to, i. [267], [428], [454]
- Punishment, ii. [447], [448]
- Purcell's Life of Manning, i. [250] n.
- Pure Literature Society, ii. [310]
- Purveying system, in Crimean War, i. [199–205], [224] seq.; new Warrant (1861), i. [395]; department abolished, ii. [338], [341]
- Pusey, Dr., ii. [321]
- Puseyism, i. [55], [56], [129]
- Putney Hospital for Incurables, i. [423], ii. [256]
- Pyne, Miss, ii. [256], [260]
- Quacks, i. [495]
- Quarterly Review, i. [266] n., [377], [484]
- Queen Alexandra Imperial Military Nursing Service, i. [187]
- Quetelet, A., Physique Sociale, i. [429], [480], ii. [315], [397], [400]; F. N.'s admiration of, i. [480], ii. [238]
- Quinet, E., Histoire de mes Idées, i. [469]
- Raglan, Lord, dispatch on Battle of the Alma, i. [145]; welcomes F. N. on her arrival in the East, i. [181]; supports her throughout, her feeling for, i. [181–2], [286], [319]; F. N. visits at the front, i. [256]; his visit to her in illness, i. [259]; Kinglake and, i. [319]; contrasted with the Duke of Wellington, ii. [410]; various references, i. [437], [447]
- Rameses II., i. [369], ii. [260]
- Ramsgate, F. N. at, ii. [324]
- Ranke, Leopold von, i. [36]
- Raphael, Sistine Madonna, i. [91], [92]
- Rathbone, William, corresponds with F. N. on nursing reform (1861), ii. [124]; founds Training School for nurses in Liverpool, ii. [52], [125]; institutes District Nursing there, ii. [125]; starts trained nursing in the Workhouse infirmary there, ii. [125]; in consultation with F. N., ii. [125], [129]; co-operates with her in opposing Registration of Nurses, ii. [357], [361]; gives reputed portrait to nation, ii. [467]; letters to F. N., ii. [127], [413]; tributes to F. N., ii. [127]; sends her flowers weekly, ii. [127], [306]; F. N.'s tribute to, ii. [124]; Memoir of, ii. [125]; Organization of Nursing in a Large Town, ii. [125]; Workhouse Nursing, ii. [125]
- Rations, soldiers', ii. [70]
- Rats, i. [173]
- Rawalpindi, ii. [369]
- Rawlinson, Sir Robert, Sanitary Commissioner in the Crimean War, i. [220], [221]; subsequent co-operation with F. N.:—about hospitals, etc., i. [352], [420], [421], [422]; Indian sanitation, ii. [33], [46], [269]; death, ii. [414]; admiration for F. N., i. [352–3]; letter to F. N., ii. [165]
- Reading aloud, i. [41]
- Reay, Lord, ii. [369], [377]
- Récamier, Madame, i. [20], ii. [13], [15], [16], [425]
- Red Cross Movement, i. [xxvi], [441], ii. [71], [119], [199], [205], [421]
- Red Tape, i. [506], ii. [58], [131], [276]
- Reeve, Henry, i. [157], [377], ii. [85]
- Registration. See [Nurses]
- Rejected Addresses, ii. [270]
- Religion, essence of, ii. [233]; external forms, ii. [366]
- Religious difficulty, the, in Crimean War nursing, i. [156], [158], [159], [169], [244] seq., [289]
- Rembrandt, i. [37]
- Renan, Ernest, Vie de Jésus, i. [486]
- Renkioi, hospital at, i. [174]
- Reports not self-executive, i. [362], ii. [33], [40]
- Republicanism, i. [75], [88]
- Requisitioning, system of, in military hospitals, i. [204–5], [210], [211]
- Rhododendrons, i. [9], ii. [258], [309]
- Rice. See [Monteagle]
- Rich, Mr., i. [114]
- Rich, the, i. [9], [15]
- Richards, Miss Linda, i. [465]
- Richelieu, “self-multiplication,” ii. [191]
- Richmond, Sir W. B., portrait of F. N., ii. [469]
- Righteousness, i. [52]
- Rigoleuc, Father, ii. [235]
- Ripon, Marquis of (Lord de Grey), Under-Secretary for War under Sidney Herbert, i. [403], [404], [406]; under Sir George Lewis, ii. [5], [62]; a sanitarist, ii. [41]; offers to help F. N. after Herbert's death, ii. [5]; insists on General Military Hospital at Woolwich, ii. [6]; secures redefinition of Captain Galton's duties, ii. [6]; consults F. N. about Canadian expedition, ii. [9]; hopes to reorganize War Office, ii. [63]; adopts F. N.'s scheme for Army Sanitary Committee, ii. [65]; consults her about Army Medical School, ii. [67]; about soldiers' reading-rooms, ii. [76]; F. N. agitates for his appointment as Secretary of State for War (1863), ii. [29–31]; interview with her, ii. [41]; confers with her on report of Indian Sanitary Commission, ii. [37], [38], [46], [47]; consults her on a Woolwich appointment, ii. [73]; defends Herbert Hospital against Panmure (1865), ii. [69]; becomes Indian Secretary (1866), ii. [108]; finds a missing dispatch from Sir T. Lawrence, ii. [109]; asks F. N.'s views on it, ii. [109]; leaves a Minute upon it, ii. [110], [114]; attitude on leaving office (1866), ii. [105]; intervenes to save Army Sanitary Committee (1869), ii. [173]; Viceroy of India (1880), ii. [325]; F. N.'s sympathy with his reforms and hopes from them, ii. [323], [330], [331]; communications with her, ii. [325], [332], [338], [343]; her support of his policy, ii. [332], [333], [334], [339], [453]; resignation, her expostulation, ii. [343]; her attempts to celebrate his return, ii. [345], [346]; suggests his appointment as Indian Secretary (1885–86), ii. [368]; sits in the Privy Council to decide “Nurses' Battle,” ii. [362]; communications with F. N. on India, ii. [369], [372]; F. N. on, ii. [152]; various references, ii. [73], [74], [162] n., [297], [299]
- Roberts, Lord, i. [315]; sees F. N., ii. [333], [369]; his reforms in India, ii. [369]; letters to F. N., ii. [369], [420]
- Roberts, Mrs. (Crimean War nurse), i. [185], [259], [294], [301], [458]
- Robertson, Dr., i. [273]
- Robertson, R. W., ii. [333]
- Robinson, Miss Sarah, ii. [77]
- Robinson, Robert, i. [256]
- Roden, Lord, i. [152]
- Roebuck Committee (1855), i. [176], [179], [195] n., [198], [200], [203], [214], [217]
- Rogers, Frederick (Lord Blachford), ii. [80] n., [166]
- Rogers, Rev. William, ii. [228]
- Roland, Madame, ii. [95]
- Rolfe, Baron, i. [36]
- Roman Catholicism: F. N.'s studies in, i. [77]; her sympathy with, i. [487]
- Rome, F. N.'s winter at, i. [69–80]; happiness at, i. [69], [105]; house where she stayed, i. [70]; impressions of, i. [74]; Castle of St. Angelo, statue of St. Michael, i. [74], [76]; St. Peter's, i. [73]; Sistine Chapel, i. [71], [72], ii. [306], [313]; study of hospitals at, i. [417]; Trinità de' Monti, i. [77]; convent of Dames du Sacré Cœur, i. [78], ii. [231]; Villa Mellini, i. [73], [76]
- Romsey, health of, ii. [119]; volunteers, ii. [336]
- Roosevelt, Theodore, The Strenuous Life, ii. [417]
- Rorke's Drift, ii. [267]
- Rose, Sir Hugh (Lord Strathnairn), ii. [52–4]
- Rosebery, Lady, ii. [347], [395]
- Rosebery, Lord, i. [500], ii. [395]
- Roulin, F. D., i. [21]
- Roundell, Mrs., i. [111], ii. [456]
- Royal Alexandra Hospital, i. [392]
- Royal College of Surgeons, i. [434]
- Royal Commission on Health of the Army (1857): F. N. decides to ask Queen and Ministers for, i. [323]; agreed to “in principle” at Balmoral (Oct. 1856), i. [327]; personnel, etc., discussed with Lord Panmure (Nov. 1856), i. [329]; delays in appointing, i. [334] seq.; Royal Warrant issued (May 1857), i. [334], [354], [355]; F. N.'s work for, i. [355–60]; Report of, ready August 1857, why kept back, i. [360], [361], [363]; issued Feb. 1858, i. [377]; salient feature of, i. [360]; endorsed by House of Commons, i. [375–6]
- Royal Commission on Health of the Army in India (1859–63), ii. [22]; F. N. “importunate-widows” for, ii. [19], [21]; personnel of, ii. [21], [22]; F. N. drafts circular of inquiry for, ii. [22]; collects statistics, ii. [23]; sees witnesses, ii. [24]; analyses the Stational reports, ii. [25]; writes and circulates Observations on them, ii. [25], [26]; writes much of the Report, ii. [31]; Report of, ii. [33], its bulk, ii. [24], [34], [35], [37]; measures for reform recommended, ii. [33]; F. N. devises measures for securing adoption of its recommendations, ii. [32]; works press for notices, ii. [34]; small official edition of, omitting F. N.'s Observations, ii. [35], [36], [37]; amended edition with the Observations, ii. [37], [38]; the Report criticised by Indian Government, etc., ii. [54], [55]; F. N asked to write Suggestions for carrying out its reforms, ii. [42]
- Royal Commission on the Poor Law, Report (1909), ii. [124] n., [139] n., [143]
- Royal Engineers, officers of, in India, ii. [152], [155]
- Royalty, ii. [336]
- Rubini, J. B., i. [19]
- Rundall, General, ii. [274], [295]
- Ruskin, quoted, i. [xxx], [474], ii. [385], [393]
- Russell, Lord John, i. [26], [437], ii. [92]; defeat of his Government (1866), ii. [104], [109]; anecdote of, ii. [110] n.
- Russell, Sir W. H., i. [146]; Life of, quoted, i. [175]
- Russia and Turkey, 1878, ii. [319], [320]
- Rutherford, Dr., ii. [71]
- Ryots, ii. [285], [295], [451]
- Sabin, Rev. J. E., chaplain at Scutari, i. [185], [235], [281] n.; at Aldershot, i. [351]
- Sacrament. See [Communion]
- Sacrifice, i. [139]
- Sailors' Homes, ii. [52]
- Saint Angela of Foligno, ii. [235]
- St. Bartholomew's Hospital, i. [430], [433], [434], [465] n., [499], ii. [256]
- St. Catherine of Genoa, ii. [81]
- St. Catherine of Siena, ii. [82], [240]
- St. Clara, i. [439], [440]
- St. Francis of Assisi, i. [96], ii. [235]; Fioretti, ii. [219] n., [232]
- St. Francis de Sales, ii. [82]
- St. Francis Xavier, ii. [82], [235]
- St. George's Hospital, i. [433]
- St. Hilaire, Barthélemy, i. [21]
- St. Ignatius Loyola, i. [96], ii. [272]
- St. James's Magazine, i. [462] n.
- St. Jean de la Croix, ii. [81], [232], [235]
- St. Jerome, i. [440]
- St. John's House, i. [158], [159], [186], [440], [444], [464]
- St. Mary's Hospital, i. [430], [433], ii. [256]
- St. Paul, i. [47]
- St. Teresa, i. [439], [440], ii. [82], [231], [235]
- St. Thomas's Hospital, question of its removal from the Borough (1859–1860), i. [425–6]; temporary quarters in Surrey Gardens, i. [266] n., [427]; new buildings on the Embankment, Queen Victoria and, ii. [246]; “pavilion” construction, i. [340], [427]; selected for the Nightingale Training School, i. [374], [458] (see further [that title]); F. N.'s desire to die in, ii. [103]; F. N.'s proposal to enter, ii. [211]; her reputed sojourn in, ii. [404]; her “visitation” of, ii. [247]; her actual visit to (1882), ii. [326]; various references, i. [430], [433], [499]; ii. [303]
- St. Vincent de Paul, ii. [272]
- Salève, ascent of the, i. [17]
- Salisbury Infirmary, ii. [256], [452]
- Salisbury, Marquis of (Lord Cranborne), F. N. introduced to, by Lord Stanley (1866), ii. [114]; promises to consult her on Indian sanitation, ii. [115]; resigns office (1867), ii. [146]; on little public interest in India, ii. [281]; returns to India Office (1874), ii. [276]; expectations of what he would do there, ii. [285], [295]; F. N. corresponds with, on Indian sanitation and irrigation, ii. [108], [277], [279], [282], [283], [286], [287], [288]; a master workman, ii. [295], [448]; on Drift, ii. [298]; success in the Elections (1895), ii. [392]; letters to F. N., ii. [115], [278], [282], [283], [286], [287]
- Salisbury, Lady, ii. [347]
- Salvage, Madame, ii. [16]
- Salvation, i. [488]
- Sanitary Commission (Crimea), 1855, i. [177] n., [219], [220]
- Sappho's leap, i. [66]
- Sardinian Army in the Crimea, i. [204], ii. [117]
- Saturday Review, i. [449]
- Saul, Dead March in, ii. [83]
- Saviours, meaning of, i. [485]
- Savonarola, i. [97], ii. [391]
- Scharlieb, Mrs., ii. [333]
- Schulz (musician), i. [24]
- Schwabe, Mrs. Salis, ii. [467]
- Scott, Sir Walter, quoted, i. [233]; novels of, ii. [95]
- Scottish Hospital in South Africa, ii. [411]
- “Scratting,” i. [28], [49]
- Scutari, situation and view, i. [173], [262]; Hospitals at, during Crimean War:—Barrack H., i. [172], [175]; atmosphere of, i. [177]; F. N.'s quarters in, i. [173], [184]; General H., i. [172], [175]; Palace H., i. [174], [224]; Hospitals at, generally:—deficiencies, i. [177], [225]; doctors in, i. [184], [185]; improvement, by Sanitary Commission, etc., i. [220], [254]; mortality in, i. [178]; open sewers, i. [177]; overcrowding, i. [177], [184]; statistics, inaccurate, i. [429]
- Sebastopol, siege of, heroism of the men, i. [257], [258], [317]; fall of, i. [283], [447]
- Self-control, ii. [266]
- Self-sufficiency, ii. [264]
- Sellon, Miss, i. [159], [424]
- Service of Man, as Service of God, i. [53]
- Shaftesbury, Lord, F. N.'s acquaintance with, i. [81]; Chartists and, i. [80–81]; urges Sanitary Commission (1855) i. [220]; President, Social Science Congress (1858), i. [383]; Census Bill (1860), i. [436], [438]; International Statistical Congress (1861), i. [435]; Indian Sanitary Commission (1863), ii. [36]; Herbert Hospital (1865), ii. [69]; on F. N.'s work, ii. [36]
- Shakespeare, i. [458], ii. [426]; quoted:—Cymbeline, ideal of a nurse, i. [458]; Hamlet, “most deject and wretched,” i. [407]; Ghost in, ii. [390]; character of Hamlet, ii. [426]; King John, “grief fills the room,” i. [407]; Measure for Measure, “aves vehement,” i. [299]
- Sheffield cutlery presented to F. N., i. [320]
- Sherborne, Lord, i. [65]
- Shore, Mary. See [Smith, Mrs. Samuel]
- Shore, Mrs. (mother of W. E. Nightingale), i. [31], [49], [128]
- Shore, William (father of W. E. Nightingale), i. [5]
- Shore, William, i. [241]
- Shore, William Edward. See [Nightingale, W. E.]
- Siam, ii. [386]
- Sidney, Sir Philip, ii. [160]
- Simpson, Sir J. Y., i. [439]
- Simpson, M. C. M., Julius and Mary Mohl, ii. [463]; quoted, i. [21], ii. [307]
- Single Life, the, i. [101]
- Sismondi, i. [17], ii. [391]
- Sisterhoods and nursing, i. [44], [62], [63], ii. [270], [272]. See also [Orders]
- Sisters of Charity, Paris, i. [127], [162], [432]
- Sisters, Hospital, i. [440]
- Sisters' Tower, the, at Scutari, i. [184], [200]
- Small ownership, F. N.'s scheme for, ii. [92–3], [167] n.
- Smith, Dr. (afterwards Sir) Andrew, Director-General of the Army Medical Department (1853–58), presumably responsible for deficiencies in war hospitals, i. [354]; his excuse, i. [179]; authorizes F. N. to offer to go out (1854), i. [151]; evidence before Roebuck Committee (1855), i. [176], [179], [198]; a member of the Royal Commission (1857), i. [332]; “slips into current of reform,” i. [358]; “swallows pavilions,” i. [342]; opposes reform, ascendancy over Lord Panmure, i. [354], [355], [364]; objects to F. N. visiting Chatham, i. [349]; retires, i. [378], [379]; various references, i. [152], [213], [330], [340], [437]
- Smith, Beatrice Shore (Lady Lushington), i. [499], [502], [504], ii. [4], [11]
- Smith, Bertha Shore (Mrs. W. Coltman), i. [327] n.
- Smith, Blanche Shore (Mrs. Clough), i. [30], [128]
- Smith, Deputy Commissary-General, i. [157]
- Smith, Frederick, i. [11]
- Smith, Sir Henry Babington, ii. [405]
- Smith, Julia, i. [34], [66]
- Smith, Octavius, i. [10], [506]
- Smith, Colonel Philip, ii. [335]
- Smith, Robert Angus, i. [78], ii. [56], [134]
- Smith, Samuel (F. N.'s “Uncle Sam”), Mrs. Nightingale's brother, married to Mr. Nightingale's sister, i. [30]; gets consent of her parents to F. N.'s Crimean mission, i. [151], [154]; accompanies her to Marseilles, i. [162], [163]; manages soldiers' money orders for her, i. [278]; F. N. stays with (1857), i. [342]; acts as her private secretary, i. [495–7], ii. [86]; death, ii. [387]; various references, i. [114], [506], ii. [21], [96]
- Smith, Mrs. Samuel (Mary Shore, F. N.'s “Aunt Mai”), close association with F. N., ii. [15]; her “true mother,” i. [367]; “as two lovers,” i. [495], ii. [223]; collaborates with her in Suggestions for Thought, i. [120], [482]; appeals to her parents to grant F. N. her independence, i. [122], [123]; takes rooms for her in Pall Mall (1853), i. [133]; replaces Mrs. Bracebridge at Scutari, i. [295]; accompanies F. N. to London (1856), i. [303]; subsequently “mothers” F. N. at Malvern, i. [371], and in London, i. [372], [380], [502]; advises her parents to leave Burlington Hotel, i. [503]; F. N.'s estrangement from, ii. [15]; reconciliation, ii. [15] n., [387–8]; death, ii. [387]; various references, i. [141], [368], ii. [96]
- Smith, William, M.P., of Parndon, i. [4], [5]
- Smith, William Adams, i. [33]
- Smith, Rt. Hon. William Henry, ii. [373], [374], [396]
- Smith, William Shore, son of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Smith, F. N.'s affection for him, i. [30], [44], [50], ii. [237]; marriage of, i. [505]; care of Mrs. Nightingale, ii. [311]; assumes the name Nightingale, ii. [392] n.; death, ii. [399]
- Smythe, Warrenton, i. [38]
- Snodgrass, Sister, ii. [393]
- Social Reform, ii. [219]
- Social Science Congress, papers by F. N. read at:—1858, Liverpool, Hospital Construction, etc., i. [383], ii. [439]; 1861, Dublin, Hospital Statistics, i. [433], ii. [441]; 1863, Edinburgh, Aboriginal Races, ii. [79], [444]; Indian Sanitation, ii. [53], [181], [444]; 1864, York, Aboriginal Races, ii. [79], [445]; 1873, Norwich, Indian Sanitation, ii. [181], [448]
- Socrates, i. [90]
- Soldiers, employment for, in peace, ii. [411]; Institutes, Reading-rooms, etc., i. [280] seq., [396], [399], ii. [76], [77], [280], [369]; morals of, i. [277], ii. [77]; trades, ii. [54], [76]; wives:—hospitals for, ii. [70]; men's pay and, ii. [27]
- Soldiers' Home, Aldershot, ii. [5]
- Solitude, inspiration of, ii. [13], [39]
- Sophie, Queen of Holland, ii. [89], [187]
- Sophocles, ii. [229]
- Sorabji, Miss Cornelia, ii. [394]
- South, Sir James, i. [35]
- South, J. F., President of the College of Surgeons, opposition to the training of nurses, i. [443], [444], [445], [466], [467]
- Southey, ii. [213]; Colloquies, quoted, i. [439], [440]
- Soyer, Alexis, chef, goes out to Scutari, helps F. N., i. [196]; accompanies her to the Crimea, i. [256]; helps her there, i. [258], [285], [303]; his Culinary Campaign, ii. [461]; quoted, i. [257], [283–284]; helps her in London barracks, i. [381]; death of (1858), F. N.'s tribute to, i. [382]
- Spectator, i. [267], ii. [35]
- Spencer, Miss, ii. [411]
- Spenser's Faerie Queene, ii. [128]
- Spielberg, i. [479]
- Spiritualism, ii. [425]
- Spitalfields weavers, i. [424]
- Spottiswoode, William, ii. [34]
- Spring, the, ii. [17]
- Spring-Rice, Thomas. See [Monteagle]
- Spurgeon, Rev. C. H., ii. [249]
- Staël Madame de, i. [21], [36]
- Stafford, Augustus, M.P., goes out to Scutari, helps F. N., i. [242]; on his return describes state of hospitals, in House of Commons, i. [177] n.; gives evidence to Roebuck Committee, i. [242]; on F. N.'s work at Scutari, i. [180], [231] n., [279]; a member of the Royal Commission (1857), i. [332]; presses F. N. to give evidence, i. [359]
- Stagnant women, ii. [247] n.
- Stanhope, Edward, ii. [289], [374], [375]
- Stanley, Dean, i. [57], [124], [180], [194]; Life and Letters of, quoted, i. [250]
- Stanley, H. M., ii. [304]; How I Found Livingstone, ii. [315]
- Stanley, Lord. See [Derby]
- Stanley, Miss Mary, assists in selection of Crimean nurses (1854), i. [158], [166]; conducts a second party of nurses to the East, unsolicited by F. N., i. [188–92], [247]; breach in friendship with F. N., i. [192]; takes charge of Koulali hospital, i. [193]; describes F. N. at work, i. [234]; her Hospitals and Sisterhoods quoted, i. [443]
- Stanmore, Lord, Memoir of Sidney Herbert, ii. [465]; quoted or referred to, i. [149], [158], [159], [189], [201] n., [212], [217], [235], [288], [290], [297] n., [328], [331], [334], [364], [390]
- Stansfeld, James, ii. [186]
- Statistical Society, i. [387]
- Statistics, Lord Brougham on, i. [428]; Lord Goschen on, i. [428]; Governments and, i. [435]; graphic method in, i. [352]; importance of political education in, ii. [396]; F. N.'s devotion to, i. [16], [129], [397], [428] seq., ii. [219]; her conception of them as religious, i. [435], 480, [$1][396]; scheme for founding a Professorship of, ii. [395–7], [400]; Lord Panmure on, i. [331]. See also [Hospitals], [International Statistical Congress]
- Steell, Sir J., bust of F. N., ii. [409], [469]
- Stephanie of Hohenzollern, Princess, i. [421]
- Stephen, Sir James, Essays in Ecclesiastical Biography, i. [4], [5]
- Sterling, Colonel Sir Anthony, his Highland Brigade in the Crimea, ii. [464]; quoted or referred to, as illustrating military prejudice against F. N., i. [167], [168], [206–7], [214], [287], [466]
- Stewart, Mrs. Shaw, one of F. N.'s mainstays in the Crimea, i. [300]; Memorial Cross at Balaclava and, i. [294] n.; proposed by F. N. as superintendent of army nurses at Woolwich, i. [373], [405]; at Netley, ii. [66]; appointed by Sidney Herbert, i. [395], [406]
- Stockmar, Baron, ii. [97]
- Storks, General Sir Henry, succeeds Lord W. Paulet as commandant at Scutari, i. [279]; “served with F. N.” there, in measures for promoting welfare of the men, i. [279], [281], [294], ii. [77]; F. N.'s “last letter” to him, i. [294]; his farewell to F. N., i. [301–2]; subsequent co-operation with her, i. [350]; a member of the Royal Commission (1857), i. [328], [331], [332]; influenced by her, ii. [14]; appointed to Malta (1864), ii. [77]; other mentions, ii. [73], [162]
- Stovin, General Sir F., i. [26]
- Strachey, Sir John, ii. [50], [147], [159], [287]
- Stratford de Redcliffe, Lord, i. [151], [156], [199], [206], ii. [170]
- Stratford, Lady, i. [206], [296]
- Strathnairn, Lord. See [Rose]
- Strutt, E., i. [26], [34]
- Strzelechi, Count, i. [410], ii. [38]
- Stubbs, Bishop C. W., The Mythe of Life, ii. [430] n.
- “Stuff,” the, i. [471]
- Style, Jowett on, ii. [296]
- Sub-Commissions on Army Reform (1857), i. [363]
- Sultan of Turkey, Abdul Mejid, gives F. N. a bracelet, i. [302]
- Surgical operations, statistics of, i. [434]
- Surin, Father, ii. [235]
- Sutherland, Dr. John [(1) chronological; (2) characteristics, personal relations with F. N., etc.; (3) letters to her; (4) miscellaneous references.]
- (1) Chronological:—
- Earlier career, i. [355]; head of the Sanitary Commission sent to the East (1855), i. [220]; friendship with F. N., acts as her physician, i. [221]; on her return to England, becomes closely associated with her in work for Army reform, i. [220], [355], [356]; member of the Royal Commission (1857) and in its inner circle, i. [329], [331], [332], [355]; one of the Herbert-Nightingale “cabal,” i. [365]; member of the Barrack and Hospital Commission (1857), i. [381] n.; and paid member of the permanent Army Sanitary Committee (1862–88), ii. [65]; instructed to report with F. N. on Netley Hospital, i. [331], [341]; member of Committee on Soldiers' Reading-rooms (1861), i. [396]; drafts scheme with F. N. for War Office reorganization (1861), i. [403]; member of Commission on Mediterranean barracks (1861), i. [405].—1856–61 generally, constant, almost daily, work with F. N. on all her subjects, i. [372], [382], [391], [420], [421], [422], [494], [502], ii. [9]; acts as her physician, i. [492], ii. [17]; remonstrates with her on over-working, i. [368]; visits her at Malvern, i. [370].—1859–63, as member of Royal Commission on India collaborates with F. N. in its work and subsequent developments, ii. [19], [22], [24], [31], [36], [42] n., [46], [54], [56], [109].—1862–66, collaborates with her in various War Office business, ii. [63], [65], [74], [75].—(1865) appointed to report on cholera at Mediterranean stations, ii. [86]; visits Algiers, ii. [110]; moves to Norwood, ii. [88]; questions in the House about his pay, ii. 70;—(1866) visits F. N. at Embley, ii. [119]. —Later years: collaboration with F. N. on Poor Law reform, Hospitals, and Nursing, ii. [125], [129], [131], [133], [137], [186], [188], [195], [247], [254], [338]; on Indian business, ii. [168], [171], [176], [178], [180], [276], [283], [332], [344], [369]; in her books, ii. [164], [166], [167] n., [196]; his position at the War Office threatened (1869), ii. [173]; reports on Aid Society (1871), ii. [200], [203]; anxious to retire (1886), ii. [368]; F. N.'s anxiety on the “Sutherland Succession,” ii. [368], [371], [372]; resigns (1888), ii. [375]; death (1891), ii. [387]
- (2) Characteristics, personal relations with F. N., etc.:—
- Called “the Baby” by F. N. and his wife, i. [370], [383], ii. [86]; continual help to F. N., ii. [85], [86]; deafness, ii. [87]; extent of his collaboration, ii. [205–8]; value of it, ii. [85]; communications between them by notes, ii. [87], [88]; one of her “wives,” i. [383]; his estimate of F. N., i. [372]; on F. N.'s illness (1861), i. [492]; on Sir John Lawrence, ii. [146]; a tiff, i. [382]; thought unbusiness-like by F. N., i. [382], ii. [87]; scolded by her, ii. [110], [146] n., [148], [344]; value of his public services, ii. [173] n., [372]
- (3) Letters to F. N.:—i. [328], [356], [364], [369], [383], ii. [111], [129], [161], [179], [197]
- (4) Miscellaneous references:—i. [373], [374], [400], [505], ii. [24], [51], [89], [113], [116], [117], [149], [263], [302]
- Sutherland, Mrs. John, i. [370], [382], ii. [24], [86], [89], [103], [111], [302], [469]
- Swansea Infirmary, i. [423]
- Swinburne, A. C., Atalanta in Calydon, ii. [95]; The Children's Bible, ii. [228]
- Sydney (N.S.W.) Infirmary, ii. [181], [191–192], [256]
- Sympathy, i. [96], [105], ii. [13], [14], [84]
- Tacitus, Agricola, i. [503]
- Talleyrand, i. [26]
- Tamburini, i. [19], [25]
- Tapton, i. [49]
- Tastu, Madame, i. [21]
- Taylor, Fanny M., ii. [460]
- Tel-el-Kebir, ii. [267]
- Temple, Sir Richard, ii. [274], [332]
- Tennyson, Alfred, Lord, ii. [94] n., [426]; quoted, ii. [272]
- Territorial Force, the, ii. [8]
- Terrot, Miss, i. [463]
- Thalberg, S., i. [25]
- Thames Bank, i. [10]
- Thebes (Egypt), i. [86]
- Thermopylæ, i. [317]
- “They are not here,” i. [263], [374]
- Thiers, i. [21]
- “Thirty years on,” ii. [266]
- Thomas (drummer boy), i. [256]
- Thorne, Dr. May, ii. [421]
- Thornton, W. T., ii. [274], [287]
- Thucydides, ii. [390]
- Ticknor, G., i. [20]
- Times calls attention to hospital and nursing defects, Crimean War, i. [146], [147], [151]; organizes fund and co-operates with F. N., i. [165], [196], [199], [201]; attacks Chelsea Board (1857), i. [337]; advocates the C.D.A., ii. [75]; supports Indian sanitary reform, ii. [38], [380]; quoted or referred to, on:—F. N. in the Crimean War, i. [162], [164], [213], [269], ii. [455]; Austro-Prussian War, ii. [105]; hospital nurses (1857), i. [443], [445]; in various connections, ii. [4] n., [86] n., [90] n., [165], [253], [298] n., [455]
- Titian, “Tribute Money” (Dresden), i. [369], ii. [294]
- Tocqueville, A. de, i. [21], [484]
- Torrance, Miss Elizabeth (Mrs. Dowse), ii. [192]
- Toynbee, Arnold, ii. [333], [334]
- Tractarian movement, i. [244]
- Tracts, F. N.'s “distribution” of, i. [496]
- Transports, victualling on, ii. [70]
- Treasury, the, ii. [25]
- Tremenheere, Mr., i. [114]
- Trench, Archbishop, “Alma,” i. [145]
- Trent affair, ii. [9]
- Trevelyan, Sir Charles, i. [157], [225], ii. [23], [26], [27], [56], [63]; letters to F. N., i. [423], ii. [18], [26], [40]
- Trevelyan, Sir George, ii. [304]
- Trevelyan, G. M., Life of John Bright, i. [195] n.
- Trevor, Rev. Dr., i. [4]
- Trinity, the, i. [486]
- “Triumvirate,” the, ii. [254]
- Truelove, Edward and Mrs., i. [119], [120]
- Truth, “not what one troweth,” i. [481]
- Tulloch, General Sir A. M.: commissioner with Sir J. McNeill (q.v.) in Crimea, i. [257]; subsequent cooperation with F. N., i. [315], [321], [328], [389] n.; controversy about Chelsea Board (q.v.), i. [337], ii. [352]; made K.C.B., i. [331], [338]; influenced by F. N., ii. [14]; death of, appreciation by F. N., ii. [94]
- Tulloch, Captain H., ii. [169]
- Tulloch, Lady, i. [315], [338], [377]
- Turnbull, Sister Bertha, i. [294]
- Twining, Miss Louisa, i. [141]
- Twiss, Sir Travers, ii. [228] n.
- Umballa, ii. [369]
- Umberslade, i. [116], [118]
- Undine, ii. [14]
- United Service Institution, Museum, memorials of F. N. in, i. [274] n., [306] n., [469]
- University College Hospital, i. [430]
- Unseen World, reality of the, i. [47]
- Upholsterer, an, and F. N., i. [494]
- Vegetarianism, ii. [390]
- Venice, ii. [104], [117], [118]
- Verney, Miss Emily, ii. [199]
- Verney, Frederick, ii. [334], [346] n., [383], [389], [455]
- Verney, Sir Harry, marries F. N.'s sister (June 1858), i. [380]; Bucks County Infirmary and, i. [422]; keeps F. N. au fait with affairs, ii. [29]; interview with Lord Palmerston on F. N.'s behalf (1863), ii. [30]; other missions, etc., for her, ii. [69], [76]; lends F. N. his London house, ii. [81], [84] n.; Poor Law Bill (1867), ii. [138]; on Committee of Aid Society (1870–1871), ii. [199]; Chairman of Council of Nightingale Fund, ii. [190], [268]; entertains nurses for F. N., ii. [304]; interview with Mr. G. Hardy on F. N.'s behalf (1876), ii. [318]; stands for Parliament again in his 79th year, ii. [325]; interviews with Mr. Childers (1880, 1882), ii. [328], [337]; takes F. N. to see return of the Guards (1882), ii. [335]; accompanies her to the Law Courts, ii. [339]; writes to Mr. Gladstone about General Gordon, ii. [329]; friendship with Gordon, ii. [329], [330]; interviews Sir M. Hicks-Beach for F. N. (1891), ii. [361]; F. N.'s affection for, ii. [82]; morning visits to F. N., ii. [301]; walks with F. N. in the Park, ii. [309]; devotion to F. N., ii. [383]; vigorous old age, ii. [403]; death, F. N.'s tribute to, ii. [399]; letters to F. N., ii. [30], [326], [382]; various references, i. [498], [506], ii. [8], [24], [164], [235], [324], [339], [350], [357], [373], [375], [421]
- Verney, Frances Parthenope, Lady [(1) General; (2) Letters.]
- (1) General:—
Elder daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Nightingale, i. [3–4]; birthplace, i. [4]; birthday, i. [429]; F. N.'s early letter to, i. [10], [11]; a quick pupil, i. [13]; on a winter in Paris with F. N. (1838–39), i. [20]; temperament of, contrasted with F. N.'s, i. [28], [29]; character of, i. [105]; attitude to F. N. and her aspirations, i. [69], [84], [104], [105], [114], [115], [125], [126], [138], [141]; marries Sir H. Verney (June 1858), i. [380]; collects and receives gifts and offers of nurses for F. N. at Scutari, i. [166], [264–6]; writes Life and Death of Athena, an Owl, i. [160]; lives near her sister in South Street, ii. [301]; entertains nurses for her, ii. [304]; on F. N.'s Indian work, ii. [273]; on her sister as “like a man,” ii. [15]; on her interesting life, ii. [321]; affection for her, ii. [382]; illness, ii. [324]; death, ii. [382]; portraits of F. N. by, ii. [468]; various references, i. [33], [148], [163], [369], ii. [82], [164], [235] - (2) Letters of:—
To Madame Mohl, i. [33], [166], [371], [499]; to F. N., i. [265], [274], [280], [306], [372]; to various friends, i. [62], [154], [155], [159], [198], [252], [259], [261], [264], [280], [304], [305], [320]
- (1) General:—
- Verney, Margaret, Lady, ii. [389]
- Victoria, Queen, accession of, i. [479]; the Bedchamber Plot, i. [25]; Lord Melbourne and, i. [26]; visit t o Strathfieldsaye (1845), i. [37]; desires F. N.'s letters from the East to be sent to her (Dec. 6, 1854), i. [215]; her letter read in Scutari hospitals, i. [215]; and, published in the press, checks sectarian outcry against F. N., i. [245–6]; commissions F. N. as almoner of the Royal Gifts to sick and wounded (Dec. 14, 1854), i. [216]; sends presents to the nurses, i. [216]; writes to ministers on F. N.'s letters, i. [216]; consults F. N. as to what help Her Majesty could render to the soldiers, i. [223]; writes to ministers about Scutari cemetery, i. [223]; has bulletins of F. N.'s Crimean fever, i. [259]; presents F. N. with a jewel (Nov. 1855), i. [274], [294], [296]; sends print for F. N.'s Inkermann Café (Nov. 1855), i. [281]; sends F. N.'s letter to the Cabinet (Dec. 1855), i. [278]; F. N.'s expression of help rendered by Her Majesty, i. [294]; approves Sir J. Clark's invitation to F. N. to come to Ballater (Aug. 1856), i. [321]; F. N. introduced to, at Balmoral (Sept. 21, 1856), i. [324]; calls on F. N. (Sept. 26), i. [324]; requests F. N. to stay to meet Lord Panmure, i. [325]; writes to Lord Panmure about F. N., i. [325]; commands F. N. to Balmoral (Oct.), i. [326]; her opinion of F. N., i. [xxvi], [213], [324], [325]; Proclamation to people of India (1858), ii. [324], [331], [340], [381]; acknowledges Notes on Nursing, i. [450]; places hospital beds at F. N.'s disposal, i. [497]; the Royal Commission on India (1859), ii. [21]; offers rooms in Kensington Palace (1861), i. [498]; death of the Prince Consort, ii. [26]; reads F. N.'s Observations on India (1862), ii. [26]; appointment of Lord de Grey (1863), ii. [29]; sends F. N. Prince Albert's speeches, inscribed, ii. [26]; choice of Prime Minister after Palmerston, ii. [92]; asks F. N. to see Queen of Prussia (1867), ii. [187]; sends message to F. N. (1868), ii. [192]; lays stone of, and opens, St. Thomas's Hospital, ii. [246]; sends message on death of F. N.'s mother (1880), F. N.'s reply, ii. [323]; sends F. N. Life of Prince Consort, ii. [324]; sends message to F. N. at opening of the Law Courts (1882), ii. [336]; invites F. N. to Windsor to receive Royal Red Cross (1883), ii. [339]; subsequent communications on Army and India, ii. [339–40]; devotes Women's Jubilee Gift to nursing, ii. [355]; invites F. N. to witness Diamond Jubilee procession, ii. [412]; letters to F. N., i. [216], [274], ii. [340]; various references, i. [21], [215], [330], [493]
- Victoria, the Crown Princess (Empress Frederick), sends message to F. N. (1858), i. [384]; consults F. N. on Austro-Prussian War (1866) nursing, ii. [116], [117]; on Franco-German War, ii. [200], [203], [204]; sees F. N. (1868, 1870), ii. [188] seq., [203]; founds Nursing School in Berlin, ii. [204]; lunches at F. N.'s house, ii. [303]; later visits, ii. [357], [413]; F. N. on, ii. [187], [188]; letters to F. N., ii. [118], [189], [204]
- Victorian Era Exhibition, ii. [408]
- Village Sanitation, in England, ii. [383], [384]; in India, ii. [377] (see also [Indian Sanitation])
- Villiers, C. P., and F. N.'s scheme of small ownership (1865), ii. [93]; communications with F. N. on Poor Law Reform (1864–67), ii. [130] seq.; adopts her scheme, ii. [105], [134]; abandons idea of a Bill, ii. [105], [134]; attitude to Mr. Hardy's Bill (1867), ii. [135], [138]; on F. N., ii. [130], [139] n.
- Vincent, Miss, ii. [256]
- Virgil, a boy's translation of, i. [129]
- Virtue, “a second-rate virtue,” ii. [95]
- Vivian, Sir R., ii. [19], [21], [22]
- Voltaire, ii. [317]
- Volunteers, F. N. on the, i. [496], ii. [7], [8], [336]
- Voysey Defence Fund, ii. [200]
- Vulgarity, i. [424]
- Waddington, Mr., i. [437]
- Wady Halfa, ii. [346]
- Walker, Dr. J. P., ii. [50]
- Wantage, Lord (Colonel Loyd Lindsay), ii. [199], [337], [434], [457]
- Wantage, Lady, ii. [409]
- War, ii. [411]
- Ward, Sir Henry, i. [90]
- Ward Island Emigrant Hospital, F. N.'s gift to, ii. [9] n.
- Ward, Lord, i. [260]
- Wardroper, Mrs., Matron, St. Thomas's Hospital, i. [458]; F. N.'s character-sketch of, i. [458]; Nightingale Training School and, i. [459], [461], [462], [463], ii. [190], [193], [194], [247], [248], [254],268, [302], [326]; on Agnes Jones, ii. [126]; retires, ii. [354]
- War Office, organization of (1854), i. [248], [249]; reorganization of, attempted (1860–61), i. [403], [404]; partial, (1862) ii. [62]; (1868) ii. [161]; obstruction to various reforms, i. [380], [390], [394], [405]; after S. Herbert's death undermining his work, ii. [4], [9], [94]; F. N.'s sarcasm on, ii. [72]; principles of reform, ii. [63–4]; F. N. as adviser to (1862–66), ii. [59] seq.
- Washington, George, ii. [91]
- Water cure, i. [118]
- Waterloo, battle of, ii. [404], [410]
- Watts, G. F., portrait of Sir John. Lawrence, ii. [43]; of F. N. (unfinished), ii. [469]
- Waverley Abbey, i. [29], [32]
- Webster, Sir R. (Lord Alverstone), ii. [362], [363]
- Wedderburn, Sir William, ii. [332], [371], [378], [379], [404], [453]
- Wellington, Duke of, ii. [404], [410]
- Wellow, F. N.'s reply to parishioners of, i. [309]
- Wensleydale, ii. [101]
- Werckner, Madame, ii. [202]
- West Indian colonies, staff-surgeons, ii. [70]
- Westminster, Duke of, ii. [355], [364]
- Westminster Hospital, ii. [256]
- Westminster Ragged Schools, i. [82], [93]
- Westminster Review, i. [377]
- Wheatstone, Sir Charles, i. [65]
- White, Blanco, ii. [12]
- Whitfield, R. G., Resident medical officer St. Thomas's Hospital, i. [185], [458]; corresponds with F. N. on removal of the hospital, i. [425], [426]; Nightingale Training School and, i. [458], [459], [460]; retires, ii. [247]
- Whybron, Thomas, i. [279]
- Widows' caps, F. N.'s, ii. [15]
- Wilberforce, William, i. [5]
- Wilbraham, Colonel, i. [405]
- William I., German Emperor, ii. [314] n.
- William II., German Emperor, ii. [420]
- William IV., i. [479]
- “William.” See [Jones]
- Williams, Dr., ii. [17]
- Williams, Mrs. Margaret, i. [234]
- Williams, Miss Rachel (Mrs. D. Morris), ii. [255], [256], [260], [347]
- Wilton House, ii. [4]
- Winchester County Hospital, i. [422], [423]; health of, ii. [119]
- Wintle, W. J., The Story of Florence Nightingale, ii. [466]; quoted or referred to, i. [236], [237]
- “Wiping” Sub-Commission, i. [364], [366], [394]
- Wiseman, Cardinal, i. [250] n., [253]
- “Wives,” F. N.'s, i. [383]
- Wives and mothers, selfishness of, ii. [15]
- Wolff, Dr. H., ii. [441]
- Wolseley, Lord, and the Soldiers' Institute, Portsmouth, ii. [77]; on female nurses in military hospitals, ii. [341], [342]; on hospital deficiencies, Egypt, 1882, ii. [338] n.
- Woman, Women, as “handmaids of the Lord,” ii. [366]; as health missioners, ii. [353]; attitude of, to women, ii. [315]; better life for, sought by F. N., i. [102], [442], ii. [366]; business-like efficiency in religious Orders, i. [432]; the Churches and work for, i. [57]; crave for being loved, not for loving, ii. [15]; have only odds and ends of time, i. [116], ii. [238]; in the Bible and Greek literature, ii. [229]; inaccuracy of, ii. [15]; influence of, i. [332]; “inspiration” of, ii. [316]; lack power of attention, ii. [14]; lack power of sympathy, ii. [14]; midwifery as a career for, ii. [197]; new sphere for, opened by F. N.'s Crimean mission, i. [305], [306], [448]; F. N.'s knowledge of, ii. [14]; the respublica and, ii. [95]; regulations and, ii. [195]; “woman's movement,” i. [385], [441], ii. [14], [142]
- Woman's Suffrage, i. [332], ii. [215], [216], [217]; F. N. on, ii. [451]
- Wombwell's menagerie, ii. [110]
- Wood, Sir Charles (Viscount Halifax), Indian Secretary, ii. [33], [36], [38], [41], [42], [43], [47], [48], [57]; resigns 1866, ii. [108]
- Wood, Sir Evelyn, ii. [337], [407]
- Woolner, T., R.A., ii. [469]
- Woolwich, Herbert (General Military) Hospital, i. [340], [395], [405], [420], ii. [6], [73], [88]; Naval Hospital, i. [348]
- Work, blessedness of, i. [34], ii. [209], [214], [430]
- Workhouses, Workhouse Infirmaries, condition of (1864–66), ii. [52], [123], [124], [125]; nursing in, ii. [52], [125], [128]; reforms in, ii. [143]; Irish, ii. [412]
- Works versus doctrines, i. [58]
- Wreford, Mr., Purveyor-General, i. [157], [225]
- Wright, R. S., ii. [60] and n., [399]
- Writing, doing and, i. [94]; F. N.'s attitude towards, i. [93–4], [474]
- Würstenberger, Mdlle., i. [110]
- Wyatt, Sir William, ii. [192]
- Wyse, Sir Thomas, i. [90]
- Yonge, Miss, Book of Golden Deeds, i. [xxiv], ii. [462]
- Young, Colonel, ii. [25] n., [28]
- Young, “Ubiquity,” i. [26]
- Yule, Colonel Sir Henry, succeeds Sir B. Frere on India Office Sanitary Committee, ii. [274]; collaborates with F. N., ii. [375]; death, ii. [387]; on F. N., ii. [308], [386]; Memoir of Sir W. E. Baker, ii. [274] n.
- Zambesi mission, ii. [194]
- Zemindars, ii. [285], [295], [451]
- Zenana Mission, ii. [333]
- Zoroaster, ii. [222]
THE END
Transcriber's Note
The original spelling and minor inconsistencies in the spelling and formatting have been maintained.
Inconsistent hyphenation is as in the original.
| The table below lists all corrections applied to the original text. |
| p 14: and Prussian Bauerinnen → Bäuerinnen |
| p 69: attention to “hygeists → “hygienists |
| p 69: of consulting hygeists → hygienists |
| p 75: [54] Below, p → p. |
| p 78: be a “saviour” of men → men. |
| p 89: (Oct. 4 [1865] → [1865]) |
| p 112: 24 PRINCES GATE, Feb. → Feb. |
| p 128: far more untameable → untamable |
| p 145: consigning sanitary adminisstration → administration |
| p 151: This was on July 27 → 27. |
| p 154: civilization of India” → civilization of India”) |
| p 184: pp. 519–534. → 534.) |
| p 190: Princess sent Fraülein → Fräulein |
| p 235: childlikeness of wisdom → wisdom. |
| p 237: und stiller Auf → auf |
| p 248: or Ward Sisters → Sisters. |
| p 284: in 1874, 37.1 → 37.1. |
| p 285: others, for over-emphasis → over-emphasis. |
| p 285: was not the → Was |
| p 288: told her drily → dryly |
| p 304: “But these pleasures → But |
| p 328: August 21, 1880 → 1880. |
| p 369: can be expected.” she → expected,” she |
| p 384: Nos. 126, 133 → 133, |
| p 388: the thing was very characteristic → characteristic. |
| p 389: Ever your loving F. N.” → N. |
| p 390: was “Aunt Florence → Florence” |
| p 401: in all that befel → befell |
| p 428: are letters to Mr., → Mr. |
| p 441: des Geh. Sanitäts → Sanitäts-Rath |
| p 447: Discipline, Cincinatti → Cincinnati |
| p 455: By George H. De' Ath → De'Ath |
| p 471: i. 361, 376, → 376; |
| p 477: De' Ath -> De'Ath |
| p 483: ii. 117, → ii. 117; |
| p 486: See also Daily News → See also Daily News |
| p 488: (1) Chronological → [(1) |
| p 489: (Oct. 16) → (Oct. 16), i. 155 |
| p 495: 261, 262, 142 → 342 |
| p 506: (1866) visits F. N. → —(1866) visits F. N. |