FOOTNOTES:
[156] Engraved by Meyer. A copy of the print hangs in the Museum of the Royal Institution of Cornwall, a building which now occupies the site of the Vivians' Truro residence and Copper Office.
[157] Sir Joshua also immortalized the fair Betsy Cranch by a portrait of her, painted in her prime, in 1763.
[158] Hussey was a name early celebrated in the annals of England; e.g., a Sir William Hussey was Lord Chief Justice in the reign of Edward IV.
[159] Gourgaud, Napoleon's aide-de-camp, as well as other French military critics, ascribe their loss of the battle of Waterloo mainly to the charge of Vivian's brigade on the flank of the Old Guard, after the repulse of the middle guard. 'These three thousand cavalry,' says Gourgaud, 'prevented all rallying.'
[160] He rode on this occasion a milk-white troop-horse of the 10th Hussars.
[161] Colonel Lord Robert Manners.
[INDEX.]
A
Acland, Sir Thomas Dyke, i. [98].
Acton Church, Godolphin tombs at, i. [353].
Adams, Mr., the astronomer, ii. [226] note.
Africa, remarks on access to the interior of, and its probable results, ii. [216], [217].
Albalanda family, i. [194], [195].
Albercombe, ii. [6] note.
Alford, Dean, his lines on Martyn, ii. [239].
ALLEN, RALPH, his birthplace and parentage, i. [3].
appointment to the Post Office, [4].
detects a Jacobite plot, [4].
marries Miss Earl, [4].
invents cross-posts, [5].
his enormous profits by it, [5]-[8].
his Coombe Down quarries, [8].
Mayor of Bath, [8].
portraits of him, [8], [17].
builds mansion at Prior Park, [9].
his literary and social friends, [9].
his connexion with Fielding, [9].
do. with Pope, [3], [10], [16]-[18].
do. with Warburton, [10].
do. with General Wade, [4], [13].
do. with Pitt, [13]-[15].
his second wife, [14].
his political views, [16].
raises a corps of volunteers, [16], note.
his generosity, [17]-[19], note.
house at Weymouth, [18].
house at Bathampton, i. [18].
his building propensities, [19].
his son Philip comptroller of the Bye-Letter Office, [22].
buried at Claverton, [22].
his personal appearance, [23].
his character, [24], [25].
his descendants, [25], [26].
Almanza, battle of, ii. [174].
its peculiar features, [175].
Alverton (Penzance), i. [293].
Amerideth, Judith, i. [351].
Amherst, General, at Louisbourg, i. [224].
Anderson, his opinion of George Grenville as a poet, ii. [83].
Anne, Queen, Godolphin's administration of her affairs, i. [379].
Anson, Lord, his jealousy of Admiral Boscawen, i. [215], [216] note, [220].
ANSTIS, JOHN, his extraction, i. [29].
his birthplace, [30].
his various appointments, [30]-[32].
his works on Heraldry, [30], [31].
created Garter King at Arms, [30].
his fragments of a history of Cornwall, [31].
do. of Launceston, [31].
his MSS. and other works, [31].
his imprisonment, [31], [32].
his death and burial-place, [32].
his son and successor in office, [32].
his portraits, [33].
his wife, [33].
buys Tremodret, [46] note.
See also [Errata and Addenda].
Antrewan family, i. [344].
Apreece, Mrs., i. [269].
Argallez, or Arallas, manor of, ii. [285].
Arthur. King, [xiv].
ARUNDELLS. Their origin and early importance, i. [19], [42].
settlement in Cornwall, [37], [41], [77].
origin of the name, [39], [40]; ii. [5], [39].
their connexion with the Grenvilles, i. [87].
do. with Lanherne, [45].
of Tolverne, [99]-[102], [195].
their connexion with Tolverne, [46].
Sir John, of Tolverne, ii. [124].
of Trerice, i. [76]-[99].
their connexion with Trerice, [46].
of Wardour, their origin, etc., [56], [57].
Sir Ralph, [41].
John, builder of part of St. Columb church, [41].
often Sheriffs of Cornwall, [41].
Sir John, the magnificent, [43]. his will, [43].
Roger (temp. Will. I.), [45].
William, [45].
John (temp. Richard II.), [47].
his descendants, [54].
his violation of a nunnery, [47].
his shipwreck and death, [48].
Thos. Walsingham's account, [47].
Froissart's account, [48].
Sir John (temp. Hen. IV. and V.), [50]-[101].
Sir John (temp. Hen. VI.), his riches, [50].
John, Bishop of Exeter, [50].
John, Bishop of Chichester, [53].
Sir John, knight-banneret of Therouenne, [54].
his wife and daughter, [55].
Mary, the authoress, [55].
Sir John, patron of Father Cornelius, [55].
his daughters, Dorothy and Gertrude, [56].
his son, [72].
Sir Thomas, Count of the Empire, and first Baron Arundell of Wardour, [58].
Humphrey, leader of the Cornish rebellion, [59].
George, a recusant, [73].
Sir Oliver de, i. [80].
Sir John, of Trerice (temp. Hen. V.), [80].
besieges St. Michael's Mount, [81].
is killed on the sands there, [81].
Sir John, 'Jack of Tilbury,' [82]-[103].
buried at Stratton, [87].
his son Roger, [85].
his grandson John, [85].
Raynulfe (temp. Hen. III.), [87], [101] note.
Sir Thomas, a Commissioner for the suppression of religious houses, [88].
his grant from Henry VIII. of the Scilly Isles, [90].
committed to the Tower, [88].
executed on Tower Hill, [89].
Sir John (temp. Elizabeth), [90].
Sir John, 'John for the King' (temp. Chas. I.), defender of Pendennis Castle, [91], [95], [97].
his gallant letter to Fairfax, [93].
Richard, Lord Arundell of Trerice, [91], [95], [96].
Lord John, his son, [97].
the Honble. Richard, M. P., [98].
his appointments, [98].
Lady Francis, during the earthquake of 1750, [98].
Sir Thomas, of Tolverne, [101].
Thomas, Esq. (will dated 1552), [102].
John (will dated 1598), [102].
Sir Thomas, of Tolverne (temp. James I.), [102].
Colonel John (temp. Charles II.), [102].
THE MINOR, [103].
Robert, of Menadarva, [103].
Francis, of Trengwainton, [104].
Captain Francis (temp. Commonwealth), [104].
of Trevithick, [105].
Thomas (temp. 1620), [105].
decay of the family, [105].
William, marries Dorothy Palæologus, [106].
Charles, one of the last of the name, [106].
See also [Errata and Addenda].
Arwenack, i. [92].
Arwenack, ii. [117], [119], [120], [126], [127], [130] note, [148].
B
Bacon, Lord, on Biographies, [x].
his observation on the last fight of the Revenge, ii. [98].
ii. [148] note.
Bael, Jemima, ii. [153].
Baker, his opinion of Foote, i. [312].
Ballard, his reference to Anne Killigrew, ii. [195].
Barfell (see Varfel).
Barrowby, Dr., his description of Foote, i. [316].
Bartolozzi, his portrait by Opie, ii. [245] note.
BASSET FAMILY, ii. [5], [39], [281], [283].
their Norman origin, i. [111]-[112].
Cove, alias Portreath, [115]-[134].
Sir Arthur, [118] note.
Francis, Baron de Dunstanville and Basset, [111], [112], [130]-[136].
Frances, Baroness, [136].
Sir Francis, M.P., Sheriff and Vice-Admiral of Cornwall, and Governor of St. Michael's Mount, [118].
his letters to his wife, [92], [120], [121].
Colonel Francis, a Puritan, [123].
Francis, Sheriff of Cornwall, 1708, [123], [197].
Francis, M.P. (temp. 1730), [125].
George, M.P., son of Sir John Basset, of Umberleigh, [118].
General Sir Thomas, [118] note.
Gilbert, [113] note.
Gustavus Lambert, [130], [136].
William, of Ipsden, [113].
J., (temp. 1435), [115].
Sir John (temp. 1478), [114].
J. P. (temp. 1734), [116].
John, the Rev., [128].
John, M.P., his son (died 1843), [128].
John, of Tehidy, sells St. Michael's Mount, ii. [285] note.
John, Sheriff of Cornwall, (temp. Hen. VII.), i. [117], [174].
John, son of Vice-Admiral Sir Francis, [122].
Sir Lawrence (temp. 1277), [115].
Osmund (temp. Will. I.), [112].
Osmund (temp. Hen. I.), i. [111].
Ralph (temp. Edward I.), [114].
Sir Ralph, father of Osmund, Justiciary of Hen. I., [111].
Thomas, his son, Justiciary of Hen. III., [113].
Thurstan, [111].
William (temp. Hen. IV.), [114].
Sir William (temp. 1382), [115].
William (temp. Edw. III.), [114].
Bateman, Viscount, an early friend of Opie, ii. [251].
Bath (see Allen).
Bathampton Church, restored by Ralph Allen, i. [22].
a tablet there to his memory, [22].
Bathurst, Dr., Bishop of Norwich, i. [131].
'Bayliffe of Blackmore,' The, i. [195].
Beaumont, Rev., his life of Dean Grenville, ii. [80] note.
Beddoes, Dr., i. [255].
Bedruthan steps and sands, ii. [310].
Beling, Richard, assumes name of Arundell, i. [58].
Berippa, Manor of, ii. [285].
Berkeley House, i. [372] note.
Berkeley, Lord and Lady, i. [372].
Bernard, his remarks on Incledon, ii. [91].
Betham, Elizabeth, i. [144].
Bevill family, i. [344]; ii. [5], [6], [10], [30], [281].
Bevill, Mary, i. [87].
Bewes family, their connexion with Anstis, i. [33].
Bibliotheca Cornubiensis, [xii]., [288], [353] note; ii. [5].
Bideford, ii. [4].
Blagge, pedigree of the family, i. [370] note.
Blagge, Margaret (see Margaret Godolphin), i. [362].
Blazey, St., i. [3].
Bligh (or Blygh) of Bodmin, i. [140].
Admiral Sir Richard Rodney, i. [140].
BLIGH, ADMIRAL WM., i. [139]-[147].
a Cornish circumnavigator, [139].
his birthplace and parentage, [140].
sails with Captain Cook in the Resolution, [140].
becomes a lieutenant in the navy, [140].
commands the Bounty, and sails for Otaheite, [141].
is seized and cast adrift by his crew, i. [141].
reaches Timor, [141].
reaches England, [142].
his skill, resource, and courage, [142].
account of the voyage, [142] note.
is made Post Captain, and appointed to the Providence, [142].
sails for the Society Islands, [142].
receives gold medal of the Society of Arts, [142].
at the mutiny at the Nore, [143].
his naval services, [143].
receives Nelson's thanks at Copenhagen, [143].
is elected F.R.S., [143].
is appointed Governor of New South Wales, [143].
his arbitrary temper leads to his deposition and imprisonment, [144].
is made Rear-Admiral of the Blue, [144].
dies at Farningham, [144].
his wife, [144].
his children, [145], [146].
his character, [145].
his interview with George III., [145].
his house at Farningham, [146].
his ghost! [147].
Blowing-house, ii. [245] note.
Blue-Stocking Club, its origin, i. [239].
Boaden, his account of Opie, ii. [276].
Boase, G. C., [xii].
Boase, Rev. C. W., his Registers of Exeter College, [xii]., ii. [5].
Bodmin, i. [368].
Bochym, Robert, of Bochym, i. [64].
Boconnoc Park, ii. [43] note.
Bodrugan, [ix].
Bolton, Charles I., Duke of, i. [176].
BONAVENTURA, THOMASINE, i. [151]-[157].
her connexion with the City of London churches, [151], [152].
do. with Stratton Church, [153].
her college and chantry, [153]-[156] note.
her birthplace, [154].
her first husband, [154].
builds a bridge to his memory, [155].
her second husband, i. [155].
her third husband, [156].
is Lady Mayoress of London, [156].
retires to Week St. Mary, [156].
her fancied relation to John Dineham, [157].
Carew's account of her bounteous charity, [157].
makes her will in 1510, [156].
suppression of her chantry, [157].
Bone, C. K., i. [166].
BONE, HENRY, R.A., i. [161]-[166].
his parentage, [161].
as china-painter, [161], [162].
marries Elizabeth Vandermeulen, [163].
first exhibits at the Royal Academy, [163].
large size of his enamels, [163], [164].
is elected a R.A., [164].
sells one of his enamels for 2,200 guineas, [164].
his series of historical portraits, [164].
his various residences in London, [164] note.
receives the Academy pension, [165].
sales of his works, [165].
his death, [165].
his family, [165].
his character, [166].
J. J. Rogers's list of his works, [166].
his portraits, [166]; ii. [245] note.
Henry Pierce, i. [165].
Peter, [166].
Robert Trewick, [166].
Thomas, [166].
W., [166].
Walter, [161].
See also [Errata and Addenda].
Bonython, [xiv]. and note, i. [99], [347].
Borlase, Captain in King Charles I.'s army, ii. [39] note.
Colonel William, i. [171].
John, of Pendeen, i. [172], [173].
Dr. J. B., i. [253].
Humphry, created a peer by James II., i. [172].
Dr. Walter, i. [178], [179].
BORLASE, REV. DR. WM., i. [169]-[187].
origin of the family, [170].
meaning of the name, [171].
his birthplace and parentage, i. [172].
his youth and education, [174], [175].
goes to Exeter College, Oxford, [175].
his sketch of Oxford in his own days, [175].
his journey to Cornwall with Sir John St. Aubyn, [176]; ii. [287].
is presented to Ludgvan, [176],
to St. Just, [179].
his favourite authors, [177].
his correspondents, [181].
his mode of studying the Cornish antiquities, [177].
his wife, [177].
his companions, [180].
his squabble with Rev. John Wesley, [179].
elected F.R.S., [181].
prints his Cornish Antiquities, [182].
do. his account of the Scilly Islands, [182].
do. his 'Natural History of Cornwall,' [182].
is made LL.D., [183].
his old age and last pursuits, [183].
his death and epitaph, [185].
his family, [185].
his view of Godolphin Hall, [341].
Burgess, i. [171] note.
Bosaverne, Thomasine, an ancestress of Richard Lander, ii. [201].
Boscastle, ii. [4].
BOSCAWENS, THE, i. [99], [191]-[206], [345].
their origin, [192].
BOSCAWEN, ADMIRAL, i. [191], [202], [205], [206]-[237].
his birthplace and youth, [207].
his portrait, [207].
enters the navy, [207].
his determined courage, [209].
at Porto Bello, [210].
at Carthagena, [211].
marries Frances Evelyn Glanville, [213].
elected M.P., [214].
captures the French frigate Medea, [214].
is wounded off Cape Finisterre, [215].
Anson's jealousy of him, [215], [216] note, [220].
sails for Port Louis and Pondicherry, i. [217].
is made Lord Commissioner of the Admiralty, [219].
his action with the French off Cape Ray, [220].
takes M. Hocquart prisoner for the third time, [221].
commands a squadron in the Bay of Quiberon, [222].
attacks and captures Louisbourg, [223] et seq., [227] et seq.
rejoicings thereupon in London, [225].
receives the thanks of Parliament, [226].
action with the French in Lagos Bay, [229] et seq.
his tactics, [231] note.
his later honours, [233].
at Quiberon again, [234].
his death, epitaph, and character, [234]-[237].
Boscawen, Capt. in King Charles I.'s army, ii. [39] note.
Charles, barrister, i. [193].
Edward (temp. Charles II.), i. [196].
Edward Hugh, M.P., i. [202].
Elizabeth, Duchess of Beaufort, i. [204].
Edward, fourth Viscount and first Earl, i. [202].
Evelyn, sixth Viscount, i. [206].
Frances (Honble. Mrs. J. Leveson Gower), i. [204].
George Evelyn, third Viscount Falmouth, i. [133], [202], [203].
General John, i. [200].
Honble. George, at Dettingen and Fontenoy, i. [200].
George Henry, fifth Viscount and second and last Earl, i. [205].
Henry de (1292), i. [193].
BOSCAWEN, THE HON. MRS. i. [133].
the 'blue-stocking,' [205].
her fondness for the sea, [237].
her parentage, [238].
her character, [238].
her membership of the Blue-stocking Club, [239].
Boswell's opinion of her, [239].
her vivacity, [240].
her politics, [240].
her latter days and death, [241]-[243].
her remarks on Opie's portrait of Lady Jerningham, ii. [261].
Hugh (temp. Will. III.), Baron Boscawen Rose and Viscount Falmouth, i. [197].
Sir Hugh, M.P. (1626), i. [196].
Hugh, second Viscount, i. [198].
Hugh, M.A., i. [192].
Hugh (temp. Mary), i. [192] note, [195].
John de, i. [194].
John Francis, Sheriff of Cornwall in 1861, i. [130].
Lawrence (temp. Hen. VII.), i. [194] note.
Lieutenant, at Tel-el-Kebir, i. [211] note.
Mary, i. [200].
Nicholas, D.D., Dean of Buryan, i. [199].
Nicholas, a Parliamentarian, i. [196].
Colonel Nicholas, at battle of Braddock Down, ii. [286].
Richard (temp. Hen. VII.), i. [195].
Rose, i. [193].
Street, Truro, i. [196].
William, the author, i. [200].
William Glanville, i. [202].
Bounty, Mutiny of the, i. [139]-[141].
Boyer, Mayor of Bodmin, i. [70].
Braddock Downs, i. [91].
battle of, [121]; ii. [43], [286].
Braham, his relations to Incledon, ii. [98], [101].
Brande, the chemist, on Davy's death, i. [248].
Bray family, i. [114], [171].
Bread-fruit, i. [140], [142].
Breage, i. [340], [377].
Bridges, Sir Egerton, his account of young Sidney Godolphin, i. [360].
Brierly, Mr. O. W., his picture of the last fight of the Revenge, ii. [26].
Brinn, ii. [30].
Bristol china, i. [161].
Bristol, Cornish at the siege of, ii. [52] note.
Brompton, Chronicum of Johannis de, ii. [281].
Browne, Sir Thomas, on our forefathers, [viii].
Browne, Sir William, caricatured by Foote, i. [329].
Brunel, his opinion of Trevithick's genius, ii. [323].
Buckingham, Duke of, his quarrel with Harry Killigrew, ii. [179].
Bude, i. [82].
Budock, St., the church, ii. [116], [118] note, [119].
Bullers, The, ii. [283].
Bunn, Mary, first wife of Opie, ii. [255].
Bunsby, Richard, i. [154].
Burdo, Adolphe, his description of the Niger, ii. [205].
Burgoyne, General, i. [294].
Buryan, i. [193], [194] note, [199] and note.
Bynnamy, ii. [6] note.
Byron, Honble. Ada, i. [98].
Byron's poem, 'The Island,' i. [143].
Lord, his verses on Davy, i. [271].
C
Camden on the origin of the St. Aubyns, ii. [281].
Campbell, Duncan, the Scotch pirate, i. [82].
Carankan family, i. [345].
Cararthyn family, i. [345].
Cardew, Dr. Cornelius, i. [250], [253]; ii. [225] note.
Carews, The, [xiv]. i. [345].
Carew, Sir Gawen, i. [61].
Sir Peter, i. [68]; ii. [121].
Richard, on the Arundells, i. [79], [83]-[86], [90], [102].
marries an Arundell, i. [86].
his account of Thomasine Bonaventura's chantry and college at Week St. Mary, i. [157].
do. of Sir William Godolphin, i. [346].
do. of Sir Francis Godolphin, i. [347].
on the Grenvilles, ii. [3], [4], [7], [9], [13], [17] note.
his account of Sir Hy. Killigrew, ii. [141].
do. of Sir Wm. Killigrew, ii. [154].
do. of Thomas St. Aubyn, ii. [284].
Thomas, his lines on Tom Killigrew's wedding, ii. [167].
Carlyon, Clement, M.D., his description of Henry Martyn as a schoolboy, ii. [224].
Carminow, Elizabeth, wife of Sir John Arundell, i. [77].
Carminows, The, i. [99]-[101], [140] note, [192] note, [195], [344].
Carnbrea Castle, i. [114] and note.
Carnbrea, ii. [310], [312].
Carteret family, ii. [37].
Carveth, i. [114].
Castle, Mrs. Boddam, her Killigrew portraits, ii. [132], [136].
her double descent from the Killigrews, ii. [136].
her Killigrew plate, ii. [136].
Cawse, John, a pupil of Opie, ii. [273] note.
Chamond, i. [102].
Chamonds, the, ii. [281].
Champernon, [ix].
Chantry, his bust of Davy, i. [257].
'Chantries, Cornish,' i. [200] note.
Charles I., his letter of thanks to the County of Cornwall, ii. [38].
is nearly shot at Fowey, ii. [43] note.
his letter of thanks to Sir Bevill Grenville, ii. [49].
Charles II., at Pendennis Castle, i. [92].
takes refuge at Scilly, i. [350].
Cholwel, the Week St. Mary schoolmaster, i. [157].
Clapperton, Captain, ii. [202].
Clapton, Elizabeth, i. [103].
Clarendon, his encomium of the Cornish army, ii. [50].
his account of young Sidney Godolphin, i. [357]-[359].
description of Sir Bevill Grenville, ii. [38], [56].
account of the great Sir Richard Grenville, ii. [13].
quarrel with the second Sir Richard Grenville, 'Baron of Lostwithiel,' ii. [33], [35].
his character of the second Sir Henry Killigrew, ii. [152].
his account of the battle of Lansdowne, ii. [50].
his account of the battle of Stratton, ii. [46].
Clares, Nunnery of, at Truro, ii. [285].
Clarke Hyde, his comparison of Trevithick and Watt, ii. [325].
Clarke, Theophilus, A.R.A., a pupil of Opie, ii. [273] note.
Claverton—Ralph Allen buried there, i. [22].
Clement's, St., near Truro, i. [314].
Clifton, ii. [4].
Clifton, Sir Francis, marries Elizabeth Killigrew, ii. [159].
Clinton family, i. [196].
Clowance, ii. [282], [287].
Coffin, Jaquet, i. [118].
Coke, the Godolphin steward, i. [342].
Colburn, Zerah, on locomotive engineering, ii. [320].
Cole, Thomasin, ii. [13].
Colenso, Bishop, ii. [226] note.
Coleridge, his opinion of Davy's poetic faculty, i. [248], [256], [261] note.
Columb, St. (major), i. [38].
its college, i. [52].
Conon, Mr., master of the Truro Grammar School, i. [293].
Cook, Captain, the circumnavigator, i. [140], [224] note.
Cooke, Sir Anthony, Preceptor of Edward VI., ii. [147].
Cooke, his life of Foote, i. [311] note, [315].
Cooke, Katherine, wife of Sir Henry Killigrew, ii. [147].
her learning, ii. [148].
her Latin verses to Cecil, ii. [148].
her burial-place and epitaph, ii. [149].
Cookworthy, William, i. [161].
Coombe, near Stow, ii. [17].
Corbeil, or Corboyle, ii. [6], [69], [78].
Cornelius, Father, i. [55].
Cornish Worthies, the necessity for an account of them, i. [xi.-xiii].
principles in selection of the Lives, [xiii].
Cornish miners capture the Cleopatra, i. [297].
Cornishmen, members of the Royal Society, i. [288].
members of the Royal Academy of Arts, ii. [245] and note.
noted for their bass voices, ii. [90].
Queen Elizabeth's saying of them, ii. [123].
Wranglers at Cambridge, ii. [226] note.
Cornish forces for King Charles I., ii. [39] note.
song on the Armada, ii. [17] note.
troops at siege of Bristol, ii. [52].
tumults in 1727 owing to scarcity of corn, ii. [290].
Cornwall, Charles I.'s letter of thanks to the county, ii. [38].
the mining districts, i. [109].
mining operations in, ii. [308]-[311].
the old main road through, i. [99].
Corrie, Bishop, the friend of Martyn, ii. [236], and passim.
Corunna, Lord Vivian at, ii. [349].
Coryton, Mr., a Royal Commissioner for Cornwall, ii. [150].
Courtney, W. P., i. (in Introduction).
Courtneys, The, i. [101], [140] note.
Courtenay, Henry, at battle of Braddock Down, ii. [286].
Coverack, ii. [89].
Coxe, Frances Susannah, i. [131] note.
Cranch, Betsy, mother of Lord Vivian, ii. [346], [347] and note.
Crantock, i. [38].
Crediton, Sir Robert Killigrew, Lord of the Manor of, ii. [159].
Croft, Cecilia, wife of Tom Killigrew, ii. [167], [168], [178].
Crowan Church, ii. [282], [285], [286], [300].
Cudlipp, Elizabeth, wife of John Anstis, i. [33].
Cunningham, Allen, his remarks on Opie, ii. [246].
Curgenven, Rev. W., Martyn's brother-in-law, ii. [227].
Cuvier, his opinion of Davy, i. [264], [287].
D
Danet, Elizabeth, i. [104].
Dangrous, William, i. [195].
Daniell, Ralph Allen, i. [25].
Daniell, Thomas, i. [25], [26], [255].
Darrell, Jane, ii. [117] note.
Davies, his opinion of Foote, i. [321], [331], [336].
Davy the composer, ii. [91].
Davy family, i. [247].
DAVY, SIR HUMPHRY, i. [247]-[288].
his birthplace, [247].
his youth, [248].
his poetic faculty, [248], [256], [261] note.
his schooling, [250], [253].
his portraits, [251]-[257].
as a young man, [252], [257], [260] note, [261].
articled to a surgeon, [253].
his fondness for fishing and shooting, [254], [272], [282] note.
begins chemistry, [254].
becomes assistant at the Pneumatic Hospital, Clifton, [255].
his dangerous experiments on nitrous oxide, etc., [256], [266].
his scheme of study, [259].
appointed to the Royal Institution, [259].
the father of agricultural chemistry, [260].
elected F.R.S., [260].
delivers the Bakerian Lectures, i. [261].
ill with typhus fever, [262].
visits Ireland, [262].
is urged to enter the Church, [263].
is knighted, [264].
is married, [264].
visits Scotland, [266].
experiments in electric lighting, [266].
goes on the Continent, [267].
experiments on the torpedo, [267], [284].
examines the extinct French and Italian volcanoes, [268], [271].
becomes acquainted with Volta, [268].
helps to found the Geological Society of Penzance, [268].
one of the founders of the Athenæum Club, [269].
originates the Zoological Society, [269].
returns to England in 1815, [269].
discovers the safety-lamp, [270].
is entertained by the coal-owners at Newcastle, [270].
his will, [270] note, [286].
is made a baronet, [271].
revisits the Continent in 1818, [271].
examines the fresco colouring
at Pompeii, [272].
do. the burnt papyri at Herculaneum, [272].
returns to England in 1820, [272].
visits Scott at Abbotsford, [272]-[275].
his costume, [273], [277].
his conversations with Scott, [275].
is made President of the Royal Society, [277].
his weekly social gatherings, [277].
his illness, [278], [280].
revisits Ireland, Wales and Scotland, [278].
visits Penzance in 1821, [278].
investigates metal sheathing for vessels, [278].
visits Norway, Sweden and Denmark, [279].
specimens of his poetry, [248], [279], [282].
revisits the Continent in 1827, [280].
retires from the Royal Society, i. [281].
Royal Society medal in his honour, [281] note.
his religious views, [281], [282].
returns to London, 1827, [282].
writes the 'Salmonia,' [283].
last visit to the Continent in 1828, [283].
plans 'Consolations of Travel,' [283].
writes 'Last of the O'Donoghues,' [283].
is seriously ill at Rome, [284].
a good linguist, [284] note.
his latest literary enjoyments, [285].
at Geneva on his return homewards, [285].
last hours and death at Geneva, [286].
his death and epitaph, [286].
his principal works and discoveries, [287] note.
on Trevithick's steam locomotive, ii. [319] note.
Davy, Robert, i. [247].
Dr. John, i. [259], [280], [281], [284], [286].
his analysis of Sir Humphry Davy's earlier discoveries, i. [263].
De Crespigny, Eliza, Lord Vivian's first wife, ii. [348], [363].
DE DUNSTANVILLES, their Norman origin, etc., i. [111]-[113] note.
Reginald, Earl of Cornwall, i. [112] note.
Adeliza, wife of Thomas, Baron Basset, i. [112] note.
Alan de (temp. 1100), i. [112].
Alice (temp. Hen. III.), i. [113].
Cecilia (temp. Rich. I.), i. [113].
Lady, at Trevithick's, ii. [319].
Delaines, The, friends of Foote, i. [319].
Delany, Mrs. (Mary Grenville), her account of the Basset family (circa 1730), i. [124].
her description of George Grenville, ii. [83].
do. of Mr. Killigrew, ii. [135].
her portrait by Opie, ii. [260].
Denham, Sir John, his lines on Tom Killigrew, ii. [163].
his epigram on Cowley and Killigrew, ii. [166].
Dentatus, Hamon, ii. [6].
Dibdin, Dr., his remarks on Davy, i. [252].
Dibdin, his relations to Incledon, ii. [98].
'Dineham, John,' i. [157].
Dixon, 'Fasti Eboracensis' of, ii. [9].
Dodd, Rev. Dr., his widow caricatured by Foote, i. [331].
'Dolphin Town (see Godolphin Town).
Doran, Dr., his observations on Foote, i. [331].
Drew, Samuel, i. [255].
Dryden, his tribute to George Grenville's poetry, ii. [85].
his ode on Anne Killigrew, ii. [190].
Duloe, Rectory of, ii. [285].
Dunbar, Major John, marries Ann Killigrew, ii. [132].
Durham, Bishop of, urges Davy to enter the Church, i. [263].
Durham, Lord, his address to Davy, i. [270].
Dutch ships seized by the Killigrews at Falmouth, ii. [114].
E
Ecclesiasticus on our forefathers, [vii].
Echard, his account of Sir Richard Grenville, 'Baron of Lostwithiel,' ii. [35].
his particulars of the Restoration, ii. [66] note.
Edgcumbes, The, of Mount Edgcumbe (see Introduction).
Edgecumbe, Honble. George, Admiral, i. [208] and note.
Edgecombe Lieut.-Colonel in Charles I.'s army, ii. [39] note.
Edwardes, Dr., i. [255].
Edwards, Thos., the architect, i. [116].
Efford or Ebbingford, i. [81]-
[87].
Elder-trees in Cornwall, i. [193].
Elizabeth Castle, Scilly, ii. [119].
Elizabeth, Queen of Bohemia, intercedes for Tom Killigrew, ii. [168] note.
Eliot, Sir John, [xiv].
relations with Sir Bevill Grenville, ii. [41].
Emerson, R. W., on Biography, [x].
on 'Steam,' ii. [328] note.
Enys family, i. [114].
J. S., ii. [314].
Erissey family, i. [344], [345].
Juliana, i. [87].
Erissey, Richard, marries Frances Killigrew, ii. [131].
Erissey, Richard, ii. [131] note.
Erme, St., ii. [115].
Erth, St., ii. [119].
Evelyn, John, his friendship with the Godolphins, i. [362].
his life of Margaret Godolphin, i. [365], [370] et seq.
his opinion of the great Sir R. Grenville, ii. [28].
his anecdote of Tom Killigrew, ii. [168].
Ewens, William, ii. [121].
Exeter College, Oxford, ii. [226] note.
Registers of, [xii]., ii. [5].
EXMOUTH, LORD, i. [291]-[308].
his birth and childhood, [292]-[3].
enters the navy, [294].
under Burgoyne in America, [294].
returns to England, [295].
made Post-Captain, [296].
marries, [296].
in the Winchelsea and Salisbury, [297].
turns farmer, [297].
appointed to the Nymphe, [297].
is knighted, [298].
clears the Channel, [299].
cuts down and refits the Indefatigable, [299].
his gallant rescue of the Dutton's crew at Plymouth, [300].
made a Baronet, [300].
his coat of arms, [300].
assists in preventing the French descent upon Ireland, [300].
desires to attack Brest, [301].
quells a mutiny at Bantry Bay, [301].
rests at Trefusis, [302].
made Colonel of Marines, and elected M.P., [302].
blockades the French at Corunna and Ferrol, [302].
helps to save Pitt's administration, [302].
promoted Rear-Admiral of the White, [302].
made Commander-in-Chief, in India, [302].
returns to England, [303].
blockades the Dutch fleet in the Scheldt, [303].
Commander-in-Chief in the Mediterranean, [303].
made Baron Exmouth, [303].
his offspring, [303] note.
goes again to the Mediterranean in 1815, [304].
saves Marseilles, i. [304].
undertakes the siege of Algiers, [304]-[6].
liberates the Christian and other slaves, [306].
his later honours, [307].
is appointed to the naval command at Plymouth, [307].
his last days and death, [308].
his portraits, [308].
F
Fairfax in Cornwall, i. [93], [172].
FALMOUTH family (see Boscawen).
Haven, i. [99], [194], [292].
the town arms, ii. [116].
its rise and progress, ii. [125], [126], [128], [131], [132], [135].
old maps of, ii. [126] note.
origin of St. Charles Church there, ii. [128].
Killigrew monuments in the church, ii. [132].
Faraday, his connexion with Davy, i. [267].
Farningham, i. [146].
Fauntleroy's Bank, i. [164].
Felton, Dr., his opinion of George Grenville as a poet, ii. [84].
Fentongollan, i. [99], [192], [205].
Ferguson, Professor, his opinion of Davy, i. [257].
Fermor, Jane, ii. [124].
Fielding at Ralph Allen's, i. [9].
Fleming, maiden name of Martyn's mother, ii. [224].
Flores, in the Azores, ii. [21] and note.
Flushing, i. [292], [296], [297].
Foote, Edward, i. [313].
Eleanor, i. [313], [314].
Henry, i. [314].
John, the dramatist's grandfather, i. [314].
John, mayor of Truro, [314] note.
FOOTE, SAMUEL, i. [311]-[336].
his claims to notice, [311].
his voluminous works, [311].
Foster's opinion of him, [312].
Baker's opinion of him, [312].
his bon mots, [313], [333].
his parentage and birthplace, [313], [315].
his education, [315].
goes to Worcester College, Oxford, [316].
entered at the Inner Temple, [316].
his vanity and dandyism, i. [317] and note.
quarrels with Garrick, [317] and note, [326].
his portraits, [318].
his three fortunes, [318], [322].
goes on the stage, [319].
his first piece, [320].
caricatures Macklin, [320], [323] and note.
has his license withdrawn, [320].
his 'Tea-drinking,' [321].
his 'Auction of Pictures,' [321].
his satiric powers, [321].
his generosity, [321] note.
his address, [321].
his play 'The Knights,' [322].
his extravagance and dissipation, [322], [328] note, [330].
again takes the Haymarket Theatre, [323].
his piece 'The Author' suppressed by the Lord Chamberlain, [323].
goes to Dublin with Tate Wilkinson, [324].
produces 'The Minor,' [324].
ridicules Whitefield, [325].
his aversion to newspaper critics, [326].
produces 'The Liar,' [327].
do. 'The Orators,' [327].
leases the Edinburgh Theatre, [327].
'The Mayor of Garrat, and succeeding plays, [328].
breaks his leg, [328].
produces 'The Devil on Two Sticks,' [329].
revisits Dublin, [330].
his 'Primitive Puppet Show,' [330].
his 'Cozeners,' and later plays, [321]-[333].
his affair with the Duchess of Kingston, [331].
sells his Patent to Colman, [332].
paralysed whilst acting, [333].
retires to Bath, [333].
goes to Dover, [333].
his last jokes at the Ship Inn, Dover, [333].
last illness and death, [333].
buried at Westminster Abbey, [334].
his epitaph, [334].
his alleged marriages, [334].
his residences, [326], [335].
his talents and his character, i. [335].
Foote, Samuel, the elder, i. [313], [314].
Samuel (another of that name), [311] note.
Fortescue family, i. [196] note; ii. [5].
Fox, the late Caroline, her remark on Mr. Edward Opie, ii. [247].
Charles James, his opinion of Foote, i. [327], [336].
his portrait by Opie, ii. [256].
his opinion of Opie's mental powers, ii. [264].
George Croker, his advice to Lander, ii. [202].
Mr. Howard, on the Lizard Point lights, ii. [124] note.
Froude, Mr., his tribute to Sir Richard Grenville, ii. [27].
Frowde, Susan, i. [296].
Fuller, on William Grenville, Archbishop of York, ii. [9].
Fuller's translation of Lady Katharine Killigrew's lines, ii. [149].
Fuseli, his portrait by Opie, ii. [256].
G
Gall, Master John, i. [155].
Garrick, his relations with Foote, i. [317] note, [326], [336].
Garth, Dr., his tribute to Godolphin's merit, i. [384].
Gatty, Dr. Alfred, his acquaintance with Bligh, i. [145].
Gaverigan, Manor of, ii. [285].
Geneva, Davy dies there, i. [286].
George III., his conversation with Bligh, i. [145].
Ghent, Sir R. Grenville's tomb at, ii. [34] note.
Gilbert, C. S., his 'History of Cornwall,' i. [369]; ii. [56].
Gilbert Davies, i. [26], [251] note, [254], [281]; ii. [37].
his connexion with Trevithick, ii. [314], [319], [327].
Gillyngvase Bay, ii. [126].
Gluvias Church, ii. [117].
Glynn, Major, i. [111].
Glynn, the seat of the Vivians, ii. [345].
Godfrey, Charlotte, i. [197], [210].
Godfrey of Cornwall, [xiv].
GODOLPHINS, THE, i. [340]-[396].
family, [114], [118], [173], [191], [195], [340]-[396]; ii. [3], [39], [119], [283].
Hals' description of the family, i. [340].
description of the place, [340]-[344].
or 'Dolphin Town, Scilly, [350].
Manor of, ii. [285].
origin of the name, i. [344].
their early origin, [345].
intermarriages of the family, [344], [353].
great tin-owners, [342], [347], [348].
obtain lease of Scilly Isles and become Governors, [350]-[353].
number of deaths in the family in a short period, [350].
School, The, at Salisbury, [352].
Captain, killed in a duel, 1682, [353].
Colonel in Charles I.'s army, ii. [39].
Charles, M.P. for Helston, i. [379].
Elizabeth, maid of honour to Katharine of Braganza, [353].
Ellinor, [344].
Sir Francis, friend of Richard Carew, ii. [24].
Francis, Baron Godolphin of Helston, i. [364].
Sir Francis, knighted in 1580, [347].
Carew's account of him, [347], [348] note.
Lipscomb's do., [347].
repulses the Spaniards at Penzance, [348].
marries Margaret Killigrew, [350].
Sir Francis, [361], [368].
his loyalty and poetic skill, [361].
Hobbes dedicates his 'Leviathan' to him, [362].
is M.P. for St. Ives, 1640, [362].
his wife and family, [362].
Francis, second and last Earl, [374], [389].
is made Lord Warden of the Stannaries, [382].
dies, [389].
his love for the turf, [392].
Gentle, three of the name, [347].
Henry, Dean of St. Paul's and Provost of Eton, [362].
educated at Eton and at Oxford, i. [362].
marries his cousin Margaret Godolphin, [362].
his piety and munificence, [363], [364].
his monument at Eton, [363].
was to have been made Bishop of Exeter, [364].
his descendants, [364].
Jael, [197], [210].
John (temp. Hen. III.), [340].
John (temp. Hen. VII.), [345].
John, Captain of Scilly, [351].
marries Judith Amerideth, [351].
John, LL.D., goes to Oxford, [353].
is made Judge of the Admiralty, [354].
his legal and religious books, [355].
his death and burial-place, [356].
his son Francis, died 1695, [356].
Margaret, wife of Sidney Godolphin, [362].
as 'Diana,' [370] note.
comes to the Court, [371].
her pious disposition, [371].
leaves the Court, [373].
lodges in Scotland Yard, [373].
marries Sidney Godolphin, [374].
her illness and death, [374].
her last letter to her husband, [375].
is buried at Breage, [377].
the inscription on her coffin, [377].
Sidney, M.P., killed in a Civil War skirmish, 1643, [357].
Clarendon's account of him, [357].
Sir Egerton Brydges' do., [360].
Hobbes' do., [360].
his poetic skill, [361].
Sidney, 'Prime Minister,' [340], [362], [365]-[396].
is left £5,000 a year by his brother, [362].
his birth and early days, [365].
goes to Spain and Holland, [366].
is made Privy Councillor, and one of the 'Triumvirate,' i. [368].
becomes First Lord of the Treasury, [368].
is made Baron Godolphin of Rialton, [368].
James II. practises upon him, [369].
is made Chamberlain to the Queen, [369].
Second Commissioner to the Treasury, [369].
is selected to propose an 'accommodation' with William III., [369].
finds favour with William III., [370].
yearns to retire to Cornwall, [370].
marries Margaret Blagge, [374].
his letter to Evelyn on his wife's death, [375].
political troubles, [378], [380].
is made one of the nine Justices to manage England, [378].
leaves office for a while, [378].
is made Lord High Treasurer by Anne, [378].
effects the Union with Scotland, [379], [383].
his pseudonyms, [380] note, [381].
his secret correspondence with James II., [381].
his honours increase, [381], [386].
his connexion with Marlborough's Continental wars, [379], [382].
his portraits, [382], [391].
his North American Expedition, [383].
his weariness of office, [383], [386].
his share in the Conformity Bill, [384].
clamour against him, [384].
favours Walpole, [385].
loses favour with Anne, [386].
is dismissed from office, [387].
the shock to the national credit, [388].
his illness, death, and funeral, i. [389].
his appearance, manners, and character, [391]-[6].
Thomas, shot at the siege of Boulogne, [346].
marries first a Grenville, [347].
marries, second time, a Bonython, [347].
Colonel William, brother of young Sidney, [361].
Sir William, Vice Warden of the Stannaries (temp. Hen. VIII.), [342], [346].
Sir William, [351], [356].
his son, ambassador at Madrid, [351].
the friend of Locke, [351].
is suspected of treason, [352].
his will declared void, [352].
Sir William, made a baronet by Charles II., [362].
See also [Errata and Addenda].
Godwin, a friend of Opie, ii. [255].
Goodere, Sir Edward, i. [314].
tragedy, the, concerning, i. [318].
Gordon, Duchess of, i. [260].
Gornard (or Gurney), Sir Richard, ii. [4].
Granville (see Grenville).
Granville, in Normandy, ii. [6].
Graynfylde, John, ii. [4].
Green, Anne, her horrible execution, ii. [129].
Green, J. R., his account of the support of the Royal cause by the Cornish, ii. [57] note.
Grenfell, Miss, her relations with Martyn, ii. [232] and passim.
Grenfield, Henry, Master of Truro Grammar School, ii. [37].
Grenfield, Richard (temp. 1316), ii. [5].
GRENVILLE FAMILY, i. [87], [114], [191], [340], [345]; ii. [3]-[85], [281]-[283].
a true Norman-Cornish family, ii. [3]-[5], [6].
their portraits, [82] note.
their coat of arms, [5] note, [6] note.
various modes of spelling the name, [6].
indigence of the later Grenvilles, [36], [37].
their various seats in Cornwall, [4] note, [6] note.
Rectors of Kilkhampton, [5].
frequent occurrence of Richard as their Christian name, ii. [6].
Sir Bartholomew, [5].
Sir Bernard, M.P., son of the great Sir Richard, [30].
Sir Bevill, [4], [30].
his birthplace and parentage, [30], [58] note.
his 'Gate Song of Stow,' by Rev. R. S. Hawker, [32].
goes to Exeter College, Oxford, [33].
enters Parliament, [33].
is knighted, [33].
M.P. for Cornwall and for Launceston, [38] note.
heads the Cornish gentry in the King's cause, [38].
suppresses the Parliamentary Committees in Cornwall, [38].
his letter to Sir John Trelawny, [39].
his letters to his wife, [41], [43].
his friendship for Sir John Eliot, [41].
at battle of Braddock Down, [43].
at battle of Stratton, [45].
receives letter of thanks from Charles I., [49].
at the battle of Lansdowne, [50].
is slain, [52], [57] note.
is buried at Kilkhampton, [52] note.
Clarendon's description of him, [56].
his monument at Lansdowne, [57].
do. at Kilkhampton, [58].
his portraits, [63].
his grandson of the same name, [64] note.
Chamond, [5].
Dennis, D.D., [5], [68]-[80].
his birth and education, [69].
Kilkhampton his first preferment, [69].
made Dean of Durham, [69].
goes into exile with James II., [69]-[76].
his loyalty to the Crown, [70], [75].
his invalid wife, [70], [77].
endeavours to reform the clergy, ii. [70].
his incompetence to manage his money affairs, [71].
his admirable household rules, [72]-[74].
is imprisoned in his own deanery, [76].
resides at Rouen and prints his works, [77].
is deprived of his deanery, and his library and goods distrained by the Sheriff, [77].
is slighted by James II., [77] and note.
retires to Corbeil, [78].
his latter days, [78].
his death at Paris, [79].
his portrait, [79].
his character, [79], [80].
George, Baron Lansdowne, [81].
declares himself a Cornishman, [81].
goes to Cambridge, [81].
is about James II.'s Court, [81].
his admiration of Mary of Modena, [81].
his poems and plays, [81].
his representation of Cornwall in Parliament, [81].
made Privy Councillor, and Treasurer of the Household to Queen Anne, [81].
committed to the Tower, [81].
goes abroad to retrench his expenses, [82].
dies, [82].
strange story about his remains, [82].
his portrait, [82].
his character as a man and a poet, [83]-[85].
John (temp. Edward IV.), [5].
John, rector of Kilkhampton, [5].
John, son of the great Sir Richard, [30].
John, Earl of Bath, [34].
at battle of Lansdowne, [54].
at Oxford, [65].
wounded at battle of Newbury, [65].
is made Governor of Scilly, [65].
John, Earl of Bath, is instrumental in Restoration of Charles II., ii. [66].
communicates to Parliament Charles II.'s proposals from Breda, [67].
is made a Secretary of State, Earl of Bath, etc., [67].
builds the new house of Stow, [67].
his wife and offspring, [68].
declares for William III., [68], [75].
Lady Grace, her extraction and marriage, [41] note.
her portraits, [41] note.
alleged letters by her, [59]-[63].
Mary (see Mrs. Delany).
Mary, wife of Thomas St. Aubyn, [283].
Richard (temp. William I.), [7], [9].
Richard (temp. Henry III.), [6] note.
Sir Richard (temp. Henry VIII.), [9].
loses Trematon Castle, [10].
imprisoned at Launceston, [10].
specimens of his poetical powers, [11], [12].
the great Sir Richard, [4] note, [13]-[29].
his birth and parentage,13.
his biographers, [13].
his military career in Eastern Europe, [13].
as Sheriff of Cornwall arrests Francis Tregian, [14].
is knighted, [14].
twice visits Virginia, [14].
during the time of the Armada, [14].
his appearance and portraits, [15].
his wife, Mary St. Leger, [20].
as Vice-Admiral is sent to intercept the Spanish West Indian fleet, [20].
his last fight at Flores, and last words, [28].
Sir Richard, 'Baron of Lostwithiel,' [33].
Clarendon's quarrel with him, [33].
Earl of Suffolk's quarrel with him, ii. [33], [35].
is fined and imprisoned in the Fleet, [33].
joins the Parliamentarian forces, [33].
deserts them, [33].
joins the King's army, [34].
blockades Plymouth, [34].
surrenders to Hopton his
command in the West, [34].
is imprisoned at Launceston, [34].
fortifies Launceston, [34] note.
do. Hall House, Fowey, [64].
his opposition to the King's general, [34] and note.
captures Restormel Castle, Lostwithiel, [64].
Clarendon's account of him, [35].
Echard's do., [35].
George, Lord Lansdowne's do., [35], [81].
prints his own defence, [35].
seizes, at Bruges, some of Lord Suffolk's property—but restores it, [35].
goes into exile, [36].
is forbidden the English Court, [36].
dies broken-hearted, [36].
his project for defending Cornwall by joining the English and Bristol Channels, [36] note.
his tomb at Ghent, [34] note.
his son Richard's fate, [36].
Roger, drowned at Spithead, [13].
Sir Theobald, [4], [7], [8].
William, Chancellor of England and Archbishop of York, [7].
his death and tomb, [8].
his ring, [9].
see also [77] note, and [78] and note.
See also [Errata and Addenda.]
Grotius on Archbishop Grenville's ring, ii. [9].
Guiccioli, Countess, her acquaintance with Davy, i. [281].
Gunpowder first used for blasting rocks in Cornwall, i. [348] note.
Gwavas, Mr., i. [176].
H
Hailstone, Professor, i. [255].
Hall walk, Fowey, ii. [43] note, [64].
Hals, the Historian, i. [102] and passim.
Lieutenant-Colonel James, at battle of Braddock Down, ii. [286].
Sir Nicholas, of Pengerswick, ii. [124].
Harley, i. [380].
Harris, Christopher, i. [173].
Lydia, i. [172].
Harmony Cot, ii. [245] and note.
Harvey, Henry, ii. [326], [328].
Jane, wife of Richard Trevithick, ii. [312].
John, [311] and note.
Hawke, Admiral, of Cornish extraction, i. [209] note.
Hawker, William, [301].
Rev. R. S., i. [154].
his account of Stow, and the Grenvilles, ii. [31].
his alleged discovery of Grenville's letters at Stow, ii. [59].
Hawkins, Admiral, ii. [28].
Hellins, Dr. John, i. [255].
Henrietta Maria, Queen, at Pendennis Castle, i. [92].
Henry, Dr., his opinion of Davy's genius, i. [249].
Henwood, W. J., i. [342].
Herry, Johanna, ii. [117] note.
Hervey, Admiral Lord, a patron of Incledon, ii. [94].
Hewlett, Mr. H. G., his translation of Katharine Killigrew's Latin verses to Cecil, ii. [149].
his letter about Admiral Bligh's ghost, i. [146].
Hill, Mary, wife of Sir William Killigrew, ii. [159].
Hingeston-Randolph, the Rev. F. C., his valuable assistance to the author, [xvi].
Hitchins, Rev. Malachi, i. [255]; ii. [233] note.
Hitchins, Rev. T. M., ii. [233].
Hobbes, his account of young Sidney Godolphin, i. [360].
Hobby, Thomas, ii. [148].
Hoblyn family, i. [345].
Hogg, Thomas, his poem on St. Michael's Mount, ii. [301] note.
Holcroft, his account of Opie, ii. [261].
Hone, Horace, i. [162].
Hornblower, Jonathan, ii. [314].
Howard, Admiral Lord Thomas, ii. [21] note.
Leonard, his Collection of Letters, ii. [140].
Howlett, Mr. Richard, his 'Monumenta Franciscana,' i. [72], [89].
Hurd, Bishop, at Ralph Allen's, i. [13].
Hussey family, ii. [345], [348] and note.
I
Incledon, Charles, ii. [111].
INCLEDON, BENJAMIN CHARLES, i. [322]; ii. [89]-[111].
his kindness to his mother, [90].
the great range of his voice, [91]-[100].
is choir-boy in Exeter Cathedral, [91].
is an excellent swimmer, [91].
charms Judge Nares by his singing, [92].
runs away from Exeter and joins the navy, [92].
sees active service, [93].
becomes a general favourite, [93].
his portrait, singing 'The Storm,' [93] note.
is introduced to Sheridan and to Colman, [94].
is considered not fitted for the stage, [94].
joins Collins' company at Southampton, [94].
goes with them to Winchester and Bath, [94].
his first appearance at Bath, [94], [95].
his vocal merits recognised by Rauzzini, [95].
is engaged at Vauxhall Gardens, [95].
his singing of 'The Lass of Richmond Hill,' [96].
makes his début at Covent Garden, [96].
his jolly disposition, [96].
is made a butt of, [96].
and retaliates, [97].
cuts a ridiculous appearance as a volunteer, [97].
his large salary, [96]-[104].
his fondness for the 'Beggar's Opera,' [98].
his relation to Braham, [98].
do. to Dibdin, [98].
his success at Bury St. Edmunds, ii. [98].
his attachment to his profession, [99].
his voice and style, [99].
no actor, [100].
with Mathews, at Leicester, [100].
his joke with a Quaker there, [100].
sings in oratorio, [101].
his singing of 'All's Well' with Braham, [101].
his singing at the Glee Club, [101].
retires from Covent Garden, [101].
his entertainments in the provinces, [102].
his coach journey with H. C. Robinson, [102].
his singing to Mrs. Siddons, [102].
sings 'The Storm' at a dinner given to John Kemble, [103].
his favourite songs, [103], [104],
his last benefit at Drury Lane, [104].
his last appearance and farewell speech at Southampton, [104].
his wives, [105]-[109].
as a composer, [105].
is shipwrecked in Dublin Bay, [106].
goes to America, [106].
has an attack of paralysis at Brighton, [107].
sings for the last time at Worcester, and dies there, [107].
his fondness for the kitchen, [107] note.
do. for quack medicines, [107] note.
his dissipated habits, [108].
his ingenious patching up of a quarrel with a military officer, [109].
his grand dinner at Brompton Crescent, [109].
his extravagance and carelessness, [110].
dies in easy circumstances, [111].
is buried at Hampstead, [111].
his sons and daughter, [111].
Incledon, Frank, [111].
Loveday, [89], [90].
Michael, [90].
Ilcombe, ii. [6] note.
J
Jackson, of Exeter, the composer, ii. [91].
Jago, Mary, adopted by Mrs. Killigrew, ii. [136].
marries Daniel Wait, ii. [136].
William, of Wendron, i. [102].
James, Mary, an old sweetheart of Opie, ii. [264].
Jeffery, Mr. H. Martyn, edits some of Martyn's letters, ii. [233].
Jeffrey, his opinion of Mrs. Opie's novels, ii. [259].
Jenkins, Sir Lionel, i. [368].
Jermyn, Lord Harry, ii. [150].
his letter to Sir Henry Killigrew, at Pendennis, ii. [151].
Jewell, William, the friend of Foote, i. [334].
Job, on our ancestors, [vii].
Johannes, Sarisburiensis, his tribute to Cornish valour, ii. [48].
Johnson's, Dr., opinion of Borlase's 'Scilly Islands,' i. [182].
opinion of Foote, i. [311], [327], [336].
opinion of George Grenville as a poet, ii. [84].
his portrait by Opie, ii. [253].
K
Kea parish, i. [194].
Kempthorne, Senior Wrangler of 1796, ii. [226].
Keverne, St., ii. [89].
Kilkhampton, ii. [4], [5], [69].
Killigarth, ii. [30].
KILLIGREWS, THE, [xv]., i. [191], [344]; ii. [115]-[195], [283].
etymology of the name, ii. [115].
at siege of Pendennis Castle, i. [92].
their family monument at Falmouth, ii. [115].
of royal descent, [116].
their swannery at Falmouth, [115] note.
the Devonshire branch, [116] note.
their earlier Christian names, [116].
they move to Arwenack, [117].
trusted courtiers, [117].
a very numerous family, [118].
they seem naturally to divide into two branches, [118].
their 'family tree,' ii. [118].
the elder branch, [119]-[137].
the junior do., [137]-[195].
addicted to 'piracy,' [121].
difficulty in identifying the early members, [121].
amongst the predecessors of the heroes of the Armada conflict, [122].
their promotion of the interests of Falmouth, [126].
Falmouth, their later burial-place, [128], [132].
some of the family portraits, [136].
in St. Erme, [115], [116].
Ann (Mrs. Kirk), drowned at London Bridge, [156].
Ann, marries Martin Lister, [131].
Anne, [188]-[195].
her birth and baptism, [189].
early displays her talents, [189].
Dryden's ode on her, [189]-[192].
Anthony Wood's opinion of her, [189].
her skill in painting, [189], [191], [192].
her portraits, [189], [193].
Maid of Honour to the Duchess of York, [193].
her poems, [193], [194].
her death, [193] and note.
her burial-place, [189] note.
her epitaph, [188], [194], [195].
Charles, Master of the Revels, [177].
succeeds to the Drury Lane playhouse, [177].
introduces useful reforms in theatres, [178].
Elizabeth, [119].
Elizabeth, marries Count de Kinski, [129].
Elizabeth, wife of Dr. Lambe, Dean of Ely, [184].
Elizabeth, Viscountess Shannon, [156].
Fitz-Hardinge, Lady, [156].
marries a Godolphin, [156].
Yarmouth, Countess of, [156].
Frances, marries Richard Erissey, [131].
Frances Maria, last of the name, [136], [165], [174].
George Augustus, [136].
George, killed by Walter Vincent, ii. [131].
his wife and daughter, [132].
Harry, son of Tom, 'the jester,' [178].
his bad character, [178].
his quarrel with the Duke of Buckingham, [179].
his wife, Lady Mary Savage, [179].
his sons, [179].
his death, [179].
Henry (temp. 1402), [116].
Henry (15th century), [116].
Admiral Henry, [184].
is made Lord of the Admiralty by William III., [184].
his death, and MS. letters, [184].
his action with the French off Beachy Head, [185].
his character, [187].
his wife, and son Henry, [187].
Dryden's allusion to him, [191].
Sir Henry, the Ambassador, [137].
his parentage, [137].
his political appointments, [137].
his letters to Burleigh on Scotch affairs, [137] note.
his verses to Lady Cecil, [137].
his description of John Knox, [137].
sent by Elizabeth to a Congress at Frankfort, [138].
his many diplomatic missions, [140] and note, [148].
complains of being ill-remunerated, [140].
his latter days, [141].
his mission to Mary Queen of Scots, [141].
his pay whilst in France, [142].
at siege of St. Quentin, [142].
one of a 'forlorn hope' at Rouen, [142] note.
lived in Broad Street Ward, [143].
dies there, [143].
his character and accomplishments, [143]-[147].
his wives and children, ii. [147], [149].
Sir Henry, son of the ambassador, [149]-[150].
his adherence to Charles I., [150] and note.
is a Royal Commissioner for Cornwall, [150].
is one of the defenders of Pendennis Castle, [150].
is wounded there, [152].
dies at St. Malo, [152].
his character, and that of his son, by Clarendon, [152], [153].
his burial, and funeral sermon, [153].
his wife and son Henry, [153].
Sir Henry, of Crediton, [159].
Major Henry, [177].
Henry, Master of the Savoy, [180].
his education, [180].
takes his degrees of M.A. and D.D. at Oxford, [180].
specimen of his Latin verse, [180].
is Preceptor to James II., etc., [180].
made Master of the Savoy, [181].
his tragedy, 'The Conspiracy,' [181].
a song by him from that play, [181].
his play, 'The Tyrant King of Crete,' [182].
his sermons printed, [182].
extract from one of them, [182].
his character as Master of the Savoy, [182].
his wives, [183].
his daughter Anne, [184].
Captain James, [188].
killed in an engagement off Leghorn, in 1694, [188].
his bravery, [188].
Jane, [150].
Dame Jane, [120] note.
John (temp. 1297), [116].
John (temp. Henry VIII.),
first Captain of Pendennis Castle, [119].
his brass at Budock Church, [119].
surveys and fortifies the Scilly Isles, [119].
is Sheriff of Cornwall, ii. [119].
builds Arwenack, [119].
his three brothers, [137].
his sons, [137].
Sir John, second captain of Pendennis, [120].
John (third of the name), [120].
complaints of his 'ill demeners,' [120].
his wife and children, [122].
Sir John (fourth and last of that name), [123], [126].
is knighted (1617), [123].
promotes the lighting of Lizard Point, [124].
Lady Katharine (see Katharine Cooke).
Margaret, i. [350].
Mary, wife of Sir John James, ii. [156].
Mary, succeeds to most of the family property, [132].
marries Colonel John West, [132].
her daughters take the name of Killigrew, [132] note.
Maugan, [116].
a Mr., in Dublin; Mrs. Delany's account of him, [135].
a Peter (date uncertain), [121].
Sir Peter, 'Peter the Post,' [126].
his services to Charles I., [127].
Sir Peter, the second, [128].
his poverty, [128].
is M.P., and marries Mary, sister of Lord Lucas of Colchester, [128].
his children, [129].
Sir Peter, second baronet, [129].
educated at Oxford and in France, [129].
his verses on the execution of Anne Green, [130].
do. 'Pro Rege Soteria,' [130]
is made Governor of Pendennis, [130].
marries Frances Twysden, [130].
his offspring, [131].
his disappointments and retirement to Ludlow, [131].
his portrait, [131].
his death, [132].
takes the Penryn Collector of Custom's money to repair Pendennis Castle, ii. [132] note.
Ralph, [116].
Radulphus, [116].
Richard (or Michael—temp. 1350), [116].
Sir Robert, of Hanworth, [154].
is Chamberlain to two Queens of England, [154].
is made Governor of Pendennis Castle, [154].
Ambassador to the United Provinces, [155].
his connexion with the Lindsey Level, [155].
is 'sequestered' for a scuffle in Parliament, [155].
is mixed up with Sir Thomas Overbury's affair, [155].
visits Sir Walter Raleigh in the Tower of London, [155].
gives Whitelock a seat for Helston, [155].
his fine seat at Hanworth, [155].
his wife, Mary Wodehouse, [155].
his death, [156].
his offspring, [156].
Robert, son of Sir Robert, [156].
one of his college exercises, [157].
Sir Robert, Vice-Chamberlain to Queen Anne of Denmark, [159].
his daughters, Elizabeth and Mary, [159].
General Robert, [174].
his monument in Westminster Abbey, [174].
is killed at the battle of Almanza, [174].
his effects, [176].
his last letter, [177].
his heroism, [177].
Simon (temp. Richard 11.), [117].
Simon (temp. Elizabeth), [122], [123].
Thomas (temp. 15th century), [116] note, [117].
his brass at Gluvias, [118].
Thomas (temp. Elizabeth), [122], [123].
Thomas, 'The Jester,' ii. [160].
his birth, [160].
his early Court appointments, [160].
his mode of obtaining fees, [160].
his intimacy with Charles II., [160].
reproves the king, [161], [166], [167].
his bet with Lord Lauderdale, [161].
his mission to Venice, [162].
his plays, [163], [170].
their indelicacy, [163].
King Charles II.'s copy, [165].
his portraits, [165].
his early fondness for play-acting, [165].
his first wife, Cecilia Croft, [167], [168].
their stormy wedded life, [167].
intercepts Hyde's Canary wine, [168].
obtains a license for a playhouse, [169].
starts operas, [170].
his second wife, Charlotte van Hess, [171].
his children by her, [171].
narrowly escapes assassination, [171].
his quarrel with the Earl of Rochester, [171] note.
his death, and burial in Westminster Abbey, [172].
his character, [172].
his will, [172].
his indigence, [172].
his letter to Mrs. Frecheville, [173].
his children, [173].
Tom, the younger, [173].
a courtier and a playwright, [173].
Thomas Guildford, [136].
marries Catherine Chubb, [136].
supports the Stuart cause, [136].
settles at Bristol, and dies
there without issue, [136].
his portrait, [136].
William (temp. Elizabeth), [25].
William, Sir, Charles I.'s letter to him, i. [96].
Sir William, Bart., ii. [123], [126].
Sir William, 'Farmer' of the seals of Queen's Bench and Common Pleas, [153], [154].
is at the Court of James I., [153].
his wife, [153].
his death, [154].
his portrait, [154].
Richard Carew's account of him, [154].
his celebrated offspring, [154].
General William, in the Danish service, [129].
goes over to the Dutch, [129].
recalled to England at the Restoration, [129].
Sir William, baronet (son of Sir Robert), [157].
Gentleman Commoner of Oxford, [157].
his verses set to music by Henry Lawes, [157].
writes plays, [157], [158].
takes degree of D.C.L., [157].
his Court appointments, [157].
commands the King's body-guard, [157].
is made a Baronet, [157].
serves at York and at Edgehill, [157].
is made Governor of Pendennis Castle, [157].
his books, [157].
specimen of his poetry, [158].
is buried at the Savoy, [159].
his wife and children, [159].
Kimberley, Earl of, ii. [118], [156] note.
Kimiel, Manor of, ii. [285].
Kinski, Count de, marries Elizabeth Killigrew, ii. [129].
Kingsley, Charles, his view of Martyn, ii. [223].
Kingsley, Canon, his description of Sir Richard Grenville, ii. [5], [13], [15].
do. of Stow, [17]-[20].
Kingston, Sir Anthony, i. [70].
Kingston, Duchess of, her affair with Foote, i. [331].
Knava, John, takes name of Godolphin, i. [345].
Knott, the Cornish, i. [154] and note.
Knovill, Eleanor, ii. [282].
Knox, John, described by Sir Henry Killigrew, ii. [137].
do. by James Melville, ii. [138].
Kymyell, Elizabeth, ii. [282].
L
Lake's Parochial History of Cornwall, ii. [5].
Lambe, Dr., Dean of Ely, ii. [184].
Lambesso, i. [314].
Lambourne, Annora or Eleanora, i. [50], [101].
Lander, John, ii. [200], [203].
LANDER, RICHARD, buried in the Savoy, ii. [194] note, [199]-[218].
portrait of the Brothers Lander, [199] note, [203].
his monument at Truro, [199], [201], [213].
his birth and parentage, [201].
his lineage, [201].
his grandfather a noted wrestler, [202].
his school-days at Truro, [202].
becomes a gentleman's servant and visits the Continent, [202].
goes to the Cape of Good Hope, [202].
his short stature, [202].
offers to accompany Captain Clapperton to Africa, [202].
his first expedition, [203].
publishes his travels, [203].
his second expedition, [203]-[204].
discovers the course of the Niger, [204].
Murray purchases his papers and publishes his journals, [205].
receives the first premium of the Royal Geographical Society, [205].
his third and last expedition, [206].
attacked by the natives near Ingiamma, [207].
escapes by flight, [209].
is killed by a musket-ball, [211].
is buried at Fernando Po, [211].
Laird and Oldfield's account of his last expedition, [211].
Commander Allen's views and maps of Lander's discoveries on the Niger, [212].
the Royal Geographical Society's recognition of his discoveries, ii. [212].
his monument and stained glass window in the Savoy, [212].
contemporary accounts of his appearance and character, [213], [214].
his widow receives a Government pension, [214].
his last letter, [214].
Land's End, Davy's lines on the, i. [248].
Lane, the artist, i. [135] note.
Langford family, i. [292].
Langherne, John, at Plymouth, ii. [56].
Lanherne, i. [38], [42], [45], [73], [75].
Lanow, ii. [4].
Lansdowne, battle of, ii. [50].
George, Lord, his vindication of Sir Richard Grenville, 'Baron of Lostwithiel,' ii. [35].
erects a monument to Sir Bevill Grenville, ii. [57].
Lanyons, The, ii. [281].
Lawes, Henry, sets William Killigrew's verses to music, ii. [157].
Leeds, Duke of, i. [390].
Leland, on the origin of the St. Aubyns, ii. [287].
Lemon, Harriet, i. [132].
Lerchdekne, Margery, i. [101].
Leslie, C. R., his remarks on Incledon's singing, ii. [107].
Leveson-Gower family, ii. [37].
Lipscombe's account of the origin of the Godolphins, i. [345].
do. of Sir Francis Godolphin, i. [347].
Lister, Martin, his connection with the Killigrews, ii. [131].
his amusing letter to the Steward at Arwenack, ii. [133].
his squabbles with the Falmouth Corporation, [135].
his death, [135].
his MS. history of the Killigrews, [135] note.
Lizard Point, The lighting of, ii. [124].
Lloyd, David, his 'State Worthies,' ii. [143].
Locke, John, a correspondent of Dean Grenville, ii. [78].
John, the friend of Sir William Godolphin, i. [351].
Louisbourg, its siege and capture by Boscawen, i. [223] et seq.
Lower family, i. [195].
Ludgvan, i. [169], [180], [247].
Lundy Island, once belonging to the Grenvilles, ii. [31].
Lysons, Rev. Samuel, i. [111].
borrows Borlase's MS. from Sir John St. Aubyn, ii. [285].
Lyte, Maxwell, his account of Eton College, i. [363].
Lyttelton, Dr. Charles, Bishop of Carlisle, P. S. A., i. [180].
M
Macaulay, Lord, his sketch of England after the defeat of Charles I.'s cause, ii. [64].
his epitaph on Martyn, ii. [241].
Machado, Roger, his journals, ii. [117] note.
Mackintosh, Sir James, his opinion of Opie's mental powers, ii. [264].
Macklin ridiculed by Foote, i. [320], [323].
Maclean, Sir John, his 'Deanery of Trigg Minor,' i. [354] note.
Man-engine, The steam, i. [129].
Markham, Gervase, his 'Most Honourable Tragedie of Sir Richard Grenville, Knight,' ii. [29] note.
Marlborough, Duke of, his relations to Godolphin, i. [379], [385], [387].
Duchess of, i. [378], [385], [393].
Martineau, Harriet, her description of Mrs. Opie, ii. [262].
MARTYN, REV. HENRY, ii. [221]-[241].
his mournful journals and letters, [221].
his religious views, [221].
his biographer, Rev. John Sargent, jun., [222].
his despondency, [223], [225] note.
his birth and parentage, [223].
his father, John Martyn, [224], [226].
his school-days, [224].
his personal appearance, [225] note.
his portrait, [225].
his amiable disposition, [225].
fails to obtain an Oxford scholarship, [226].
goes to Cambridge, [226].
becomes acquainted with the Rev. Charles Simeon, [226].
his religious views on his father's death, ii. [226].
becomes Senior Wrangler, [226].
is Fellow and Tutor of St. John's College, [227].
gains the first prize for Latin prose, [227].
rests at Woodbury on the Fal, [227].
desires to become a missionary, [227].
is ordained, and becomes Mr. Simeon's curate, [228].
loses his patrimony, [228].
seeks a chaplaincy in the East India Company's service, [228].
makes the acquaintance of H. Kirke White, [228].
preaches at Kenwyn, [229].
his daily routine, [229].
his reading, [230].
his religious position and views, [230], [231].
takes his degree of B.D., [232].
preaches in London, [232].
makes the acquaintance of Wilberforce, [232].
obtains his chaplaincy, [232].
his affection for Miss Grenfell, [232], and passim.
sails for India, [233].
long and stormy voyage, [233].
lands with the troops at Cape of Good Hope in January, 1806, [234].
his religious ministrations unappreciated on board ship, [234].
falls ill at Calcutta, [235].
reaches Dinapore, [235].
his two native assistants in translating, [235] and passim.
his translation of the Scriptures, [236], [239], and note.
his health fails, [236].
moves to Cawnpore, [237].
his daily routine in India, [237].
visits Persia, [238].
renewed illness, [239].
sets out for England, [240].
dies near Tokat, [240].
his burial, [241].
his epitaph by Lord Macaulay, [241].
a mission-hall at Cambridge, and a baptistry in Truro
Cathedral erected to his memory, ii. [241].
his motto, [241].
Thomas, author of the map of Cornwall, [224].
Marrais (or Orchard Marries), ii. [116].
Marrys family, i. [114].
Mary of Modena, George Grenville's admiration for her, ii. [81].
Mary Rose, The, sinking of, ii. [13].
Mary, Queen, requests Sir John Arundell to entertain the Prince of Spain, i. [85].
Mary Queen of Scots, Sir Henry Killigrew's mission to her, ii. [141].
Maskelyne, Dr., i. [255].
Masson's account of the negotiations for the Restoration, ii. [66] note.
Master of the Revels, account of the Post, ii. [177] note.
Mathews, his relation to Incledon, ii. [100], [111].
Mawes, St., ii. [125], [126] note.
Mawgan Church, Arundell brasses in, i. [74].
Mayne, Cuthbert, his tragic story, i. [59].
Mayow of Clevyan, i. [70].
Menadarva, i. [103].
Menalida, ancient name of Tehidy, i. [113].
Michael Cornubiensis, his tribute to Cornish valour, ii. [48].
Michael's Mount, St., i. [62], [64], [80], [118], [122]; ii. [285] note, [290] and note, [301] note.
Michael, Penkivel St., i. [192], [209].
Michell (Medeshole), an ancient borough, i. [91].
Michell, John, Dean of Crantock, i. [44].
Michell, of Truro, a circumnavigator, i. [26], [139].
Milles, Dean, P. S. A., his copy of Anstis's 'Register of the Order of the Garter,' [xiv]., i. [30].
short notice of him, i. [31] note, [180].
Militon, Job, sheriff of Cornwall, i. [65], [72].
Millett, Grace, i. [247].
Milton, John, his letter concerning Sir Richard Grenville's seizure of Lord Suffolk's property, ii. [35].
Mohun, [ix].
Molesworths, The, [xiv], i. [345], [354]; ii. [283].
Monk, Duke of Albemarle, ii. [41], [66], [122].
Montpesson, Rachel, i. [105].
Moore, Edward, his lines on Stow, ii. [17] note.
Moore, Sir John, his recognition of Lord Vivian's merits, ii. [349].
Morice, Catherine, of Werrington, wife of Sir John St. Aubyn, third baronet, ii. [294] and note.
Morice, Mr., Warden of the Stannaries, i. [133].
Morris, a cooper, friend of H. Bone, R.A., i. [162].
Morwenstow, ii. [4].
Mulgrave, Lord, a patron of Incledon, ii. [94].
Munday family, i. [368].
Murchison, Sir Roderick, Davy's advice to him, i. [262].
Murdock, inventor of the gas-light, ii. [316], [317].
Murphy, his intended life of Foote, i. [311].
N
Nares, Judge, his delight at Incledon's singing, ii. [92].
Neath Abbey, ii. [7].
Nelson, Lord, his personal thanks to Admiral Bligh, i. [143].
Newcastle, Duchess of, i. [390].
Newlyn East, the church of the Arundells of Trerice, i. [100].
New South Wales, Admiral Bligh appointed as Governor, i. [144].
Niger, The, ii. [201] and note, [204], [205].
Nore, Mutiny at the, i. [143].
Northcote's jealousy of Opie, and admiration for him, ii. [256], [277].
Noy, Sir William, [xiv].
Nunnery at Lanherne, i. [75].
O
Oates, Mark, excites the rivalry of Opie, ii. [246].
O'Connell, Lady, née Miss Bligh, i. [146].
Odo de Tregarrick, [xiv].
Oliver, Dr. William, i. [169], [178].
Opie, Betty, ii. [263] and note.
her letter from her brother, ii. [263].
Opie, Edward, the present artist, [247], [253], [278].
OPIE, JOHN, R.A., i. [135] note, [191]; ii. [245]-[278].
Sir Joshua Reynolds's saying concerning him, [245].
his birth, [245].
his parentage and lineage, [246], [247].
the surroundings of his birthplace, [246].
his style and originality, [246].
his early genius as a painter, [248]-[250], [277].
do. as a mathematician, [250], [251].
his frugal rearing, [249].
is helped by Dr. Wolcot, [250] and passim.
do. by the families of Daniell and Vivian, and by Viscount Bateman, [251].
goes to London, [252].
exhibits at the Royal Academy, [252].
his London residences, [252], [255], [262].
catalogue of his works, by J. Jope Rogers, [251], [252] note.
his reading, [252], [253], [263].
paints Dr. Johnson's portrait, [253].
his rapid success and great popularity, [253].
is introduced to George III., [253].
his letter to his mother, 11th March, 1782, [253].
his first marriage, [255], [278] note.
his divorce, [255].
his bon mot thereupon, [255].
his popularity wanes, [256].
turns to historical compositions, [256].
rumours of his being about to be knighted, [256] note.
is ill from too close application, [256] note.
his historical paintings, [256] and passim.
excites Northcote's jealousy, [256].
elected Associate of the Royal Academy, [257].
his 'Schoolmistress' sold for £787 10s., [258].
is elected Royal Academician, [258].
marries his second wife, [258].
his female portraits, [260], [261].
his memoir by his wife, [261].
visits Belgium, Holland and Paris, ii. [261], [262].
resides at Berners Street, [262].
his connexion with Alderman Boydell's Shakespeare Gallery, [262].
his letter to his sister Betty, 20th Nov., 1800, [263].
his literary talents, [264].
his life of Sir Joshua Reynolds, [265].
his project for a 'Gallery of Naval Pictures,' [265].
his Royal Academy lectures, [266]-[272].
his project for a 'Gallery of Honour,' [267].
do. for a colossal statue of Britannia, [267].
do. for decorating St. Paul's Cathedral, [267].
his health gives way, [272].
his last hours, [273].
his death, [272], [273].
is buried at St. Paul's, [273].
the nature of his illness, [273] note.
his pupils, [273] and note.
his private character, [274]-[277].
his personal appearance, [275].
portraits of him, [275].
the critics on his paintings, [276], [277].
his best works in Cornwall, [278].
Opie, Mrs., the first, ii. [245] note.
the second, [245] note, [258].
her novels, [259].
her poetry, [259], [275] note.
her death, [260].
her life by Miss Brightwell, [260].
her portraits, [260].
her influence on Opie, [260].
her memoir of her husband, [261].
her talent in sketching portraits, [262].
her character and biographers, [262].
Oppy, a Cornish artist, ii. [247].
Orford, Lord, his opinion of George Grenville as a poet, ii. [84].
Osler, Edward, F.L.S., i. [291], [304].
P
Paine, Anthony, of Stow, the Cornish giant, ii. [54], [55].
made Halberdier of the guns at Plymouth, ii. [56].
his portrait, [56].
Palæologus, Dorothy, i. [106].
Paris, Dr., his 'Life of Davy,' i. [252], [287].
Parkes, his relations to Incledon, ii. [96], [100], [107].
Paulton, Elizabeth, i. [101].
Payne, John, Mayor of St. Ives, i. [64], [71].
Pearson, Mrs., Martyn's youngest sister, ii. [228].
Peigne, Jael de, ii. [149].
Pellews, The, i. [292].
Pellew (see Lord Exmouth).
Pellew, Captain Fleetwood, i. [303].
Pellew, Admiral Sir Israel, i. [297], [304].
Pellew, Samuel, i. [292].
Pencalenick, i. [314].
Pendarves family, i. [110], [123], [124], [345]; ii. [283], [285].
Pendarves, Alexander, M.P., ii. [194] note.
Pendeen, i. [171], [172], [174] and note.
Pendennis Castle, i. [91], [94], [95], [307].
in connexion with the Killigrews, ii. [117], [119], [125], [126] note, [127], [130], [132] note, [152], [154].
Pendyne, Richard, i. [174] note.
Pengelly in Breage, i. [292].
Pengerswick Castle, i. [341]; ii. [124].
Penpons, Manor of, ii. [285].
Penrose, the maiden name of Richard Lander's mother, ii. [201].
Penryn, ii. [125], [126].
its loving-cup, ii. [125], [128].
Penwarne's poems, i. [131] note.
Penwerris, ii. [148].
Penwith, i. [248].
Penzance, i. [247], [250], [252] note, [268], [286] bis, [292], [348].
Pepys, Samuel, his acquaintance with the Godolphins, i. [362], [366], [367].
his notes on the Killigrews, ii. [160], [165], [166], [169], [179], [182].
Percyvall, Sir John, i. [151], [156].
Peter Pindar (see Dr. Wolcot).
Petworth Park, Grenville portraits there, ii. [63].
Opie's paintings at, ii. [276].
Philleigh, the church of the Arundells, i. [100].
Pigot, Admiral, a patron of Incledon, ii. [94].
Piran (in Zabulo), skull of the saint i. [44].
Pitt, his connexion with Ralph Allen, i. [13]-[15].
Playfair, his notes on the Basset family, i. [112] note.
Plymouth Breakwater, ii. [328].
China, i. [161].
citadel, ii. [6] note, [34].
Pole, on Sir Richard Grenville (temp. Henry VIII.), ii. [9] note.
Polwhele's, Rev. R., 'Biographical Sketches,' [xi]., i. [252], [293] and note, [296] and note, [314], [321], [336], [354].
his visit to Incledon's mother, ii. [89].
Polwheles and Landers intermarry, ii. [201].
Pondicherry, account of, i. [218] note.
Pope's connexion with Ralph Allen, i. [3], [10], [16]-[18].
do. with Borlase, i. [178] and note.
his tribute to George Grenville's poetry, ii. [85].
do. to Sir John St. Aubyn, ii. [281], [299].
Porter, Sir R. K., his remarks on Martyn, ii. [240].
Portreath, alias Basset's Cove, i. [115].
Post Office, development of (see Allen).
Potheridge, Dorothy, ii. [122].
Price's 'Mineralogia Cornubiensis,' ii. [311].
Prideaux family, i. [114], [344]; ii. [5], [33], [249], [283].
Prideaux, Dean, [xv].
Prideaux, Edmund, Master of the Post Office, i. [6].
Prideaux Place, Padstow, ii. [17] note, [249].
Prince, his 'Worthies of Devon,' ii. [3], [15] note.
Prior Park, account of, i. [19], [20], [22].
Pumping-engines, steam, in Cornwall, ii. [308].
Q
Quarles, Francis, his lines on Cecilia Killigrew, ii. [168].
Quarme, Rev., Lady Frances Killigrew's letter of reproach to him, ii. [130].
Quarterly Review, on Borlase, i. [171] et seq.
on biography, [x].
on Foote, i. [312].
on the St. Aubyns, ii. [287].
on steam locomotion, ii. [325].
on Trevithick's share in the invention, ii. [325].
R
Radnor, Earl of, i. [368].
Raleigh, Sir Walter, his account of Grenville's action with the Spaniards at Flores, ii. [21] and note, [23], [24], [29].
Rashleighs, The, [xv]., i. [114].
Rauzzini, his recognition of Incledon's talents, ii. [95].
Rebellion, Cornish (see Humphry Arundell).
Red Lion Inn, Truro, i. [314].
Redruth, its ancient markets and fairs, i. [114].
Rencie, John, assumes name of Godolphin, i. [344].
Reskymer, i. [101].
Respermel, i. [200] note.
Restormel Castle, ii. [64].
Revenge, The, ii. [22], [29].
Reynolds, Admiral, i. [301].
Reynolds, Sir Joshua, his description of Opie, ii. [245].
his life by Opie, [265].
Rialton, i. [368].
Richard of Cornwall, [xiv].
Richmond, Ritchie, Mrs., her account of Mrs. Opie, ii. [256].
Road, The old main, through Cornwall, i. [99].
Robarteses, The, [xv].
Robartes, Lord, at Braddock Down, ii. [286].
Robinson, H. C., his account of Incledon, ii. [102].
Rochester, Earl of, i. [368].
Rogers, Henry, his riot near Camborne, ii. [294].
Rogers, J. Jope, his catalogue of Opie's works, ii. [251], [252].
Rollo, Duke, ii. [6].
Roscarroth, Mr., a Royal Commissioner for Cornwall, ii. [150].
Rosewarne, Mr., occupant of Godolphin, i. [344].
Rosmeryn, ii. [148].
Rosogan, James, i. [64].
John, i. [64].
Rospeith, i. [169].
Royal Society, The, i. [288].
Rupe, Eva de, i. [45].
Ruskin, Mr. John, his remarks on Sir Richard Grenville's patriotism, ii. [23].
Russia, Emperor of, his tribute to Davy, i. [271].
S
Sacheverell's relations to Godolphin, i. [381], [386].
Sailor, The British, of the last century, i. [208].
SAINT AUBYN FAMILY, i. [101], [195], [345]; ii. [281]-[303].
of Norman origin, ii. [281].
first settle in Somersetshire, [282].
Sheriffs and M.P.'s for Cornwall, [283].
their intermarriages with Cornish families, [283].
their large possessions in Cornwall, [284].
their attitude during the Civil War, [285], [286].
the family portraits, [293] note.
Ann, marries George Killigrew, [132].
Francis, i. [173].
Geoffrey, ii. [282].
his wife, [282].
son of the foregoing, [282].
his epitaph, [282].
Guy de, [282].
his wife, and settlement in Cornwall, [282].
Mr. James Piers, the architect, [290].
John, purchases St. Michael's Mount, [285] note.
John, at the defeat of the Parliamentary troops at Braddock Down, [286].
Sir John, third baronet, [287].
Walpole's tribute to his incorruptibility, [287].
at Oxford with Dr. Borlase, [287].
his ride from Oxford to Cornwall, [287], [288].
his Parliamentary reputation, [289], [290].
his benevolent action during the Cornish tumults of 1727, [290].
builds the quay at St. Michael's Mount, [290].
his speech in favour of short Parliaments, [291], [292].
his portrait, [293].
his connexion with the Henry Rogers riot, [294].
death of his wife, [294].
again attacks Walpole, [295].
his appointment on the Select Committee to inquire into Walpole's conduct, ii. [296].
offered a place as Lord of the Admiralty, [298].
obtains ships of war to protect Cornish trade, [298].
dies at Pencarrow, [298].
his character, [298], [299].
a friend of Pope, [299].
Sir John, fourth baronet, [300].
goes to Oxford, [300].
is M.P. for Cornwall, [300].
his monument at Crowan, [300].
Sir John, fifth baronet, [300].
his escapade at Westminster School, [300].
enters Parliament, [301].
his scientific and artistic tastes, [302].
the friend of Opie, and pall-bearer at his funeral, [302].
his portrait by Opie, [302].
his death and funeral, [302], [303].
Sir John, M.P., present baronet, [290] note, [303].
Lieutenant at Tel-el-Kebir, i. [211] note.
Margaret, i. [131].
Sir Mauger de, ii. [283].
Thomas, Sheriff of Cornwall in 1545, [283].
his letter to the Viscountess Lisle on the death of his daughter, [284].
do. his grandson, [284].
do. temp. Elizabeth, [284].
Carew's account of him, [284].
Thomas, a Royalist soldier, [286], [287].
his monument and portrait, [287].
St. George of Cornwall, [xiv].
St. Ives, its loving-cup, i. [119].
St. Leger, Mary, ii. [20].
'Salmonia,' Davy's, i. [254], [283] bis, [285].
Sandys, Rev. William, i. [131].
Sargent, Rev. John, junr., his memoir of Martyn, ii. [222].
Sarrake (?), in Cornwall, ii. [140].
Saunders, Margaret, ii. [153].
Savage, Lady Mary, wife of Henry Killigrew, ii. [179].
Savoy, The, the Killigrews' connexion therewith, ii. [181]-[183].
Macaulay's description of the 'Sanctuary,' ii. [183].
distinguished Cornish folk buried there, ii. [194] note.
Scawen, Mr., a Royal Commissioner for Cornwall, ii. [150].
Scotland Yard, i. [373].
Scott, Sir Walter, with Davy at Abbotsford, etc., i. [272]-[276], [283] note.
Scrope, George P., M.P., his history of Castle Combe, i. [112] note.
Secker, Dr., Archbishop of Canterbury, his communications with Foote, i. [325].
Sergeaux, or Seriseaux family, ii. [282].
Sham Castle, constructed by Ralph Allen, i. [20].
Shee, Sir M. A., P.R.A., his tribute to Opie, ii. [277].
Sheep, Cornish (see Knott).
Sherwood, Mrs., her description of Martyn, ii. [225] note.
Sherwoods, The, their friendship for Martyn, ii. [236], [237].
Shield, his relations with Incledon, ii. [100], [106].
Ships, comparison of French and British, of the last century, [209].
Siddons, Mrs., her admiration of Incledon's singing, ii. [102].
Sidney, Thomasine, marries Sir William Godolphin, i. [357].
Silvius, Lady, i. [375] note.
Simeon, Rev. Charles, the friend of Martyn, ii. [226], [228].
Simon de Thurway, [xiv].
Slanning, Sir Nicholas, i. [91]; ii. [3], [51].
Smiles, Samuel, his account of Trevithick, ii. [320].
Smith, Anne, i. [177].
Soor, Joan le, i. [46].
John, Dean of Canterbury, i. [101] note.
Osbertus, i. [101] note.
Ralph, i. [101].
Southey, Poet Laureate, his opinions of Davy, i. [256], [257].
his portrait by Opie, ii. [256].
his sketch of Mrs. Opie, ii. [262].
Spaniards, The, invade Penzance, i. [348].
Sparnon, Judith, i. [292].
Spry, Admiral Sir Richard, i. [208].
Stamford Hill (see Stratton).
Stanbury, ii. [4].
Steam locomotion, The Times upon, ii. [321].
Stephenson, George, his acquaintance with Trevithick, ii. [321] and note, [322] and note.
Robert, do., [336]-[338].
Stokes, H. S., Mr., his 'Vale of Lanherne,' i. [39].
his lines on Anthony Paine, ii. [54].
do. on Lord Vivian, ii. [345].
Stow, ii. [4]-[6] note, [17], [31], [32].
Stratton, i. [82]-[87], [153].
Battle of, ii. [45], [54].
Swannacote, ii. [6] note.
Swan Pool, Falmouth, [115] note.
T
Talma, his delight at Incledon's singing, ii. [103].
Teague, Ann, mother of Richard Trevithick, ii. [310].
Tehidy, i. [110], [113], [115], [116], [174] note.
Temple, Dissolution of the Order, ii. [7].
Temple, Sir William, i. [366], [368].
Tennyson, Lord, his lines to Margaret, i. [371].
his account of Sir Richard Grenville, and his 'Ballad of the Fleet.' ii. [6], [13], [22], [27].
Theatres, The London, in Tom Killigrew's time, ii. [169].
Thomas, of Cornwall, [xiv].
Thomson, Henry, R.A., a pupil of Opie, ii. [273].
Thynne family, ii. [37], [68], [82] and note.
Ticknor's sketches of Sir Humphry and Lady Davy, i. [263].
Times, The, on steam locomotion, ii. [321].
Tintagel, ii. [4].
Tinten, i. [140], [145].
Tirthney, i. [200] note.
Tobin, Mr., i. [283].
Tolverne (see also Arundell), i. [99], [100], [102], [195].
Tonkin family, i. [171].
Tonkin's notes to Carew's 'Survey of Cornwall,' i. [135].
notes on the Grenvilles, ii. [9].
Mr. John, i. [253].
Mary, the mother of Opie, ii. [247].
Tooke, Horne, his opinion of Davy, i. [257].
his opinion of Opie's mental powers, ii. [264].
Trebasil, i. [209] note.
Tredeneck family, i. [345].
Treffry, i. [101] note.
of Fowey, ii. [119].
Trefusis, i. [99], [102], [196], [302]; ii. [126].
Tregagle family, ii. [37].
Tregameer, i. [194].
Tregarrick, i. [195].
Tregea, Charles, i. [204].
Tregellas, J. T., writer on Cornish dialect, i. [26].
Tregian family, i. [59].
Tregian, Francis, ii. [14].
Tregomynion family, ii. [5].
Tregoning Hill, i. [342].
Tregonwell, Sir John, i. [88].
Tregothnan, i. [192], [194] and note, [205].
Trelawnys, The, [xv]., i. [114], [119], [340].
Bishop Jonathan, ii. [75].
Sir John, Sir Bevill Grenville's letter to him, ii. [39].
Trelissick, i. [255].
Trelowarren, i. [197].
Trelowith, Manor of, ii. [285].
Tremanhere, i. [104], [169].
Trematon Castle, ii. [10].
Tremaynes, The, [xv]., ii. [5].
Trembleath, i. [37], [40], [101].
Tremeres, The, [283].
Tremodret, i. [46].
Tremrow, family, i. [344].
Trengrove, i. [114].
Treninick, Manor of, ii. [285].
Trenouth, i. [114], [344].
Trenowith, i. [195].
Trenowiths, The, ii. [283].
Treraven, i. [209] note.
Trerice, i. [76] (see also Arundell).
Tresahar, i. [103].
Tresilian, i. [205].
Tretawne, i. [140], [354].
Trethurfes, The, ii. [283].
Trevalga, i. [114].
Trevanions, The, [xv]., [98], [102], [195]; ii. [39].
Trevanger family, i. [344].
Trevaunance, ii. [247].
Trevelyan, Sir John, i. [4].
Trevemeder, ii. [310].
Treverry, i. [297], [300].
Trevethoe, ii. [293] note.
Trevisa, John de, [xiv].
Trevithick, in St. Columb-Major, i. [39], [105].
Trevithick, Francis, his biography of his father, ii. [307].
TREVITHICK, RICHARD, i. [255], [260] note; ii. [307]-[341].
his biography by his son, ii. [307].
original residence of his family, ii. [310].
his father a skilful engineer, [310]-[312], [317].
his mother, [310] and note.
his birthplace, [310], [312].
his school-days, [312].
his jealousy of Watt, [311], [315], [316].
marries Jane Harvey, [312], [316].
his enormous physical strength, [313].
becomes an engineer, [314].
becomes acquainted with Davies Gilbert, [314].
invents the high-pressure engine, [315].
his rapid success, [316].
his personal appearance, [316].
his portraits, [316].
his further inventions, and adaptations, [317] and note.
a capital humorous story-teller, [317].
invents the steam road-locomotive, [318]-[320].
goes to London to patent it, [319].
his acquaintance with George Stephenson, [321].
his claim to the invention of the screw-propeller, [321], [324] and note.
exhibits his steam locomotive in London, [322].
falls into ill health and poverty, [323], [325], [327].
Government refuses to recognise his services, [323], [339].
his attempt at a Thames tunnel, [323].
South Kensington Museum, account of him and his patents, [323], [324].
his many other inventions, [324].
his genius as compared with Watt's, [325].
his simple tastes and hopeful disposition, [325].
his dealings with the Admiralty, [326].
his wife's journey to London, [326].
their touching interview, [326].
returns to Cornwall, [327].
applies himself to steam navigation, [327], [340].
his connexion with Plymouth breakwater, ii. [328].
applies steam to agriculture, [328].
invents the 'pole-puffer' engine, [328].
his manner of starting Wheal Herland engine, [329].
his challenge to Woolf the engineer, [330].
his sanguine temperament, [331].
goes to Peru, [331].
his reception at Lima, [332], [333].
the destruction of his machinery, and ruin of his prospects, [333].
makes £2,500 by raising some sunken cannon, [334].
his thriftless, unbusiness-like habits, [334].
is pressed by Bolivar as a soldier, [334].
invents an explosive bullet, [334].
amputates a man's legs, [334].
visits Chili and Costa Rica, [335].
narrow escape from being drowned, [336].
reaches Carthagena, where he meets Robert Stephenson, [336].
Mr. Fairbairn's letter about him, [336].
returns penniless to England, [338].
his hearty reception in Cornwall, [339].
his later inventions, [339].
his old age and poverty, [339], [341].
his last project, [340].
his death, [341].
recent endeavours to provide a memorial to his honour, [341].
Trevose, ii. [148].
Trewarthenick, i. [195].
Trewent family, ii. [5], [8].
Trewinnard, Jane, ii. [119].
Trewledick family, i. [344].
Trewoof, Hawise, i. [193].
Treworder, ii. [37].
Trewyn, ii. [116].
Truro, i. [161], [193], [196], [293], [296], [313].
the new cathedral, ii. [200], [241].
Grammar School, i. [250], [253], [293], [315], [316]; ii. [37], [224], [347].
Nunnery of Clares at, ii. [285].
the nest of the Vivian family, ii. [345], [346] note, [361].
Truthall in Sithney, i. [102].
Truthan, i. [172].
Tudy, St., i. [140].
Twysden, Frances, ii. [130].
Tywardreath, Priory of, ii. [285].
U
Ursula, St., [xiv].
V
Vandermeulen, Elizabeth, i. [163].
Varfel, i. [247].
Virgil, on 'Worthies,' [viii].
Virginia, early accounts of, ii. [14].
Vivian, Andrew, his connexion with Trevithick, ii. [313], [319], [328].
family, ii. [5], [345], [346].
John, Vice-Warden of the Stannaries, and founder of the copper trade, ii. [345].
Johnson, his house, and mayor of Truro, i. [314].
The Hon. Lalage, ii. [363].
VIVIAN, LORD, ii. [345]-[364].
his portrait by Sir M. A. Shee, [346].
his medallion at Truro, [347].
his mother, [346], [347].
his birth, [347].
his education at Truro, Lostwithiel, Harrow, and Oxford, [347].
is articled to a solicitor, [347].
prefers a military career, [347].
obtains an ensigncy, [348].
early service in the Low Countries, and Gibraltar, [348].
exchanges into a cavalry regiment, [348].
takes part in the Texel expedition, [348].
marries Eliza de Crespigny, [348].
goes to the Peninsula, [349].
is present at Corunna, [349].
his promotion, and return to the Peninsula, [349].
at Orthes, Vittoria, and in the Pyrenees, [350].
is wounded at Croix d'Orade, [350], [351].
Duke of Wellington's despatch thereon, ii. [350].
Napier's remarks thereon, [350].
return to England, and promotions, [352].
at Waterloo, [352]-[360].
Vivian's final charge, [355].
his narrow escape, [357].
his account of the battle to Mr. Pendarves, [357], [359].
his honours and decorations, [359].
leads the British advance-guard to Paris, [361].
his return to England, and reception at Truro, [361].
his latter services and honours, [362].
his election addresses, [363].
his second marriage, [363].
is made Master-General of the Ordnance, [363].
is created a Peer, [363].
his death and funeral, [364].
his character, [364].
Prior, i. [368].
Rev. Thomas, ii. [345].
William, son of Michael, ii. [194] note.
Colonel John L., his genealogical notes, i. [45], [340]; ii. [118] note, [201].
Volta, his acquaintance with Davy, i. [268].
Vor Wheal, i. [342].
Vyvyan, Sir Richard, i. [197].
W
Waagen, Dr., his opinion of Opie's paintings, ii. [276].
Wade, General, Ralph Allen's patron, i. [4]-[13].
Wait, Daniel, Mayor of Bristol, ii. [136].
Wait, Mr. William Killigrew, ii. [136] note.
Wallis, Captain William, of Lanteglos, a circumnavigator, i. [139].
Wallyoborow, Sir Roger, [xiv].
Walpole, Horace, his opinion of Foote, i. [336].
his opinion of Opie's paintings ii. [256].
Walpole, Sir Robert, his tribute to
Sir John St. Aubyn's incorruptibility, ii. [287].
Walter de Constantius, [xiv].
Warburton, at Ralph Allen's, i. [10], [20].
Waterloo, Lord Vivian at, ii. [352].
Watt, Gregory, i. [255].
Watt, the engineer, ii. [311], [315], [316], [325].
Week St. Mary, i. [153], [156] and note, ii. [5].
Wean, St., i. [171] and note.
Webster, Lætitia, Lord Vivian's second wife, ii. [363].
Wellington, Duke of, his duel with Lord Winchelsea, i. [205].
his opinion of Lord Vivian, ii. [350], [360].
Wesley, Rev. John, in Cornwall, i. [179] and note.
West, Colonel John, marries Mary Killigrew, ii. [132].
'West Country Garland,' The, ii. [37].
Whewell, Dr., his opinion of Davy's discoveries, i. [261].
White, H. Kirke, a friend of Martyn, ii. [228].
Whitefield ridiculed by Foote, i. [325].
Whitley, Mr. H. Michell, his valuable assistance to the author, [xvi].
his 'Cornish Chantries,' i. [200] note.
his Cornish notes, ii. [120], note.
Wick, Jane, ii. [68].
Wilberforce, Bishop, his edition of Martyn's Journals and Letters, ii. [221] note.
Wilkinson, Tate, his connexion with Foote, i. [324], [336].
William IV., King, in Cornwall, i. [204].
Willyams, Humphry, of Carnanton, i. [200].
Williams, Michael, his opinion of Trevithick and his inventions, ii. [316], [330], [339].
Winchelsea, Lord, his duel with the Duke of Wellington, i. [205].
Winslade, Will., i. [64].
Withiel, ii. [30].
Wodehouse family, ii. [132], [155], [156] note.
Wolcot, Dr. (Peter Pindar), i. [26], [162]. the early friend of Opie, ii. [250], [276].
his character of Lord Vivian, ii. [364].
Wolf, the last seen in England, i. [169].
Wolfe at Louisbourg, i. [224].
Wolstan, ii. [4].
Wolverston, Mary, ii. [120], [124] note.
Woodbury, on the Fal, ii. [227].
Wood, Anthony, his opinion of Anne Killigrew, ii. [189].
Woolf's patents, ii. [330].
Wordsworth, William, his impressions of Davy's genius, i. [276].
Worth, R. N., Mr., his 'West Country Garland,' ii. [37].
his account of the Killigrews, [133].
Y
York, Duke of, becomes Foote's friend, i. [329].
Yonge, Dr., F.R.S., his account of Stow, ii. [17] note.
Young, Dr. Thomas, i. [285].
Z
Zoological Society, originated by Davy, i. [269].
Zulestein, Frederick de Nassau, Lord of, marries Mary Killigrew, ii. [159].
his son made Earl of Rochford by William III., ii. [160].
THE END.
Elliot Stock, Paternoster Row, London.
TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE
This book was published in two volumes, of which this is the second. The Index, which covers both volumes, is at the end of this volume. The first volume was released as Project Gutenberg ebook #46529, available at http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/46529.
Obvious typographical and punctuation errors have been corrected after careful comparison with other occurrences within the text and consultation of external sources.
Dates of form similar to 164-2/3 have been changed to 1642/3
Spelling has been left as found in the original text. Variations in spelling and hyphenation have been retained as well (for example: playhouse play-house; seaside sea-side; inlarge; lyeth), except for those changes detailed below.
pg [7] 'rais d' changed to 'rais'd'.
pg [18] duplicate 'of' removed from 'description of of it'.
pg [35] opening parens inserted into '(undated)'.
pg [173] 'Ddear' changed to 'Dear'.
pg [270] 'neally' changed to 'really'.
pg [312] 'world anew' changed to 'work anew'.
Index ['Ilbercombe'] changed to 'Ilcombe'.
Index ['Westminister'] changed to 'Westminster' (under "Thomas, 'The Jester,'".)
Index ['Kymiel'] changed to 'Kimiel'
Index ['Tregeagle'] changed to 'Tregagle'.